Trial court judge shot dead in La Union; guns for judicial execs pushed
>> Tuesday, November 12, 2019
By
Freddie Lazaro
SAN FERNANDO CITY, La
Union – Surigao del Sur 2nd Rep. Johnny Pimentel on Wednesday renewed his
call for the creation of up to 3,000 new positions for armed judicial
protection officers.
“We cannot allow these
brazen attacks on judges to go on without a forceful answer,” said Pimentel, a Deputy
Speaker in the 18th Congress.
Pimentel was
reacting to the killing of Tagudin, Ilocos Sur Regional Trial Court Branch 25
Judge Mario Anacleto Bañez who was 54.
“Our hearts
go out to the family of Judge Bañez, and our thoughts and prayers are with them,”
Pimentel said.
Banez died
when unidentified suspects ambushed him while on his way home to his family
here in San Fernando City Tuesday afternoon.
Lt. Col.
Silverio Ordinado, spokesperson of the La Union police provincial office,
confirmed that Judge Anacleto Mario Marrero Bañez, 53, of the RTC branch 25 in
Tagudin, Ilocos Sur, was driving home aboard his Hyundai Accent vehicle with
plate number ACL 1508 when the assassins began firing at him along Barangay
Mameltac in San Fernando City at around 5:40 p.m.
The judge did
not reach the Bethany Hospital alive where he was rushed after the incident.
Initial
reports said the judge suffered a headshot.
Ordinado said
the La Union police launched a thorough investigation on the incident, while
police stations in nearby towns in San Fernando City have launched dragnet
operations against the suspects, who allegedly used a blue colored motorcycle
as getaway vehicle from the crime scene.
Banez
reportedly dismissed murder charges filed against a female human rights worker
recently by the military.
Last week,
Pimentel expressed support behind Supreme Court Chief Justice Diosdado
Peralta’s initiative to establish a new protective service patterned after the
United States Marshals Service’s (USMS) Judicial Security Division (JSD).
In America,
the USMS’s JSD protects judges and justices, guards court proceedings and
conferences, and secures buildings and properties used by members of the
judiciary.
The division
also conducts “protective investigations” of potential security threats to
members of the judiciary.
The USMS
currently has 3,900 marshals and investigators. The service also retains
private contractors that provide more than 4,000 bailiffs or court security
officers (CSOs) in America.
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