Pubdate: Fri, 13 Dec 2002 Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer (Philippines) Copyright: 2002 Philippine Daily Inquirer Contact: http://www.inquirer.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1073 Author: Tina Santos, Inquirer News Service ANOTHER DRUG LAB FOUND IN NAVOTAS AUTHORITIES on Thursday night raided a "shabu" (crack) warehouse in Navotas town barely three days after a big drug laboratory was discovered in the adjacent town of Valenzuela Monday, National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) director Reynaldo Wycoco said. The warehouse in Navotas contained enough chemicals and other materials to produce shabu worth one billion pesos, Wycoco said. The raid came about after one of the employees of the Valenzuela shabu laboratory informed the NBI that the chemicals used to make the illegal drug were being stored in the warehouse on NorthBay Boulevard in Navotas, he said. Suspects Wang Yashi alias "Siyah" and Deng Xiao Li alias "Lucy," both from mainland China, are said to be the operators of the drug laboratory on Malinis Street in the village of Lawang Bato in Valenzuela, which was accidentally discovered when fire broke out in the premises, Wycoco said. Lee Yuk Sau, alleged owner of the Valenzuela warehouse, went to the Valenzuela police Friday with her lawyer and denied she was part of the drug syndicate. Police recovered 2.2 billion pesos' worth of shabu in the Valenzuela warehouse, the largest-ever drug haul in the Philippines. Officials put the value of the illegal drug trade in the Philippines at 81.6 billion pesos annually. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, informed of the raid, said she would ensure "that corrupt judges do not turn around the work of any of these law enforcers, as some of them have done in some of these cases." Wycoco said he had ordered his men to find out why Wang, who was arrested by Caloocan City policemen in October 2001, was again on the loose. Northern Police District Office (NPDO) director Marcelino Franco Jr. said police received a call from a Conchita Chua, who claimed she was an employee of suspects Wang Yashi and Deng Xiao Li. "(Chua) decided to come to us to reveal what she knows about the illegal trade after she learned that we are running after the suspects who happened to be her employers," Franco said. Chua told police that her employers had just arrived from China. She also said she barely managed to escape the fire that gutted the Valenzuela warehouse. Franco said police had yet to determine whether Chua would be charged as a suspect. "We have yet to find out the extent of her involvement before we could say she is a suspect," he said. Wycoco said the NBI confiscated six truckloads of "chemicals and precursors" from the Navotas warehouse. They were taken to the Crime Laboratory in the Camp Crame national police headquarters in Quezon City. Wycoco said his investigators learned that the warehouse started operating in November 2001. NBI agents had to wait for more than three hours Thursday for a search warrant from a judge before they could enter the Navotas warehouse. "We don't want to waste a very important operation by getting evidence that will be inadmissible in court," Wycoco said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek