Ex-Capas, Tarlac mayor, 3 more convicted of graft
>> Tuesday, February 5, 2019
CAPAS, Tarlac -- Former
mayor Hermes Frias of this town and three others have been found guilty of two
counts of graft by the Sandiganbayan First Division, and have been
sentenced to a maximum of 20 years imprisonment.
Frias,
together with former Municipal Administrative Officer Gener Taruc, former
Municipal Accountant Rolando Domingo, and former Municipal Budget Officer Nick
Ayuyao, were earlier charged with three counts of graft as well as one count
each of falsification and malversation.
This was for
the purchase of several items from different suppliers even though the latter
were not licensed and authorized to do business by the Department of Trade and
Industry.
For the first
two graft charges, Frias and his co-accused purchased items worth P241,146.05
from S&E Enterprises and P456,635.43 from Gem Trading sometime between
October 1996 to June 1997.
For the next
graft charge, they approved the payment of P18,915 for the purchase of
electronic calculators from Samie Sicat on March 22, 1997, even though there
were no pertinent documents to support the purchase and delivery of the item.
Frias and the
others were charged with falsification and malversation due to the falsified
official receipts of 716 Enterprise owned by Roberto Rebosa between April 25 to
June 20, 1997.
They
reportedly made it appear that 42 pails of chlorbocide were purchased even
though none was really made, so the amount P711,320.40 was liquidated from the
government.
The defense
tried to argue that Gem Trading was already operating in other localities such
as Quezon City, Cagayan, and Batangas. But the court found this reasoning
“untenable.”
“Common sense
also dictates that it is highly incredulous that the municipality went
canvassing from as far as the said provinces just to procure rice and mango
seedlings,” the court ruled.
Frias and the
others also defended themselves by saying that S&E Enterprises was
registered in the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). But based on DTI
records, S&E was only registered in 2005.
Both
testimonial and documentary evidence sufficiently prove that the accused acted
with evident bad faith, manifest partiality, and gross inexcusable negligence
when they entered into transactions with the unlicensed suppliers, the court
ruled.
However, the
same cannot be said of their falsification and malversation charges. While
Sicat said that his name was used by the accused to facilitate the calculator
transaction, he did not execute an affidavit or sworn statement. He was neither
presented as a witness.
At the same
time, no credible witness was presented to testify that the calculators were
not delivered. The court ruled that the presumption is that there was
regularity in the purchase and delivery of the items.
As for the
purchase of 42 pails of chlorbocide, the court said that the non-delivery
of the items has not been proven as well. It was the supplier, Rebosa, who said
during the audit investigation that the official receipts they sent were blank.
However,
Rebosa was not presented as a witness. The prosecution also failed to present
any expert witness who can compare the signature of Rebosa to that of
signatures appearing on the reportedly falsified receipts.
“Hence, the
presumption of validity and regularity prevails over allegations of forgery and
fraud,” the court ruled.
Frias and his
co-accused were acquitted of their other graft charge, as well as falsification
and malversation charges.
The 29-page
decision was penned by Associate Justice Efren Dela Cruz with the concurrence
of Associate Justices Geraldine Faith Econg and Edgardo Caldona.
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