BAGUIO CITY – A
religious pastor denied allegations of Mayor Benjamin Magalong that he, a
“general” and their alleged cohorts had been collecting money in exchange of
fake land deals here at Purok 28, Barangay Irisan.
Pastor Alex
Lupian said Magalong could have been deceived and misinformed by persons like
land claimants who were protecting vested interests over the lot that he owns
over the area.
Lupian said
the property is the same estate that Magalong himself had investigated and
found to be valid and enforceable in the Criminal Investigation Detection Group
report sometime in 2015.
He urged
Magalong to review the voluminous report.
Magalong was
then national CIDG chief at that time.
Lupian urged
anybody in government or private entities to file a case against him so the
truth will come out.
The pastor
said Magalong could start a full-fledged investigation on the matter.
He added a
“can of worms” of shenanigans of former and present city or line agency
officials could come out of the investigation.
Lupian said
he has all the legal papers to prove ownership of the property he acquired
through legal means.
He said he
sold parts of the property since he owns it, but squatters have set up
structures in other areas of the lot.
According to
the pastor, he met Joel Mayol, the purported former general in Manila who
volunteered to secure the property when he told him squatters have set up
structures over the area.
A city
government press release cited Magalong as saying Mayol had been involved in
fake land deals and enticing people from the lowlands to buy.
Lupian said
Mayol is preparing legal moves with his lawyer following Magalong’s allegations
so he was not commenting on matters related to Mayol yet.
But he said
the picture of Mayol that Magalong showed during a press conference at city
hall when he made the “expose” was not the person that he knew as Mayol but a
different person.
He said the
Mayol that he knew was a good person.
Lupian added
Judge Cecilia Dulay-Archog of the Regional Trial Court, First Judicial Region
of Baguio recently ruled that he owned the property when a claimant tried to
prevent him from fencing the area.
He said he
was at a loss how claimants were able to get OCTs over lots where they set up
structures.
Lupian said
he has the mother OCT 097 and OCTs derived from the mother OCT were irregular
since the purported owners could not show deeds of sale or donation over the
properties.
“I told them
if they can show me the deeds of sale over the properties they are occupying,
then I can give them the land for free, but they cannot,” he said.
Lupian urged
Magalong to conduct a full-fledged investigation over the matter to set the
record straight so he will not be put in a bad light.
He said the
mayor could start with the City Registry of Deeds on how the fake OCTs were
issued.
The
Sandiganbayan sentenced last January a former Register of Deeds chief of Baguio
City to eight years imprisonment after being found guilty of graft over an
illegal land transaction in 2010.
The
Sandiganbayan 1st Division, ordered former Baguio Register of Deeds Juanito Ampaguey to be
perpetually disqualified from holding public office.
The Office of
the Ombudsman charged Ampaguey with graft for allegedly cancelling on April 14,
2010 a certain Ong's transfer certificate of title for a parcel of land in
Baguio City, consisting of 755 square meters, by issuing a transfer certificate
of title in favor of spouses Ferdinand and Rhighina Samidan, without requiring
the owner's duplicate copy of the TCT or a court order.
Other legitimate
land owners have complained that their land titles were “overlapped” by other
titles in the office among other anomalies.
This could
have happened in the case of Lupian’s property, sources said.
Lupian said aside
from the ROD, the Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources could also be
asked on how papers of claimants over his property were processed.
Lupian said
he was not hiding contrary to what Magalong said. “I’m here at my house most of
the time. What can they arrest me for?”
On
allegations that he was transacting properties here in Barangay Loakan and
Philex, Tuba, Benguet, he said these were the figments of imagination of an
official of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples.
Another
source said the NCIP official was close to a former city top official whose
daughter is reportedly collecting monthly “amortization” over other lots in the
area.
Lupian said
the NCIP official just wanted to get a cut from the millions of royalties to be
paid by Philex Mining Corp. to indigenous peoples in Tuba.
A memorandum
of agreement was reportedly made earlier by the IPs that they will be paid as
one and that projects they will have as a result of the royalties would be
stipulated.
However, the
IPs reportedly fought over the money and could not come up with a common stand.
Lupian said
he was the one who mediated which resulted to unity among them.
Following
this, the NCIP official reportedly tried to discredit Lupian by trying to get
into the good graces of the IPs so he could get a cut of the millions of pesos
in royalties. --AD
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