Trail of bloody politics:3 dead, 2 seriously hurt in N. Ecija gun attack
>> Tuesday, August 20, 2013
By Liam
Anacleto
GAPAN CITY – In what was seen as continuation
of a long trail of bloody politics, a policeman and two civilians, including a
maritime student, were killed while two others, including an 86-year-old woman,
were listed in critical condition when five heavily armed men fired at the
vehicle owned by a son of a former mayoral candidate here Tuesday morning.
Supt. Bernard Orig,
Gapan police chief, identified the fatalities as PO2 Jefferson Lim; King Jasper
Juvinal, a student of the Midway Maritime Academy; and driver Rufino Vendivil,
44.
Juvinal and Vendivil
were killed on the spot while Lim died while being treated at a local hospital.
Confined at the
intensive care unit of the Good Samaritan Hospital were Consuelo Manse, 86, and
Rodney Garcia, 16.
Emerson Pascual, whose
two brothers were among those slain in the 2006 cockpit attack here, escaped
unhurt in the ambush at around 10:30 a.m. Tuesday along Tinio Street in
Barangay San Lorenzo.
Police said Pascual
and his companions had just alighted from the vehicle and were about to enter a
restaurant when they were fired upon by the still unidentified men who fled on
board a beige Toyota Hi-lux vehicle with license plate TT-1506.
Senior Supt. Crizaldo
Nieves, provincial police director who rushed to this city following the
ambush, said probers had yet to establish the motive.
But Pascual said prior
to the incident, he came across Caloy Barlis, chairman of Barangay Sta. Cruz and
a staunch ally of former three-term mayor Ernesto Natividad, father of
incumbent Mayor Maricel Natividad.
He said he had just
attended the interment rites for a childhood friend and even greeted Barlis. “A
minute after, it happened,” he said.
The elder Natividad,
his late brother Romeo and 17 others, including one Ricardo Peralta, were
tagged in the killing of Pascual’s brothers Erickson and Ebertson in their
cockpit in 2006.
A year later, the
Pascuals’ father Rodrigo ran for mayor against the elder Natividad but lost.
The elder Natividad
went into hiding in February 2012 after the Manila court issued a warrant for
his arrest in connection with the cockpit raid and after all 19 suspects were
placed on a hold-departure order by the Bureau of Immigration on orders of
Judge Felixberto Olalia Jr. of Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 8.
The Pascual family
raised a P1-million reward for the arrest of Natividad and his co-accused.
The elder Natividad
though was arrested while undergoing dialysis in Metro Manila a few months
before the May 2013 elections.
His brother Romeo died
while in hiding.
The Department of
Justice (DOJ) initially ordered the filing of murder charges against the
suspects in 2009 and forwarded this to the Office of the Ombudsman for review.
On Feb. 10, 2009, the
Office of the Ombudsman affirmed the DOJ ruling. But when the two Natividads
and Peralta filed a motion for reconsideration, then Ombudsman Merceditas
Gutierrez reversed her ruling on April 8, 2009, excluding the three from the
charge sheet.
The slain Pascual
brothers’ mother Cristina appealed the Ombudsman ruling.
On Nov. 25, 2011,
Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, however, found probable cause and ordered the
filing of murder charges against the two Natividads and
Peralta.
In her resolution,
Carpio-Morales said the DOJ ruling should have been affirmed outright because
the three filed their motions for reconsideration way too late, thus rendering
as final and executory the Ombudsman’s Feb. 10, 2009 ruling upholding the DOJ’s
findings.
The murder cases were
eventually transferred to the sala of Manila RTC Branch 10 Judge Virgilio
Alameda who, on Sept. 17 last year, also found probable cause against former
mayor Natividad and Peralta based on the records of the preliminary
investigation and affirmed the findings of both the Office of the Ombudsman and
the DOJ.
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