Mulcting illegal drug suspects
>> Monday, March 10, 2014
EDITORIAL
The alleged practice
of anti-narcotics agents and police of mulcting money from arrested illegal
drug suspects was brought to national prominence with the recent arrest of many
members of the Criminal Investigation Detection Group in Pampanga.
A “Baguio
boy” and former director of Cordillera police -- Chief Supt. Benjamin Magalong,
now new CIDG director personally
led Monday a raid of the CIDG’s
provincial office in Pampanga arresting its chief and six of his men for
alleged criminal activities known as “Agaw Bato.”
Arrested
were Chief Insp. Bienvenido Reydado, head of Pampanga Criminal Investigation
and Detection Team (CIDT), and six of his deputized CIDT agents, who yielded a
cache of loose firearms and P2.6 million cash.
The
civilian agents were identified as Adriano Laureta, Arnold Sanggalang, Eric
Reydado, PedritoTadeo, Alberto Reydado and Edwardson Sisracon.
“The most
important here is that we ourselves are acting on rogue elements of the CIDG,”
said Magalong who vowed not to tolerate wrongdoings in their ranks.
He said
Reydado’s team was allegedly engaged in a scheme in which they arrest bigtime
drug suspects, seize their supply of drugs and then keep them in a safehouse
until the syndicate comes up with a considerable amount in exchange for setting
them free.
Magalong
said they have long receiving reports about this modus operandi of Pampanga
CIDG operatives, dubbed as “Agaw Bato.”
Based on
the intelligence reports that became basis for the raid, the group of Reydado
would target foreign drug traffickers operating in Pampanga and nearby areas.
“In some
cases, they were also monitored to have conducted their illegal activities in
Metro Manila,” said Magalong.
Once
Reydado has control of the drugs, his civilian agents are allegedly the ones
who puts out the drugs in the underground market.
This
resulted in the relief of Senior Supt. Vic Valencia, CIDG Regional Officer for
Central Luzon, for command responsibility.
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