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Sunday, May 15, 2011

CORRUPTION IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

Salonga: CA corruption exposé
good for reforms

By Norman Bordadora
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 00:41:00 08/03/2008

Filed Under: Graft & Corruption, Politics, Government

FORMER SENATE PRESIDENT JOVITO Salonga on Saturday confirmed

the purported corruption in the Court of Appeals and said reforms were

urgently needed.

“It is true that there is bribery in the appellate court,” the 88-year-old

founder of the judiciary watchdog group Bantay Katarungan told the

Inquirer. “It should be stopped. The bribery should be exposed. It should

be the beginning of legal reforms in our system of justice.”

Salonga, mentor to a number of magistrates and a frequent amicus

curiae of the Supreme Court, made the remarks in reaction to the

exchange of accusations of bribery and corruption between Associate

Justice Jose Sabio Jr. and businessman Francis de Borja in

connection with the case involving Manila Electric Co. and the

Government Service Insurance System.

Asked whether Sabio’s claim of a P10-million offer for him to inhibit

himself from the case was a positive development, Salonga said:

“Yes. Undoubtedly.”

He said Sabio’s revelations in connection with the case that was

resolved in favor of Meralco were yet another indication of the need to

reform the appellate and other courts.

Fr. Joaquin Bernas, dean emeritus of the Ateneo de Manila School of Law,

told the Inquirer that the allegations exchanged by Sabio and
De Borja “will not do the judiciary any good, but the investigation
of the Supreme Court will.”

The Court of Appeals en banc decided on Thursday to raise to the

Supreme Court the “propriety” of certain justices’ actions vis-à-vis

the Meralco vs GSIS case. The high court is scheduled to deliberate

on the matter on Tuesday.

Notorious justices

Salonga said that since 2000, Bantay Katarungan had exposed

instances of corruption “and underscored the need for reforms

in our system of justice.”

“We have written to the Judicial and Bar Council and, from time

to time, the appointing power, on the need for reforms in specific

instances not only in the Court of Appeals but also in the other

courts,” he said.

Salonga refused to name names, saying he wanted to spare the

Inquirer and himself from being sued for libel. But he said the

justices concerned were “notorious.”

How corruption works in the appellate court and the personalities

involved are known to Bantay Katarungan’s lawyer-members,

according to Salonga.

He said even the law students doing volunteer monitoring for the

watchdog group “know who these people are.”

A recent victory for Bantay Katarungan was the Supreme Court’s rejection

of the appointment of Sandiganbayan Justice Gregory Ong to the tribunal in 2007.

‘Honest man’

It was Bantay Katarungan and Salonga’s other nongovernment organization,

Kilosbayan, that questioned Ong’s appointment on account of questions

on his citizenship.

Bernas, a constitutionalist and also an adviser to the Supreme Court

in important cases, begged off from commenting on the purported bribery

attempt involving Sabio and De Borja.

“I don’t know the facts,” he said on the phone.

Bernas did say that while he did not know De Borja,

“I consider [Sabio] to be an honest man.”

Sabio teaches legal ethics at the Ateneo Law School and

has received support from students and other members of the faculty.

Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, an opposition lawmaker and

a former law school dean, said: “This may be an initial black eye for

the Court of Appeals ... but if [Sabio] just remained silent,

nothing will happen.”

Sabio also hails from Cagayan de Oro, where he once served as a

regional trial court judge.

He also taught law at the Ateneo de Cagayan-Xavier University,

where he gained prominence as a “terror” professor.

One of his former students, lawyer Edgardo Uy, told a

Cagayan de Oro newspaper that Sabio should be

trusted for his disclosures.

“I believe he is speaking the truth. I’ve known him since my

student days. That’s why I know he is honest,” Uy said.

Rodolfo Meñes, president of the Oro Chamber of Commerce


and Industry, described Sabio as a “good lawyer.”

“I am surprised that he is being dragged into this controversy.

I know him only professionally, but I know him as an honest

man,” Meñes told the Inquirer.

Preventive suspension

On Friday, a former Malabon City judge asked the Supreme Court

to order the preventive suspension of all appellate court justices

involved in the Meralco vs GSIS case.

In a “verified complaint-letter affidavit,” Florentino Floro Jr. said

these justices should be investigated for gross misconduct, gross

ignorance of the law, manifest undue interest and violations

of the Codes of Judicial Conduct and of Professional

Responsibility, among others.

Floro said the high court should once and for all

“cleanse the entire Court of Appeals.”

“The undersigned, in his conscience, knocks at the doors of this court,

because of the shocking events which rocked the very foundations of

our entire judicial system: CA justices accusing each other, not in courts,

but in the media. This is too much. This is the darkest hour of the CA since

its creation,” he said.

Floro named as respondents in the case Sabio and

Associate Justices Bienvenido Reyes, Apolinario Bruselas,

Myrna Dimaranan-Vidal and Vicente Roxas, as well as

CA Presiding Justice Conrado Vasquez Jr.

He said the high court should appoint one of its retired

associate justices as an independent investigator and

a special prosecutor to look into the matter.

Headline maker

Floro himself made headlines when he was ordered dismissed

from the judiciary in 2006 by the Supreme Court.

The high court declared him mentally unfit after he admitted to

having “psychic visions,” having dwarfs as friends and being

an “angel of death” who could inflict pain on people, especially

those he perceived to be corrupt.

Undeterred, Floro filed cases against judiciary officials he claimed

to have violated the law. In April 2007, he filed administrative charges

against what he called the CA’s “Dirty Dozen,” whom he accused of corruption.

He said those found guilty should be dismissed from government

service and disbarred.

With reports from Jerome Aning in Manila;

Ma. Cecilia Rodriguez, Inquirer Mindanao


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