Tuguegarao mayor fights dismissal order
>> Thursday, September 11, 2014
TUGUEGARAO CITY – Mayor Jefferson Soriano
vowed before thousands of supporters here Thursday to exhaust all legal means
to overturn the order of the Office of the Ombudsman dismissing him for alleged
abuse of authority.
“We will file a motion
for reconsideration once we formally receive the order from the ombudsman,” he
said.
“I will continue to
discharge my duties as your duly elected mayor until the order becomes final
and executory,” he told placard-bearing supporters during an indignation and
prayer rally at the St. Peter’s Cathedral grounds here.
Civic leaders here deplored
the ombudsman’s order, saying it was “too harsh” and “arbitrary.”
Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales
ordered the dismissal of Soriano and city administrator Ronald Brilliantes in a
resolution dated Aug. 20.
Councilor Maila
Ting-Que filed a complaint against Soriano for abuse of authority and
grave misconduct over the operation of a flea market and carnival during the
city’s fiesta from August to September last year without authority of the
city council.
Que is the daughter of
former mayor Delfin Ting, whom Soriano defeated in the 2013 elections.
“Only because of a
flea market, they would unseat a person voted popularly by the people,” civic
leader Ronald Guzman said.
He added that putting
up a flea market during Tuguegarao festivities is a tradition even during the
incumbency of the Tings.
Soriano, a former
police official, had just reassumed his post in May following a 90-day
preventive suspension by the Sandiganbayan for his alleged involvement in the
P34-million helicopter scam.
Soriano, who also
served as police director for Cagayan Valley, was among those implicated in the
helicopter controversy, along with former Philippine National Police chief
Jesus Verzosa.
In her order,
Ombudsman Carpio-Morales cancelled Soriano’s civil service eligibility,
forfeited his retirement benefits and disqualified him perpetually from holding
public office.
Aside from
Soriano, the ombudsman imposed the same penalty on city administrator
Ronald Brillantes for allegedly acting “for and in behalf” of the mayor.
Soriano earlier said
he was willing to step down once the Department of the Interior and Local
Government serves the suspension order.
Que said Soriano
violated the law when he allowed a private individual to operate a carnival and
a bargain sale during the city’s fiesta last year without the permission of the
city council.
She said that on July
18, 2013, Soriano wrote the city council asking for authority for the conduct
of a bargain sale and closure of portions of Gomez, Del Rosario and Gonzaga
streets.
But Soriano, Que said,
had already allowed the conduct of such an activity even before he asked the
city council’s permission.
Records showed that on
July 11 of the same year, Soriano issued a special permit to a certain Vicky
Medina allowing her to hold the sale.
The permit was issued
through a memorandum signed by Brillantes.
Que said both
officials ordered the closure of the streets for the construction of the stalls
even before the council could issue a permit.
The ombudsman found
sufficient evidence to hold Soriano and Brillantes liable for grave misconduct.
“The local chief
executive is merely an executor, enforcer and implementer of the will of the
legislature,” said graft investigators Johanna Young and Bayani Jacinto in the
ruling.
The ombudsman said
Soriano had no “plenary authority to cause the closure of local roads.”
Copies of the
ombudsman’s decision were submitted to the Civil Service Commission, the
Commission on Elections, and the Government Service Insurance System. Deputy
Ombudsman for Luzon Gerard Mosquera advised the concerned government agencies
to comply with the order.
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