Ombudsman dismisses charges against Mt Province ex- mayor
>> Monday, March 7, 2016
Filed by Mt Province PNP chief in Paracelis standoff
PARACELIS, Mountain Province – The Office of the Ombudsman has cleared
charges against a former mayor here for charges arising from an illegal search
of a house allegedly owned by the town’s top executive which led to barricades
and a standoff between the mayor’s men and police.
Cleared was former mayor Avelino C. Amangyen for two charges filed by
then police provincial director William W. Viteno for violation of Presidential
Decree No. 1829 and Ernesto Gunday and Joyce Viteno for violation of Section
3(g) of Republic Act. No. 3019 for grave misconduct, dishonesty and conduct
prejudicial to the best interest of the service docketed as OMB-L-C-0514 &
OMB-L-A-12-0597.
Copies of the dismissal papers on charges reached headquarters of the
Amangyen for Mayor Movement recently.
“This is timely to clear our name, hence we are seeking again the
mayoralty post of Paracelis” said Amangyen.
Viteno filed his complaint on May 31, 2012 while Gunday and Joyce Viteno
filed their complaint on May 24, 2012 during the incumbency of then Mayor
Amangyen.
After two years of court promulgation and litigation, Ombudsman Conchita
Carpio Morales dismissed the cases on Dec. 23.
A copy of the dismissal order signed Nov. 4, 2015 by Anjuli Larla A.
Tan-eneran, graft investigation and prosecution officer and Adoracion A. Agbada
of the Office of the Ombudsman and Morales was furnished to the Northern
Philippine Times.
In his compliant, Viteno said a
search warrant was issued based on information that respondent Amangyen was
keeping a stockpile of narra lumber inside his furniture shop in Sitio Pataga,
Poblacion, Paracelis.
Viteno then coordinated with officials of Barangay Poblacion to act as
witnesses to the search.
While the confiscation of the lumber was underway, Amangyen allegedly
arrived and negotiated for the confiscation of only a part of the stockpile,
which complainant refused.
Thereafter, the barangay officials left the site without witnessing the
confiscation. When complainant and his men were about to transport some of the
confiscated lumber to the police station, they learned that barricades and
spikes were placed along the road by respondent’s sympathizers to block their
way.
Viteno, in his complaint thus instructed his men to stand guard over the
remaining lumber until they could be transported.
Early in the morning of the next day, a group of around 100 men
allegedly led by respondent appeared, swarmed the furniture shop and started
taking away the remaining lumber to an
undisclosed location.
Complainant could do nothing since he and his men were reportedly
outnumbered. Once all the lumber was gone, complainant asked respondent to
clear the road and allow them to leave, which respondent acceded to.
To corroborate his allegations against respondent, Viteno submitted sworn
statements of police officers and photographs showing the barricades and spikes
placed along the road.
Amangyen denied the allegations, averring the following: he did not own
the furniture shop searched by complainant and his men; said furniture shop was
actually owned and operated by Johnny B. Cailin (Cailin;) the search of the
furniture shop was improper and irregular since the search warrant was issued
in his respondent) name and not in the name of Cailin; he was there because
Cailin sought his assistance; despite being informed on who the actual owner of
the shop was, Viteno and his men still continued in taking away the lumber; and
complainant’s men tried to compel the barangay officials to sign their
accomplishment report even prior to conducting the search.
Amangyen said he did not know that a number of civilians had gathered
around the shop. He later learned that said group of civilians were the
individual owners of the forest products inside the shop; he was not around
when the civilians allegedly blocked the road and he only came to know of the
blockade when he went back to the shop and saw the fallen trees along the road.
The complaint was dismissed for insufficiency of evidence since
complainant failed to prove the following: first, the ownership by respondent
of the furniture shop where the narra lumber was stockpiled; second, the
validity and regularity of the conducted search; and third, that respondent was
the one who amassed the group of civilians and instructed them to block the
road and take away the lumber that remained in the shop.
“It then follows that since respondent was not the owner of the
furniture shop, as indeed borne out by the records, then the issued search
warrant in respondent’s name was defective and the conducted search was
invalid. Complainant did not even submit to this Office the purported search
warrant used to conduct the search of the furniture shop and confiscate the
lumber found therein.
“On the other hand, respondent was able to adequately explain his
presence in the furniture shop i.e., in response to the plea for assistance
from Cailin, the shop owner. Considering further that respondent’s defenses
remained unrefuted and complainant failed to prove that respondent was the one
responsible for the acts of the group of civilians, the present complaint
against respondent necessarily fails.
“Wherefore, the complaint for Violation of Section 1(b) of Presidential
Decree No. 1829 filed against Avelino C. Amangyen is dismissed for
insufficiency of evidence,” The Ombudsman said.
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