‘Drug possession not immoral’
>> Sunday, May 31, 2015
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
It may be criminal, but possession of prohibited drugs is not immoral.
This is the ruling the Supreme Court (SC) has handed down in
the election protest against Ilocos Sur Rep. Ronald Singson, who was convicted
of drug trafficking by a Hong Kong court in 2011.
The SC upheld Singson’s election, which his opponent, lawyer
Bertrand Baterina, had questioned before the Commission on Elections (Comelec),
the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal (HRET) and later the high court
on the basis of his Hong Kong drug conviction.
The son of former Ilocos Sur Gov. Luis Singson was an
incumbent congressman at the time he was convicted. After serving time in a
Hong Kong jail, he returned to the country and regained his congressional seat
in the 2013 elections.
In seeking Singson’s disqualification, Baterina said his
opponent was convicted of a crime involving “moral turpitude,” which is defined
as anything “done contrary to justice, honesty, modesty or good morals.”
In 2010, Baterina said the Comelec disqualified Eduardo
Rodriguez as a Quezon congressional candidate because he was convicted of
insurance fraud in the United States, a crime involving moral turpitude.
Both the Comelec and the HRET threw out Baterina’s
complaints.
In upholding Singson’s election, the SC said the Comelec and
the HRET did not commit grave abuse of discretion in dismissing his opponent’s
complaints.
As for the Ilocos Sur congressman’s drug conviction, the
tribunal ruled that he was not guilty of a crime involving moral turpitude.
The SC said though Rep. Singson was charged with drug trafficking,
he “pleaded guilty to and was found to have merely possessed the illegal
drugs for his own consumption.”
“Mere possession of a prohibited drug cannot be considered
immoral by itself if it were not prohibited by law, much like illegal possession
of a deadly weapon and incidental participation in illegal recruitment,” the
court said.
“We have held that moral turpitude implies something
‘immoral in itself, regardless of the fact that it is punishable by law or not.
It must not merely be mala prohibita (wrong because prohibited), but the act
itself must inherently be immoral. The doing of the act itself, and not its
prohibition by statute, fixes the moral turpitude’,” it said.
The SC distinguished the act of pushing or trafficking in
illegal drugs from mere possession of prohibited substances.
“In Office of the Court Administrator vsLibrado, the case
cited by Baterina in order to prove that possession of a prohibited drug is a
crime involving moral turpitude, the respondent therein was held guilty of both
selling and possession of said drugs,” the court said.
“A careful examination of the discussion by this court shows
that it is the pushing or selling of said prohibited drugs, and not the mere
possession thereof, that is considered a crime involving moral turpitude,” the
SC added.
The SC sustained Singson’s election a year before the May 9,
2016 elections, in which he is expected to seek a new term. His brother is the
incumbent governor of their province.
The entire court resolved Singson’s case. Justices
Presbitero Velasco Jr., Diosdado Peralta and Lucas Bersamin did not take part
in the deliberations. The three sit in the HRET, which Velasco chairs.
***
Matchmaking through the Internet will soon be outlawed with
a bill seeking to outlaw the scheme related to mail order bride activities
moves towards final reading approval in the House of Representatives.
The measure, House Bill 5572, was recently approved on
second reading. Authors of the measure are confident it will pass final
reading without any amendments or oppositors.
HB 5572, a consolidation of two bills, seeks to protect
Filipino men and women against unlawful matchmaking and mail order activities
through both the postal service or the Internet.
The bill will repeal Republic Act 6955 or the anti-mail
order bride law which was enacted 25 years ago. RA 6955 outlawed mail-order
bride services in the Philippines, banning the practice of matching
specifically Filipino women for marriage to foreign nationals using mail,
advertisement, publication, printing or distribution of brochures, fliers and
other propaganda materials.
With House Bill 5572, to be known as the Anti-Mail Order
Spouse Act, it shall be unlawful to match both Filipino men and women for
marriage or common law partnership to foreign nationals using the postal
service and the Internet.
Principal authors are Reps. Cinchona Cruz-Gonzales (CIBAC
Party-list) and Alfredo D. Vargas III (5th District, Quezon City),
respectively.
In the explanatory note of her bill, Cruz-Gonzales said the
measure aims to protect not only Filipino women but Filipino men as well
against unscrupulous individuals who operate unlawful matchmaking activities
and similar schemes through media, particularly the Internet.
“With the advent of the Internet, online matchmaking
websites have proliferated and largely replaced traditional paper-based
classifieds,” Cruz-Gonzales said.
On the other hand, Vargas called for the repeal of RA 6955,
pointing out that the law has failed to curb the perils of women trafficking
and failed to anticipate the proliferation of the mail-order bride industry in
the Internet.
“At present, it has also been a trend for Filipino men to be
engaged in mail-order spouse schemes and RA 6955 does not protect them from
falling prey to exploitation,” Vargas said.
Under the bill, the use or creation of matchmaking websites
in the Philippines is prohibited if it is created for the purpose of matching
Filipinos for marriage or common law partnership to foreign nationals on a
mail-order basis, through personal introduction or through emails or websites
in the Internet.
HB 5572 also prohibits the exhibit, and to advertise,
publish, print or distribute, or cause the exhibition, advertisement,
publication, printing or distribution of any brochure, flier or any propaganda
material, including those distributed and made available through the Internet,
which are calculated to promote the prohibited acts in the measure.
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