Pubdate: Mon, 07 Feb 2005 Source: Philippine Star (Philippines) Copyright: PhilSTAR Daily Inc. 2005 Contact: http://www.philstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/622 Author: Ana Marie Pamintuan Cited: National Bureau of Invesitgation http://www.nbi.gov.ph/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Philippines STAYING POWER Sketches Given the notoriety of former National Bureau of Investigation agent Martin Soriano, how did he last so long in the game? Going by reports of his arrest last week, Soriano had not even bothered to change his modus operandi. He was notorious for kidnapping and planting drug evidence on his victims to force them to cough up ransom. Police investigators are now looking into reports that Soriano allegedly victimized even a cop and at least one regular NBI agent, both of whom were eventually cleared of drug charges because of glaring loopholes in Soriano's accusations against them. NBI insiders told me over the weekend that if police investigators really dig deep into Soriano's story, some prominent careers could be ruined. If he's truly singing like a canary before anti-kidnapping teams of the Philippine National Police (PNP), it would be interesting to know how far the cops would be willing to go to explain Soriano's staying power. * * * Camp Crame sources say that among the details uncovered by investigators so far is that Soriano was apprehended for a drug deal in the early 1990s by NBI agents led by Ray Esmeralda. The sources say that Fidel Ramos' son-in-law Alex Sembrano, who is said to be related by affinity to Soriano, interceded, allegedly working not only to clear Soriano but also to make him an intelligence agent of the bureau. Soriano's first boss was Mike Salvador. The part about Sembrano, which has come out in newspapers, will probably be denied by the Ramos clan, but NBI insiders are telling the same story. Soriano, who is neither a lawyer nor a certified public accountant - requirements for a regular NBI agent - managed to join the bureau by virtue of an executive order issued during the Aquino administration, which created positions in the NBI for "special investigators" and "intelligence agents" that circumvented the personnel requirement for a degree in law or accounting. The EO has not been rescinded. Today even the NBI chief, a former cop, is neither a lawyer nor a CPA. PNP sources say Soriano quickly learned to cover his back, showering certain officials with expensive gifts as he embarked on a career of frame-ups and shakedowns. The names of two former NBI officials keep cropping up. Without the protection of those officials, Soriano's activities would not have flourished. Cops are investigating reports that Soriano gifted the secretary of one of the officials with a stolen car. The secretary, unaware that it was a hot car, was reportedly furious at Soriano when the vehicle was traced and impounded by cops from Camp Crame. * * * Investigators are surprised that the name of a respected politician has cropped up. The politician, who has cultivated an image of integrity, reportedly used Soriano for a campaign to discredit a rival for a high elective post. Stories circulated that the rival had drawn up a list of the nation's top drug dealers but had excluded the most notorious in exchange for P6 million. I don't think this story was completely baseless, and it looks like the respected politician, apparently believing that it takes a crook to know one, simply used Soriano to unearth the truth. But I doubt if the politician would want his name linked with someone like Soriano. In his heyday Soriano became so bold that he even allegedly planted shabu on a regular NBI agent and a cop. Both cases were dismissed. In the case of the cop Soriano reportedly told the prosecutor that the shabu was hidden in the engine of a car. After getting more details, the prosecutor decided that the shabu would not have survived the heat of the engine. Soriano teamed up with a regular NBI agent who is reportedly still with the bureau, and a special investigator who is no longer there. Police probers say Soriano's group often handled cases involving business rivalries, which offered potentials for a shakedown. For a while Soriano was also known to be attached to the Presidential Security Group under Ramos. From drugs Soriano allegedly shifted to kidnapping and shakedowns. PNP investigators are looking into reports that Soriano maintained a safehouse in Quezon City for kidnap victims. Camp Crame sources say among Soriano's alleged victims was a member of a prominent clan involved in real estate, whose brother and father were themselves victims of kidnapping. Cops are verifying if Soriano freed his victim after receiving a deed of sale for a lot signed by the victim's girlfriend. The story of that real estate clan shows that Soriano's MO was hardly original. The brother and father were reportedly kidnapped on separate occasions by a notorious hoodlum whose principal "handler" or coddler was a ranking constabulary officer. When the hoodlum had outlived his usefulness, he was executed by his handler's men on Taft Avenue near a women's university in Manila. The not-so-secret annals of Philippine law enforcement are filled with stories of such thugs who are used by regular lawmen for fund-raising criminal activities. This is a relatively small town and if lawmen truly did their job, criminal careers could be nipped in the bud. But those careers flourish because the crooks share their profits with legitimate law enforcers. When the crooks become too notorious, or when they can no longer be controlled by their coddlers, they are "salvaged" or executed. * * * By the time Joseph Estrada became president, Soriano had become too hot to handle. He was being implicated in kidnapping, carjacking, drug dealing and many other felonies. NBI insiders say Erap summoned the bureau chief at the time, Santiago Toledo, and asked why he seemed to be protecting Soriano. Toledo, not Federico Opinion, finally fired Soriano. As recent events have shown, Soriano's ouster from the bureau did not end his activities. Now we are told that he is implicating several police officers in his post-NBI operations. It would be more interesting to find out who covered for him during his days at the NBI. Soriano owed his staying power to those people, and he should give them proper credit. - ---