LINGAYEN, Pangasinan – Police filed four
counts of murder and three counts of frustrated murder against a policeman for
killing three teachers and a loan collector and wounding three other teachers
in a shooting rampage at the Pangasinan National High School (PNHS) here at
around 4 p.m. on Monday.
The complaints were
filed against Police Officer 3 Domino Alipio, a resident of Calasiao town and
assigned at Anda police station, said Supt.Reynante Panay, Lingayen police
chief.
Alipio shot dead
Florenda Flores, teacher at Labrador National High School, a resident of
Libsong West, Lingayen; AcidelloSison, teacher at the PNHS and a resident of
Barangay Maniboc; Jonalito Urayan of Barangay Gabon in Calasiao town, and
Linda Sison, teacher of PNHS.
Authorities blamed the
teachers’ unpaid loans for the shooting.
Flores was reportedly
an agent of Alipio in extending loans to the teachers while Urayan was a
collector.
The wounded –
Ferdinand Entimano, Jovito Jimenez and Juliet Molano, who are all teachers of
PNHS – are still confined at the Pangasinan Provincial Hospital, Trauma
Hospital in Dagupan City, and Lingayen Community Hospital, respectively.
Senior Supt. Reynaldo
Biay, officer-in-charge police director of Pangasinan, assured the victims’
families that justice will be served.
He also told Alma Ruby
Torio, schools division superintendent of Pangasinan, during a dialogue Tuesday
afternoon that the police will provide security to the school and the
division office following the incident.
He said six policemen,
or two for each shift, will be deployed at the PNHS.
The question of what
drove the cop to do the crime may lie with his “superiors” in the Philippine
National Police.
PO3 Alipio, admitted he could be liable to his
“superiors” whom he borrowed the money from and lent to the teachers.
Armed with a Cal.45
pistol, a carbine rifle and a hand grenade, Alipio gunned down three teachers
and his own collector in a school rampage blamed on a money-lending business
gone sour at PNHS where about 39 teachers and employees owed the suspect large
sums of money.
Pangasinan Gov. Amado
Espino Jr. has ordered a two-day suspension of classes at the school to allow
the faculty and students to recover from the trauma of the shooting incident.
From initial reports,
Alipio had been having problems collecting on loans he had extended to PNHS
teachers and employees and was growing desperate over his inability to recover
investments in his business.
“Paano naman ako, sir?
Kung hindi ako makakasingil, eh di ako naman ang yayariin! Yung kinakapital ko dito
ay pera ng mga higher ups ko (What will happen to me, sir? If I cannot collect,
then I will be in trouble. The capital I used came from my superiors),” Alipio
had allegedly told PNHS principal Florante Tamondong just days before the
shooting.
Tamondong said that
one of the slain teachers, Linda Sison, had racked up debts of more than
P200,000.
The school official
added that teachers and employees who had bad loans with Alipio have been
receiving death threats for weeks before the shooting incident, prompting them
to report these to the Lingayen police.
Apparently driven to
desperation, Alipio confronted Flores, his alleged middleman with his PNHS
debtors, and Urayan, who was his own collector, around 4 p.m. Monday inside one
of the classrooms about the status of collections at the school.
“There were
allegations that his own people – Flores and Urayan – were conniving against
him,” said Supt. Reynate Panay, Lingayen police chief.
Then suddenly, in a
fit of rage, Alipio drew his Cal.45 pistol and gunned down Flores and Urayan.
Urayan apparently bore
the brunt of his boss’ anger as Alipio riddled him with 15 bullet wounds while
Flores was shot twice.
Alipio then headed to
a nearby classroom, turned his ire on a group of teachers having an after-class
meeting and went on a shooting spree that killed Acidello Sison on-the-spot and
left Linda Sison mortally wounded.
He also shot and
wounded the four other PNHS teachers in that room.
Responding police
collared Alipio inside one of the school buildings after a brief exchange of
gunfire.
Also arrested was
Oliver Ganigan, reportedly Alipio’s driver.
Lingayen police chief
Supt. Reynante Panay said Alipio, along with his driver Oliver Ganigan and
Urayan, went to the PNHS to collect payments from several teachers.
Panay said the suspect
was furious when Flores failed to pay.
Alipio reportedly shot
Flores and Urayan before killing the Sisons.
Responding policemen
arrested Alipio and Ganigan after the incident.
The Pangasinan police
condemned Alipio’s acts. Senior Insp. Diomedes Bonales, Anda police
chief, said Alipio was off-duty at the time of the incident.
Bonales said Alipio
was assigned as patroller and liaison officer at the police station last April.
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