Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jan 2009 Source: Daily Tribune, The (Philippines) Copyright: 2009 The Tribune Publishing Co., Inc. Contact: http://www.tribune.net.ph/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2973 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) WHERE DO PROSECUTORS REALLY STAND? The controversy involving the "Alabang Boys" has turned for the worse, with the battle line being drawn between state lawyers on one side and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) chief ret. Gen. Dionisio Santiago and his operatives who were mostly extracted from the Philippine Marines. What had resulted in turn was that the heat in the bitter exchange of words between both camps now threatens to overcloud the issue of bribery following the arrests of the Alabang Boys that was the subject of the Congress inquiry into the case. The suspected drug traffickers who were arrested by the PDEA in several buy-bust operations and were given in media the misnomer of Alabang Boys to indicate the three suspects' social status must be laughing their hearts out in their jail cells for the ruckus that had erupted right in Gloria's government. The banding of state prosecutors, primarily those in the Department of Justice Dangerous Drugs Task Force, against the PDEA was seen by some as uncalled for as Santiago and PDEA agents were said to only be stating facts when they noted that drug cases, and not only in the case of the Alabang Boys, usually do not prosper because these fail to reach the courts after being struck down at the DoJ, mostly due to technicalities. What the state fiscals, including Chief State Prosecutor Jovencito Zuno, are insisting on the difference between the Marines being plunged into a Mindanao warzone and running after drug syndicates, does not wash with most Filipinos. There may have been legal infirmities on some of the PDEA cases but it would be hard to appreciate that most fail in the inquest stage because of technicalities. One way of seeing it is that it would have been the failure of the prosecutors and the DoJ mostly if the cases fail to get elevated to the courts. But it would have been a matter of a phone call to the anti-drug agents of the office of the PDEA to provide explainations and documents to help push the drug cases forward. At the same time, it cannot be denied that there are cases where the PDEA agents certainly do not go by the book when there are arrests. For instance, in the case of the Alabang Boys, while two of them were arrested in the posh village and in the act of selling drugs to the PDEA agent, the other was arrested in Quezon City. From the testimony given, drugs were found inside the home of the third drug suspect. There is doubt that the PDEA had a proper search warrant. So how did PDEA go about this search and arrest? Whatever is said about getting rid of the drug menace, rules must be followed, and the law upheld. But what seems to be happening is that the DoJ prosecutors lean more on what co-lawyers who are schoolmates or fraternity mates and who mostly represent drug traffickers, say, than the evidence presented by the arresting agencies. The public expects state prosecutors to have their bias turned more toward the government and having these cases expedited. Still, if the buy-bust was technically infirm, that's PDEA's fault. Yet there went the PDEA chief, even admitting that at times, PDEA has to plant evidence to catch the drug dealer. Wow! What an admission of their dirty ways! But what was the use of the DoJ putting up a special panel against dangerous drugs if most of the cases filed by PDEA are turned away, as claimed by PDEA. On the DoJ side, prosecutors also stated that only three or so drug cases out of some 45 were dismissed. Who is telling the truth? The way things look though, with media obviously sympathetic to PDEA, instead of working with the PDEA in the pursuit against the highly-lucrative drug trade, the state lawyers appear to be throwing legal hurdles every turn of the way. The drug trade appears to be benefiting from such legal hurdles and is causing frustrations for government anti-drug units. Legalese aside, the public expects the state prosecutors to lawyer on the public's side since they are anyway paid with public money. If they cannot do that, the prosecutors can always resign and only then can they lawyer for the drug traffickers. As for the PDEA, it should start shaping up too, and get their act right. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin