CABUGAO, Ilocos Sur --
The Supreme Court has been asked to look into the validity of an arrest warrant
issued against Mayor Edward Cobangbang of this town by a supposedly suspended
judge.
The Filipino
League of Advocates for Good Governance (FLAGG) last week questioned the order
issued by acting Cabugao Regional Trial Court Judge Raphiel Alzate for the
arrest of Cobangbang and 18 others.
The order
stemmed from a case involving the closure of a local beach resort with the
operator and a four-year-old boy trapped inside.
The National
Bureau of Investigation is now hunting down Cobangbang who was ordered arrested
over the padlocking of a government-owned resort with its operator and
four-year-old son trapped inside.
Justice
Secretary Menardo Guevarra said NBI agents have joined the manhunt for
Cobangbang after Ilocos Sur police failed to serve a warrant of arrest for
serious illegal detention and grave coercion.
“The NBI has
tapped... agents to arrest Mayor Cobangbang pursuant to the warrant issued by
the RTC,” Guevarra said, referring to the order of Cabugao Regional Trial Court
Branch 24 Judge Raphiel Alzate.
Guevarra said
prosecutors would also seek the issuance of a hold departure order against
Cobangbang.
The Dept. of
the Interior and Local Government had appointed Vice Mayor Deogracias Jose
Victorino Savellano as acting mayor of Cabugao.
The DILG
regional office said Cobangbang is “temporarily incapacitated” to perform the
responsibilities of a town mayor in view of the charges he is facing.
Cobangbang
and 18 others were ordered arrested after the court upheld the finding of
probable cause by the Dept. of Justice in the complaint filed by resort
operator Virginia Ong.
The DOJ
granted the petition for review that Ong filed and reversed the April 23, 2018
resolution of the provincial prosecutor’s office that dismissed the charges for
lack of probable cause.
The elements
of serious illegal detention were present in the case, noting that a private
individual was detained by a public official without lawful basis, according to
the DOJ.
Ong, her son
and some of her employees were forced to stay in the padlocked resort until
their lawyer and the police arrived the following day.
The court
said the offense is non-bailable.
Prior to the
incident, Cobangbang demanded that Ong and her employees leave the resort. Ong
refused, saying her lease contract is until 2025.
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