DOJ orders release of 3 P’sinan Japanese in ‘cybersex den’ raid
>> Sunday, March 30, 2014
LINGAYEN,
Pangasinan -- The Department of Justice
has ordered the release of three Japanese nationals arrested in a
suspected cybersex den here last week due to the flawed complaint filed by the
police.
In a six-page resolution dated March 21,
investigating prosecutors said the police were not able to submit
evidence in filing the charges against Takayuki Umeda, 42; Jyunko Wang, 36; and
Masahiro Kishigami, 26, for supposed violations of Republic Act 10364 (Expanded
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2012).
“The complaint affidavit of the arresting officers merely stated that
the police officers implemented the search warrant issued by the (Pangasinan)
court. Nowhere in the said affidavit was it shown how the crime of trafficking
in persons was committed,” read the DOJ resolution signed by Assistant
Prosecutors Gilmarie Fe Pacamarra and Mark Roland Estepa.
“It would have been more prudent, to say the least, for the police
officers to have presented the witnesses and/or submitted the affidavits that
were used in the application of the search warrant from the Regional Trial
Court of San Carlos City, Pangasinan. This, they do not do,” it said.
Apart from the three Japanese, also ordered released were the four
locals who were arrested and charged with them: Erlinda Tandoc, Leonora
Ceralde, Josephine Gille, and Rafael Tandoc.
The DOJ panel, however, did not immediately dismiss the charges and
instead gave the Philippine National Police-Criminal Investigation and
Detection Group and the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission a chance
to present evidence in a hearing on April 2.
It only dismissed the separate charge of illegal possession of firearm
against the respondents after the police admitted that the confiscated
.22-caliber revolver was not part of the search warrant and failed to produce
documents to show that the gun had no license.
The three Japanese and four Filipinos were arrested in a raid on the
Japanese learning school of Kame Hachi Corp. in Lingayen last March 17.
Police seized six laptops, 55 desktops, 44 CPUs, a Toyota Grandia, a
.22-caliber revolver, webcams, headsets, UPS, USB, five mobile phones,
passports, ATM cards, transaction payments, and cash in pesos and yen.
The learning school allegedly operated a porn site, which enticed
Japanese men to come to Manila for sexual favors.
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