A5 AppelantsBrief
A5 AppelantsBrief
A5 AppelantsBrief
SUPREME COURT
Manila
En Banc
October 2003
APPELLANTS’ BRIEF 2
People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
SUBJECT INDEX………………………………………………………………….
ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORS……………………………………………………...
ARGUMENT……………………………………………………………………….
I. ………………………………………………………………………
II. ………………………………………………………………………
III. ………………………………………………………………………
IV. ………………………………………………………………………
V. ………………………………………………………………………
VI. ………………………………………………………………………
VII. ………………………………………………………………………
VIII. ………………………………………………………………………
IX. ………………………………………………………………………
X. ………………………………………………………………………
XI. & XII. …………………………………………………………………..
RELIEF……………………………………………………………………………...
ANNEXES
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
SUBJECT INDEX
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORS
II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN THIS CASE OF MURDER AND FIVE
DEATH SENTENCES WITH ITS OVER-RELIANCE ON AND GIVING
CREDENCE TO THE TESTIMONY OF THE LONE ALLEGED
EYEWITNESS PRESENTED IN COURT, SECURITY GUARD FREDDIE
ALEJO, FOR THE PROSECUTION WHICH IS CHARACTERIZED BY
MATERIAL OMISSIONS, CONTRADICTIONS, UNRELIABILITY,
INCREDIBILITY, AND DISCREPANCIES.
IV. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT RULED THAT “IT DOES
APPEAR FROM THE RECORD THAT BOTH SECURITY GUARDS,
WHOSE PRESENCE IN THE VICINITY OF THE CRIME SCENE
CANNOT BE DOUBTED, CONFIRMED THAT JOEL DE JESUS WAS
ONE OF THE PERPERTRATORS OF THE KILLING OF ROLANDO
ABADILLA,” AND FAILED TO PROPERLY APPRECIATE THE
TESTIMONY OF THE OTHER SECURITY GUARD EYEWITNESS,
MERLITO HERBAS, WHICH BELIES THAT OF ALEJO.
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Nature of Action
This is an automatic review of the death penalty imposed on the five accused-
appellants by the trial court in a criminal case for murder. Specifically, this is the
Abadilla on 13 June 1996 while he was in the driver's seat of hiscar caught in traffice
along Katipunan Ave., Quezon City. The five accused-appellants - SPO2 Cesar Fortuna,
Rameses de Jesus, Lenido Lumanog, Joel de Jesus, and Augusto Santos - have come to
be known as the "Abadilla 5." This brief pertains to accused-appellants Lumanog and
Summary of Proceedings
On 25 June 1996, the Information for murder was filed as Criminal Case No. Q-
96-66684 in the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Quezon City. It was initially raffled to
Branch 86 under Judge Teodoro Bay. Actually, informations for theft (Q-96-66679) and
illegal possession of firearms (Q-96-66680, Q-96-66682, & Q-96-66683) were also filed
together with the one for murder. But since these other charges were dismissed in the
trial court's Joint Decision on these five cases, we shall no longer discuss these other
charges, except in so far as their dismissals also support the innocence of the accused-
The previous day, 24 June 1996, the rounded-up suspects of the Abadilla murder
were first brought out in public at a police press conference after several days when they
torture, and coerced confessions by their arresting officers. It was immediately after that
press conference that the suspects were brought to the prosecutor's office for summary
inquest. Also on that day, some of the wives of the presented suspects filed complaints
for torture and other human rights violations with the Commission on Human Rights
(CHR). This initiated a parallel proceeding to that of the Abadilla murder case.
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
On 10 July 1996, the Abadilla murder case was re-raffled to Branch 219 under
Judge Jose Mendoza a week after Judge Bay inhibited himself. On 18 July, the accused
were arraigned and pleaded "not guilty." Defense lawyers waived preliminary
evidence on 1 August.
In the meantime, on 26 July 1996, the CHR issued its Resolution on the
complaints of the Abadilla murder suspects and wives, finding that respondent police
officers could have violated the visitorial rights and right to counsel of the suspects,
including arbitrary detention of the latter, and forwarding the records of the case to the
By April 1997, the prosecution in the Abadilla murder case rested its case with its
eyewitness security guard Freddie Alejo. On 11 July, Judge Mendoza inhibited himself,
and the case was subsequently re-raffled to Branch 103 under Judge Jaime Salazar, Jr.
The latter therefore had not personally heard and observed any of the testimonies of the
prosecution witnesses, including Alejo. On 14 August, the trial court dismissed the case
evidence for each of the accused. Most of 1998 was devoted to presentation of evidence
for the defense, with alibi and denial as the main defenses. On 23 April 1999, the defense
rested its case with the filing of several formal offers of evidence, notably the one for
accused Fortuna.
On 11 August 1999, the trial court of Judge Salazar promulgated his Joint
Decision dated July 30, 1999 sentencing the "Abadilla 5" to death based mainly on their
Santos notwithstanding his identification by Alejo and his earlier signed confession,
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saying his alibi was supported by a credible witness, unlike the one of his nephew and
accused Joel de Jesus filed a Motion for New Trial to present two new alibi witnesses.
Reconsideration, critiquing the Joint Decision as regards respect for constitutional and
human rights, and raising for the first time the Alex Boncayao Brigade (ABB) angle of
defense for the first time, with prayer/motion to introduce additional evidence thereon.
On 19 January 2000, Fr. Roberto Reyes filed an urgent Independent Motion for
Leave of Court to Present Vital Evidence in support of the ABB angle. A hearing on the
On 25 January 2000, the trial court denied accused Lumanog's Motion for
Reconsideration, the Supplement thereto and other related pending manifestations and
At the 26 January hearing of Fr. Reyes' motion, the trial court denied it in open
On 11 February 2000, the records of the Abadilla murder case were transmitted to
the Supreme Court for automatic review, docketed as G.R. No. 141660-64, the case at
bar.
On 15 March 2000, four of the "Abadilla 5" led by petitioner Lenido Lumanog
filed a Petition for Certiorari (Rule 65) in the Supreme Court, questioning respondent
Judge Jaime Salazar, Jr.'s denial of his motion to present additional evidence on the ABB
angle, and docketed as G.R. No. 142605. On 18 July, the Supreme Court consolidated
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
On 7 September 2001, the Supreme Court dismissed the Petition for Certiorari in
G.R. No. 142065, ruling that there was no grave abuse of discretion. The Decision has
since been published as Lumanog vs. Salazar, Jr. (364 SCRA 719).
filed a Motion for New Trial and Related Relief with 21 exhibits and 21 annexes of
proposed additional evidence mainly on the ABB angle. On 5 May, the Supreme Court
summarily (without hearing and opposition) denied the Motion for New Trial. On 17
On 15 July 2003, the Supreme Court ordered several counsels for the accused-
appellants to file their briefs for the automatic review. Several motions for extension of
time to file the same were made and granted, with subsequent filing. Several briefs are
now for the consideration of the Supreme Court in the instant automatic review of the
murder suspects for torture and other human rights violations by their arresting police
officers, I.S. No. 96-663, has remained pending without final resolution in the DOJ.
The appealed judgment and orders in the Abadilla murder case (Crim. Case No.
Q-96-66684, RTC of Quezon City, Branch 103) are as follows, certified true photocopies
This is the judgment of conviction, after full-blown trial, finding the five accused-
appellants guilty of the murder of ex-Col. Rolando Abadilla and sentencing each to death.
This is the Order denying all various pending motions after the promulgation of
judgment of conviction, Annex A. The pending incidents refer mainly to accused Lenido
Lumanog's Motion for Reconsideration dated August 25, 1999, the Supplement thereto
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
dated 25 November 1999, and several other related manifestations and motions mainly to
present additional evidence on the ABB angle. They also include accused Joel de Jesus'
Motion for New Trial dated August 31, 1999 to present to new alibi witnesses.
This is the initial short Order given in open hearing denying Fr. Roberto Reyes'
Urgent Independent Motion to Present Vital Evidence dated January 19, 2000 in support
This is the long Order elaborating on the immediately preceding Order, Annex C.
The nature of the controversy has to do not only with the guilt or innocence of the
accused-appellants based on the available evidence but also whether their constitutional
and human rights were respected, from arrest up to conviction and even up to the
reconsideration stage, when they sought a last chance to present additional evidence to
prove their innocence. In addition, the death penalty itself imposed on the accused-
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
In the morning of June 13, 1996, Col. Rolando Abadilla left his residence driving his
black Honda Accord. His wife, Mrs. Susan Abadilla, saw him off and minutes
later, received a call from the colonel. Minutes later, another call came, this time
from the husband’s tailor. She was informed of an accident involving her
husband. Proceeding to the Quirino Memorial Medical Center, Susan Abadilla
found her husband already dead. (TSN, September 18, 1996, pp. 31-35).
The colonel drove along Katipunan Avenue heading southwards to Santolan.
When his car got stalled in traffic, four (4) unidentified men approached his car and fired
Several witnesses saw the four unidentified gunmen proceed to a KIA Pride,
asked the driver and passengers to get out and drove the KIA Pride towards J. P. Rizal.
Francisco and P/Insp Edward Villena proceeded to the crime scene and arrived at about
8:45 a.m. (TSN, September 7, 1996, pp. 13-14). The police investigators found the Honda
Accord with plate number RNA 777 with the left door opened and found the bloodied
PO2 Gerry Daganta, PO1 Ronald Francisco and Cesar Espiritu, a civilian who
was the first to approach the victim after the perpetrators had left, then brought the victim
to Quirino Memorial Medical Hospital. (p. 15). Magundacan was left in the area to
preserve the crime scene while Villena went back to the police station to get a camera.
(ibid., p. 16).
PO2 Daganta went back to the crime scene and gathered the spent shells and slugs
(p. 18) which were later secured by SPO1 Arlin Habitan (19). These slugs and spent
shells were later on turned over to Officer Jurado at the police station 8 (104-105) and
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Another set of police officers, this time from the CID-CPDC, Camp Crame
proceeded to the hospital where the victim’s body was brought. There were actually three
teams that proceeded to the crime scene. The first team is composed of Officers Jurado,
Gonzales and Gutierrez. The second team is composed of Officers Nicanor and Castillo
and the third is composed of Officer Jaraza and the follow up team. (p. 60). Officer
Jurado interviewed the persons who brought the victim to the hospital. ( 74)
While at the hospital, the CID-CPDC investigators monitored over their radio that
an abandoned car was reported found at Aguinaldo St. in Proj. 4. (p. 73)
At about 10:00 a.m. that same morning (77) P/Insp. Rogelio Castillo together with
Nicanor, found the abandoned KIA Pride with plate no. PTZ 401 (78) at Aguinaldo St., in
Proj. 4 (76). They found the KIA Pride with blood stains in the right front and right rear
door knobs.(80)
Castillo and Nicanor interviewed three or four persons who told them that four men
“hurriedly alighted from the vehicle.” (81) These informants described the
suspects as 30-35 years old, almost the same age, one of them was about 5’7” or
5’8” in height and the other is smaller. (83) These police officers waited for crime
lab technicians to arrive at the area. When Sr. Insp. Lily Corpuz (87), Remedios
Dedicatoria (TSN, January 9, 1998, p. 31), and another crime lab technicians
arrived, the two police officers, Castillo and Nicanor proceeded to the crime
scene.
Castillo and Nicanor arrived at the crime scene shortly before 11:00 a.m. (p. 88) They no
longer saw the car as it was already brought to the police station. (90). They
interviewed three to four persons in the area and was told that four men shot at a
man driving a black car. (92-93). After preparing a rough sketch of the area, the
two police officers went to the police station 8. (100) where several witnesses
were also brought for their statements.
Crime lab technicians lifted fingerprint samples from the two cars: the Honda
Accord with Plate No. RNA 777 and the KIA Pride with Plate No. PTZ 401. These
fingerprint samples were later compared with fingerprint samples from all the accused in
this case.
The Honda Accord was then brought to the police station by PO1 Ronald Zamora
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The CID-CPDC Camp Crame took over the investigation from the police officers.
(p.32)
Witnesses Merlito Jerbas, Freddie Alejo, Minella Alarcon, Cesar Espiritu and
Aurora Urbano were interviewed by the police officers and were brought to their
headquarters in Camp Karingal where their formal statements were taken. (TSN, August
7, 1996 p. 117).
The Accused-Appellants
At around 7:00 in the evening of June 12, 1996, Lenido Lumanog together with
Rameses de Jesus, Romeo Costibolo, Manny dela Rosa and Bonnie Mandalog left
Fairview for Mabalacat, Pampanga arriving there at around 10:00 p.m. (TSN, August 20,
From 12:00 midnight until about 4:00 a.m. of the next day, the group were
digging for treasure at the compound of the Tiglao Residence, in front of the Mabalacat
Church. At. 4:00 a.m. until about 10:00 a.m. they slept inside the bodega in the same
compound. Costibolo was the first to wake up and and he woke up all his companions,
Lumanog, Rameses, Bobby and Boni. They then helped the Tiglao family for the
celebration of the wedding anniversary until about 12:00 noon after which they joined in
the celebration. At 6:00 p.m. they resumed their digging. (TSN, August 20, 1998, pp. 10-
It was only on June 14, 1996 when Lumanog, Rameses de Jesus and Costibolo
went back to Manila to get provisions arriving at 10:00 a.m. Bonnie and Manny were left
at Mabalacat, Pampanga. (TSN, August 20, 1998, p. 15-17; March 9, 1999, p. 19). The
three, Lumanog, de Jesus and Costibolo went back to Mabalacat on June 19, 1996.(TSN,
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On June 20, 1996, Lumanog, Costibolo and Rameses de Jesus, again went back to
Fairview to visit Costibolo’s son who was confined at the Fairview West View
Polymedic. It was around 10:00 in the evening when they reached the place and it was
there where police operatives arrested them without any warrant. (TSN, August 20, 1998,
Augusto Santos
On June 13, 1996, Augusto Santos left their home in Fairview before 7:00 a.m.
He fetched his brother-in-law, Jonas Ayhon, before they proceeded to the Fabella
Hospital where Dorothy, Augusto’s sister and Ayhon’s wife, delivered a baby on June 11,
1996. The mother and child were to be discharged from the hospital that day.
Augusto Santos and Jonas Ayhon arrived at the Fabella Hospital at around 7:00
a.m. It was not until about 2:00 p.m. of that same day that Dorothy and her child were
On June 19, 1996, at about 4:00 p.m. PARAC and CPDC operatives arrested Joel
de Jesus (TSN, November 12, 1996, p. 28) after a stake-out which began at 2:00 p.m. that
same day. Freddie Alejo was with the CPDC operatives where he was shown pictures of
Alias Tabong before he was made to identify the person they arrested who turned out to
be Joel de Jesus.
After the arrest, Joel de Jesus was turned over to the CID-CPDC for investigation
(p. 30). On that same day, the CPDC investigators informed the team of Capt. Macanas
through their superior Col. Baluyot, that Joel de Jesus “made some revelation (sic) with
regard to his participation in the killing of ex-Col. Abadilla (p. 32-33). Capt. Macanas
and the CID-CPDC then conducted joint follow-up operations where they brought Joel de
Jesus along to “g[i]ve a hand in identifying his companions in the killing.” (p. 33-34).
Between 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. of June 19, 1996 (TSN, December 10, 1996, p. 21), the group
was allegedly led by Joel de Jesus somewhere in Fairview along Ruby Street wherein his
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
other alleged companions namely Ram, Lorenzo delos Santos, Ogie, one Alias Cesar
could be found, (TSN, November 12, 1996, p. 35) based on Joel de Jesus’ purportedly
volunteered information ( TSN, December 10, 1996, p. 18). Joel led them to the house of
Ram de Jesus but they did not find Ram there. Instead, Joel de Jesus pointed to Cesar
Fortuna and the arresting team, immediately effected the arrest of the latter, minutes
before midnight. (TSN, November 12, 1996, pp. 36-40). Past midnight that same
evening, the operatives apprehended Lorenzo delos Santos. (TSN, __________) look for
transcript.
Subsequent Events
While the case was pending, Fr. Robert Reyes received from a known ABB
personality the wristwatch which was taken from the victim. This piece of evidence was
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
The issues are basically found in the Assignment of Errors. The issues of fact and
Argument regarding Assigned Errors II, III, IV, V, VIII, IX, X, XI & XII.
Assigned Errors II, III & IV relate to impugning the so-called positive
identification by lone eyewitness for the prosecution Freddie Alejo on which the trial
court anchored its judgment of conviction. Much prominence and space is therefore given
to their discussion.
accused Augusto Santos and Lenido Lumanog. Relevant to this is Assigned Error IX
regarding the personal circumstances of the several accused and the circumstances of
Assigned Errors XI & XII relate to the Alex Boncayao Brigade (ABB) angle of
true responsibility for the Abadilla murder, with the proposed additional evidence thereon
being proferred by way of offer of proof in this very brief and for this automatic review.
This matter may be factual, legal or both, and is treated in Assigned Errors V, VI,
VII and even XI & XII. Assigned Error V deals with the particular case of torture and
coerced confessions of accused Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos. Assigned Error
VI deals more generally with the gross violations of the constitutional and human rights
of the accused during their arrest, detention and custodial investigation. This also has
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Assigned Error VII deals with the trial court's own violations of the constitutional
rights of accused Lenido Lumanog in the judgment of conviction itself. Assigned Errors
XI & XII deal with the trial court's own violations after promulgation of judgment and
This legal issue is raised through Assigned Error I. The reason it is placed up
front is explained in the relevant discussion of assigned Error I under the next part
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ARGUMENTS
The trial court, in its appealed Joint Decision of July 30, 1999, found all accused-
(absorbing abuse of superior strength) and evident premeditation,” and sentenced each
“to suffer the penalty of DEATH,” but which, we submit, is an unconstitutional penalty.
R.A. No. 7659, at least insofar as it classifies murder as a heinous crime and metes the
Conventional wisdom has been that “It is a well-established rule that a court
should not pass upon a constitutional question and decide a law [or part of it] to be
unconstitutional or invalid, unless such question is raised by the parties, and that when it
is raised, if the record also presents some other ground upon which the court may rest its
judgment, that course will be adopted and the constitutional question will be left for
consideration until a case arises in which a decision upon such question will be
unavoidable.” (Sotto vs. Comelec, 76 Phil. 516, 522; Lalican vs. Vergara, 276 SCRA
Thus, in People vs. Pinca (G.R. No. 129256, November 17, 1999), where the
third issue was the constitutionality of the reimposition of the death penalty on the crime
of murder, the Court did not find the resolution of this issue the very lis mota of the case.
Similarly, in the earlier parricide case of People vs. Malabago (265 SCRA 198), the
Court also ruled that “Death not being the lis mota of the instant case, the Court has to
await for a more appropriate case to pass upon the constitutionality of R.A. No. 7659, as
amended.”
That has been the conventional wisdom. But there is a time also for
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Santiago M. Kapunan in the Balikatan exercises case of Lim vs. Executive Secretary
(G.R. No. 151445, April 11, 2002), “The issues raised are of transcendental importance…
If the time is not ripe to challenge the continuing affront against the Constitution and the
safety of the people, when is the right time? When the countryside has been devastated
and numerous lives lost?” In like manner, how many more murder cases on automatic
review and how many more lethal injection executions will it take before “a more
appropriate case” comes along? RA 7659 has been in the statute books since 1993 or for
10 years already. What could be a more appropriate murder case than this celebrated
In fact, murder rather than rape (the crime in the Echegaray cases) is a most
appropriate case for a re-examination of the constitutionality of the death penalty (and the
Echegaray rulings), in fact not just for murder but for all cases. The irony is not lost on us
that a certain magistrate, Judge Fulco, once wrote: “…I can state that nothing gave me
the sort of bad conscience I felt in the face of the kind of administrative murder that is
called capital punishment.” 1 (italics supplied) This Court en banc itself once said in
similar terms: “The case at bar involves the imposition of the death penalty. With all our
frailties, we are asked to play the role of an infallible God by exercising the divine right
to give or take away life. We cannot err in the exercise of our judgment for our error will
be irrevocable. Worse, our error can result in the worst of crimes – murder by the
judiciary.” (People vs. Alicante, G.R. No. 117487, December 12, 1995, italics supplied)
execution? As early as the Emergency Power Cases (Araneta vs. Dinglasan, 84 Phil. 368;
Rodriguez vs. Gella, 93 Phil. 603), the Court has allowed taxpayer’s suits where serious
constitutional issues are involved since, “the transcendental importance to the public of
1
As quoted in Fr. Fausto B. Gomez, O.P., “The Death Penalty and Healthcare Professionals” (University
of Sto. Tomas, Manila, February 7, 1997). Some arguments here are used in this brief.
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these cases demands that they be settled promptly and definitely, brushing aside…
technicalities of procedure.”
The Echegaray cases, People vs. Echegaray (267 SCRA 682) [hereinafter,
Echegaray I] and Echegaray vs. Executive Secretary (297 SCRA 754) [hereinafter
Echegaray II], are not, and cannot be, the last word on the death penalty constitutionality
issue. These are cases of mandatory death penalty, not discretionary death penalty like
the case at bar. Echegaray I itself ruled (at pp. 722-23) that “As to other crimes in R.A.
No. 7659 punished by reclusion perpetua to death [e.g. murder]… The proper time to
are called to pass on a death sentence involving crimes punishable by reclusion perpetua
to death under R.A. No. 7659, with the trial court meting out the death sentence in
exercise of judicial discretion.” We submit that it is not only heinousness of the crime
that is to be determined in such case but also the constitutionality of the punishment.
But to quote further the guidance from Echegaray I (at p. 723): “Thus, construing
R.A. No. 7659 in pari materia with the Revised Penal Code, death may be imposed
when: (1) aggravating circumstances attend the commission of the crime as to make
operative the provision of the Revised Penal Code regarding the imposition of the
maximum penalty; and (2) other circumstances attend the commission of the crime which
indubitably characterize the same as heinous in contemplation of R.A. No. 7659 that
justify the imposition of death, albeit the imposable penalty is reclusion perpetua to
At this juncture, we have to seize the moment to point out that in the trial court’s
appealed judgment of conviction imposing five death sentences there is only discussion
of the aggravating circumstances but no discussion, not even mention, of the key other
circumstances like “heinousness” and “compelling reasons” that might justify the
imposition of the death penalty. On this score alone, therefore, the death penalty should
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be eliminated as an imposable penalty, if any there is to be, in the case at bar. We want to
get this sword of Damocles, as it were, out of the way first before proceeding to show the
In a way, this reverses the order or sequence of the two-step process of decision-
making or voting by the High Tribunal in capital cases: first the issue of the guilt of the
accused, then the question on the imposition of the death sentence itself (People vs.
We now proceed to argue the unconstitutionality of the death penalty not only in
murder cases but in all cases, at least in the operative framework of the present death
penalty law, RA 7659. As the separate (dissenting) opinion in Echegaray I already noted:
“RA 7659 did not change the nature or the elements of the crimes stated in the Penal
Code and in the special laws. It merely made the penalty more severe… RA 7659 itself
merely selected some existing crimes for which it prescribed death as an applicable
penalty… By merely reimposing capital punishment on the very same crimes which were
already penalized with death prior to the charter’s effectivity, Congress I submit has not
fulfilled its specific and positive constitutional duty. If the Constitutional Commission
intended merely to allow Congress to prescribe death for these same crimes, it would not
have written Sec. 19 of Article III into the fundamental law. But the stubborn fact is it
did.”
The 1987 Constitution, Art. III, Sec. 19(1) reads: “Excessive fines shall not be
imposed, nor cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment inflicted. Neither shall death
penalty be imposed, unless, for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the
Congress hereafter provides for it. Any death penalty already imposed shall be reduced to
reclusion perpetua.” Based on this provision, the Supreme Court itself recognized “the
abolition of the death penalty” in People vs. Masangkay (155 SCRA 113), People
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vs.Gavarra (155 SCRA 327), People vs. Atencio (156 SCRA 242), and People vs. Intino
It is true that, later on, the Supreme Court in People vs. Munoz (G.R. No. L-
38969-70, February 9, 1989) said: “A reading of Section 19(1) of Article III will readily
show that there is really nothing therein which expressly declares the abolition of the
death penalty.” No express abolition, or use of the word “abolition,” but abolition
word “abolition,” the Supreme Court preferred to use words like “not impose” and
The use of the word “reduced” rather than “commuted” in Section 19(1) reveals
that the operative reality is that the death penalty no longer exists. More so when one co-
relates Section 19(1) with Section 13 of Art. III: “All persons, except those charged with
offenses punishable by reclusion perpetua when evidence of guilt is strong, shall, before
construed or read, in relation to other provisions of the same law (Jueco vs. Flores, G.R.
discussions in the majority opinions in the Echegaray cases were largely limited to or
framed by Sec. 19(1) itself, particularly the issues of “cruel, degrading or inhuman
punishment” and of “compelling reasons involving heinous crimes.” We will not revisit
2
This and some other arguments in this discussion are drawn from the Free Legal Assistance Group
(FLAG) Position Paper on the Death Penalty submitted to the Senate Committee on Justice and Human
Rights in July 2002 by its Secretary General Maria Socorro I. Diokno.
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and belabor that discussion here. We instead raise other constitutional grounds (aside still
from the aforecited Sec. 13 of Art. III) for the unconstitutionality of the death penalty.
The separate (dissenting) opinion in Echegaray I raises several other grounds for
unconstitutionality which were never addressed in the majority opinion. These are found
in the section “Other Constitutional Rights Militate Against RA 7659” in pp. 749-54. We
need not repeat the discussion there. We will just add a bit to what it says about the pro-
life and pro-human rights constitutional provisions: the right to life (Art. III, Sec. 1);
values the dignity of every human person and guarantees full respect for human rights
(Art. II, Sec. 11); prohibition against torture (Art. III, Sec. 12[2]); protection to the life of
the mother and the unborn from the moment of conception (Art. II, Sec. 12): and the
people’s right to health, a balanced ecology and education (Art. II, Secs. 15, 16 & 17).
Take the core value of human dignity. As Father Fausto B. Gomez, O.P. said,
“Granting for the sake of argument that capital punishment could be a deterrent to crime,
it would still be against human dignity when it involves killing the offender: the human
person. No human person can be made an object of exemplariness for others without
thingifying him/her… The greatest dignity of the human person is being a child of God
and a sister/brother of Christ, and in Christ of all other human beings. If the human being,
We don’t want or intend to go too deeply here into religion but the Constitution
itself in its Preamble speaks of “imploring the aid of Almighty God.” And “Christianity,
as the religion of the great majority of the people, is a fact recognized by constitutional
conventions, legislatures, and courts.” 3 For the latter to draw transcendental guidance to
3
Vicente G. Sinco, Philippine Political Law: Principles and Concepts (Manila: Community Publishers,
Inc., 11th ed., 1962) 678, citing US authorities.
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FLAG for its part says “To protect the living, it is unnecessary for the state to end
the life of another. In keeping with the value of human dignity, other means short of
taking life ought to be enough. Perhaps then the way can be paved for the miracle of
and their institutions, something that time and again has marked history and can continue
to do so as triumphs of humanity.”
The most basic and most important right to life is found in the very first provision
of the Bill of Rights: “No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due
process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws.” (italics
supplied) The right to life is thus tied up with the due process and equal protection
clauses, the most important limitations on governmental power. We limit ourselves here
to the need to look more deeply into the co-relation of the death penalty and equal
Actually, there was a hint of this in the latter part (pp. 751-54) of the discussion
(dissenting) opinion in Echegaray I. We refer here to the reference made to the “Profile
of 165 Death Row Convicts” submitted by FLAG. In sum, the profile “demonstrates that
RA 7659 has militated against the poor and powerless in society – those who cannot
afford the legal services necessary in capital crimes, where extensive preparation,
investigation, research and presentation are required.” Also, at one point (p. 816) in the
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These FLAG and Zarco studies were never addressed in the majority opinions of
Echegaray I and Echegaray II, respectively. But neither did the dissenting opinions
explicitly frame the findings in an argument invoking the equal protection clause. We do
so now here, and also update the data. The significance of such data would not be lost on
all those who read the quotation from the great Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. in Mr.
Justice Ramon C. Aquino’s “Introductory Note” found (on p. ix) in every volume of the
Supreme Court Reports Annotated: “The life of the law has not been logic; it has been
experience.” And this is the experience with the death penalty – in practice, it does not
afford equal protection of the law for “the poor and powerless in society.”
The aforementioned FLAG Position Paper on the Death Penalty includes a 60-
page “Socio-Economic Profile of Death Inmates” current up to June 2002 and involving
989 inmates (compared to the earlier profile of 165). Here are the key highlights from the
• The death penalty is disproportionately meted against those who belong to the
underprivileged sectors of Philippine society – almost one-fifth are absolutely
poor. Majority are unschooled and unlettered, having finished only elementary
education. One third had worked in the agricultural sector – the sector that
accounts for most of the poor in the country. Half speak Tagalog, the other half
speak and understand the major Philippine languages. While one-half of the death
inmate-respondents own their homes, most do not own the land upon which their
homes are built. Most of these homes are built with wood, are without proper
sanitation facilities (using the pail system of sanitation), are without access to
piped water. One third of the death convicts have no access to electricity. Most
death convicts had no means to employ the services of private counsel, and
instead availed of government’s free legal services through the Public Attorney’s
Office during trial.
• The death penalty is handed down mostly for the crime of rape, raising doubts of
sentence proportionality. In the United States, for instance, the US Supreme Court
struck down the death penalty statutes covering the crime of rape, precisely
because it held the death penalty is disproportionate, cruel and inhuman for
the crime of rape.
And so, all told, the constitutionality of the death penalty is to be reckoned not
only on the basis of Sec. 19(1) of Art. III which specifically mentions its but also on the
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basis of other provisions of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution, particularly those
which are pro-life, pro-human rights and pro-poor. To quote Fr. Gomez again:
In this context, how may one say that to defend human life we have to reimpose the death
penalty for heinous crimes? As Joaquin Ruiz-Jimenez, who was for a time the Defender
of the People in Spain, said: “To proclaim the right to life and to maintain at the same
time the death penalty is an essential contradiction.” And he added: “If you want life,
promote life and not death… How may one be pro-life and pro-death penalty?”
themselves give rise to conflicting interpretations on the status of the death penalty in the
Constitution, then the pro-life, pro-human rights and pro-poor thrusts should prevail over
reasons involving heinous crimes.” We ask the Court “to take a second look at” and
reflect on the question again in the light of new perspectives” (following the spirit of
Munoz) broader than those in the majority opinions in the Echegaray cases.
The trial court based the conviction of the five accused mainly on the “positive
identification” made in open court by Freddie Alejo, the only eyewitness presented by the
prosecution.
“9. All in all, therefore, the court finds the accused Joel
de Jesus, Rameses de Jesus, Cesar Fortuna, Lenido Lumanog and
Augusto Santos have not produced enough evidence to overcome
the strength of the evidence of positive identification adduced by
the prosecution through its eyewitness SG Freddie Alejo.” (Joint
Decision, p. 29)
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major inconsistencies between his sworn statement and his testimony in open court, is a
shaky foundation upon which to base a conviction for a very serious crime of murder.
More so if even with the identification made by the witness, there is still doubt as to
whether the suspects seen by the witness are the same persons as the accused. The
possibility of identifying all the perpetrators of the crime with certainty when the witness
saw the suspects for the very first time and only for a brief moment under stressful and
This Court has in fact written about the dangers of unreliability in eyewitness
The credibility of the lone eyewitness presented in open court in this case is not
only suspect because of major inconsistencies and omissions which when summed up
point to a faulty, if not, tainted recollection of the whole incident but also because of an
apparent inability to capture the right words in describing the suspects and moreso,
of the accused.
We thus assail the credibility of this lone eyewitness presented in open court on
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contradicted by his testimony in open court but it also omitted a very important detail of
the incident that one relating the incident as an eyewitness cannot be expected to fail to
mention.
In his salaysay given before PO1 Nicanor on June 13, 1996, witness Freddie
Alejo recalled having seen only four suspects at the crime scene. (Exh. L) In open court,
however, he testified that there were six persons involved in the shooting. In his affidavit,
there was no mention whatsoever of two persons walking to and fro in front of the
guardhouse where he was stationed prior to the shooting incident yet he testified before
the court that these two persons were walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse for
more than an hour just before the shooting incident occurred. He further testified that
both these two persons pointed their guns at him with one commanding him to get down
from the guardhouse just after the other four suspects shot at the victim.
and the question asked by SPO1 Nicanor to witness Freddie Alejo at 1:55 p.m. or just
five hours from the shooting incident in the morning of June 13, 1996:
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are similarly framed and to which the witness both answered in the positive. When asked
however what the incident was, the witness gave different answers. In open court, he
declared, “I saw two (2) men walking back and forth infront (sic) of my post, mam.”
(TSN, Testimony of Freddie Alejo – Direct, Hearing held on August 20, 1996, p. 15) but
in his salaysay, he went straight to the shooting incident: “May binaril na sakay ng kotse
It would have been impossible for the witness not to remember the two men
walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse just five hours after the incident if indeed he
On cross examination, he even insisted that he noticed these two men walking to
Atty Buted:
A: Yes sir.
A: Yes sir.
Q: Why?
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[…]
A: No sir.
[…]
[…]
A: More than 1 hour sir. (TSN, August 21, 1996, pp. 19-25)
When asked on that same day “Ano ang itsura ng mga suspect?” he started with
“Iyong tumutok sa akin ay naka-asul na t-shirt…” which means that among the persons
he saw, he first recalled the one who pointed a gun at him. If indeed this person who
pointed the gun at him was among the two persons he mentioned in open court as those
who were walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse prior to the shooting incident, he
would have easily recalled and related to the police officer that prior to the shooting
incident he already noticed two men walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse. But he
did not.
In his testimony in open court, he declared that the two men who were walking to
and fro in front of his guardhouse prior to the shooting incident were the ones who
pointed their guns at him after he saw four other suspects shoot at the victim.
Atty Buted:
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A: Yes sir.
A: “Baba” sir.
A: No sir.
Q: Because you were not nervous and you were not scared?
A: Yes sir.
Q: When for the second time when he said “dapa”, what did
you do?
A: The one that was at the right rear side, another one at the
left rear side and another one was at the right front side.
Q: So that’s all?
A: No sir there was another one, one of the 2 men who were
earlier walking to and fro who was at the corner also
faced me and pointed the gun at me.
[…]
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A: Yes sir.
A: Yes sir.
Q: Now, then the second man pointed the gun at you one of
the men who were walking to and fro?
Q: When the second man pointed that gun at you, was it the
first man who pointed the gun at you still?
A: Yes sir.
Atty. Azarcon: May we just put on record the one who said,
“hindi po sila sabay”.
Atty Buted:
Q: Now, when you said that because of the shout of the man
who poked a gun at you, the 3 men near the car faced
you?
A: Yes sir.
A: Yes sir.
Q: And all the time the 2 men who were near the guard
house were pointing their guns at you?
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Q: When you did that, you were inside the guard house?
Q: Now, when the 3 men near the car faced you, as you
said, it was for about a minute or less than a minute?
[…]
If in fact, the witness had seen these two men walking to and fro in front of the
guardhouse where he was stationed prior to the shooting incident and he recognized these
two men as the ones who pointed their guns at him, he would have easily concluded that
these two other persons are part of the group which carried out the ambush of the victim.
Then, he would have related to the police officers who conducted the investigation that
he saw six men who carried out the ambush. But this witness categorically stated to the
police investigators that there were only four (not six) men he saw shoot at the victim.
The acts attributed by the witness to the two men whom he referred to as those
whom he saw walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse prior to the shooting incident
are very vivid and detailed that he could not have failed to remember them when he
executed his sworn statement on the very same day that the incident happened. This is
exactly “a very important detail of the incident that one relating the incident as an
eyewitness cannot be expected to fail to mention” which the court referred to in a line
of decisions. (People vs. Narvaez, et. al., G.R. NO. 140759, January 24, 2002; People vs.
Castillo, 261 SCRA 493 citing People vs. Calegan, G.R. No. 93846, June 30, 1994, 233
SCRA 537).
Since the witness failed to mention these details when he narrated the events just
five hours after the incident happened, it raises a very strong doubt that these details ever
happened at all.
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B. The sworn statement of Freddie Alejo and his testimony in open court
contained material contradictions which undermine his credibility as a witness.
Major contradictions appear when the sworn statement of Freddie Alejo executed
before SPO1 Edilberto Nicanor on July 13, 1996 is compared with his testimony in open
court.
First, the two men walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse was never
mentioned in the affidavit, yet this point was overly emphasized in his testimony.
Second, he mentioned only one person who pointed a gun at him and this person
is among the four suspects he mentioned in his affidavit whereas he testified in open
court that there were two persons, other than the four whom he saw around the victim’s
Third, in his affidavit, he readily admitted that he felt nervous and could not move
when a gun was pointed at him, but in his testimony he related in open court that he was
not nervous and that he saw all the suspects face him at the same time.
Freddie Alejo’s sworn statement, taken just five hours after the incident, contain
the following:
S – Mayroon Sir.
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14. T – Ano naman ang dahilan, kung alam mo, bakit binaril ng
apat na lalaki ang biktimang ito?
S – Maaari Sir.
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Scrutinizing his sworn statement, there was no mention whatsoever of two other
men walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse. However, in open court, his testimony
is filled with vivid details about the two men walking to and fro in front of the
guardhouse before the incident. He also attributed the pointing of the guns to him to these
two men whom he allegedly saw walking to and fro in front of his guardhouse for more
than an hour prior to the shooting incident. (TSN, Testimony of Freddie Alejo, August
20, 1996, pp. 15, 28, 39, 40-41, 45-46, August 21, 1996, pp. 19, 20, 23-25, 74-82)
In his sworn statement, the witness was very categorical when he declared that he
saw four men during the shooting incident. When asked on that same day of the incident,
“Sino naman ang bumaril sa biktima na ito kung kilala mo?” he readily answered, “Apat
na hindi kilalang lalaki sir na armado ng baril.” He only mentioned four suspects. And
continuing with his narration when asked (Question 16) “Ano pa ang sumunod na
nangyari kung mayroon?” his answer was: “Isa sa suspect na nasa tapat ko ay tinutukan
ako ng kanyang baril at sinigawan ako ng “BABA” Pinabababa niya ako sa guardhouse.”
When he qualified his statement with the phrase “Isa sa suspect na nasa tapat ko”
he could not have been referring to another person other than the “apat na hindi kilalang
lalaki” he earlier referred to. Otherwise, if this person who pointed a gun at him were not
among the four men, he would not have categorically declared that there were four men
And when asked, “Ano ang ginawa mo, kung mayroon nuong (sic) utusan ka na
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guardhouse.”
The phrase “sumigaw uli ang suspect,” in the answer to question # 17 means that
the same person who earlier shouted at him shouted again when he did not heed the
When taken together with the phrase “Isa sa suspect na nasa tapat ko ay tinutukan
ako ng kanyang baril at sinigawan ako” in the answer to question # 16 the phrase
“sumigaw uli ang suspect” proves that the witness was referring to one and the same
person who shouted “BABA!” for the first time and who repeated the same command
“BABA!” and added “Walang makikialam,” when he did not come down from the
guardhouse.
Since the witness even qualified that the person who shouted at him was “isa sa
suspect,” he could not have been referring to another person other than the four suspects
whom he saw around the victim’s car. Otherwise, if the suspect who pointed a gun at him
was not among the four he saw around the victim’s car, he would have easily concluded
that there were five persons who perpetrated the act. But just five hours after the shooting
incident, this witness freely and spontaneously narrated to the investigating officer that he
It is also clear in his salaysay that when one of the suspects pointed a gun at him,
he was nervous and could not move. In his own words, “Dahil sa nerbiyos ko ay hindi
ako nakagalaw.” During his cross examination, however, the witness declared, “When
only one suspect was pointing a gun at me, I wasn’t scared yet but when there were
already two suspects pointing a gun at me, I went down because they might actually
These discrepancies in the contents of the witness’ affidavit and his testimony in
open court are important and substantial. Increasing the number of suspects from four to
six significantly contradicts a material point that the witness stated in his affidavit.
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Testifying in open court that there were two persons who each pointed a gun at him
materially contradicts his earlier statement that only one of the four suspects pointed a
gun at him.
Making the court believe that he was not nervous and that the other suspects all
faced him when one of the suspects pointed a gun and shouted at him when in his
affidavit he related that he was nervous and could not move, is a material contradiction
that goes directly into the possibility of correctly identifying the suspects.
His declaration in his affidavit that he was nervous and could not move is but a
natural reaction to a startling and threatening situation. His testimony in open court,
however, suggests that the witness was coached in an attempt to bolster his credibility
and ability to identify the suspects despite the threat to his own life at that moment.
These discrepancies taken together all point out that the lone eyewitness presented
in open court has added material details in his testimony in open court. These additions
which directly and significantly contradicted his sworn statement gravely affected his
credibility as a witness.
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The trial court committed a reversible error when it relied heavily on the “positive
identification” of the lone eyewitness presented in open court in convicting all the
accused for the crime of murder. The witness’ recollection of the appearances of the
assailants is highly unreliable that it is doubtful whether this particular witness had
established that aside from having seen the suspects at the crime scene, the suspects left
indelible or at least memorable marks in the memory of the witness that facilitate his
recall of their appearances. For unlike other methods of establishing the presence of
suspects at the crime scene, i.e. DNA testing, fingerprint identification, which establish
the samples taken from the crime scene and the samples taken from the person of the
suspects, the process of cursorily pointing at the accused in open court and saying that
these persons are the same ones whom the witness saw at the crime scene is fraught with
It would have been different if several witnesses were presented and all are one in
identifying the suspects as the perpetrators of the crime complained of. Yet, when only
one eyewitness is presented in court, the prosecution must endeavor to establish with
certainty that the persons whom the witness saw at the crime scene are the same persons
as the accused. Such identification should involve a degree of certitude that rules out any
simply asking the witness to point to the suspects in court without showing any reference
In most of the cases where this court upheld the conviction of the accused based
personally known or are already familiar to the witnesses beforehand. The witnesses,
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because of their familiarity with the suspects, were able to recognize them at the time
they commit the crime and can readily identify them at any given time.
However, such is not always the case. There are a lot of instances when witnesses
do not personally know or are not even acquainted with the suspects whom they might
more rigorous test to rule out any mistake. It must not be enough that the witness
cursorily point at the accused and tell the court that these are the persons he has seen
commit the crime but all the circumstances that aid the witness in recalling with certainty
the identity of the suspects must also be shown. Factors such as the distance of the
witness from the suspects, the length of time that the witness has seen the suspects, the
ability of the suspect to recall, the presence or absence of any distraction that could affect
the witness’ attention to the appearances of the suspects, all become relevant and must all
point to a certainty of establishing the identity of the suspects. But more importantly, the
witness must be able to recall and relate certain specific characteristics of the suspects
that would establish a well-founded belief that the suspect could not have been any other
person than the accused. While it might be too stringent a test to require that witnesses
must be able to point certain characteristics unique to the suspects, or if not, at least
reason why those characteristics stuck to the witness’ mind, yet, it might be the only
safeguard to rule out any possibility of a mix-up or mistaken identity. Besides, this would
be in keeping with the rule in criminal prosecution that the guilt of the accused must be
This, in fact, has been crystallized by this Court when it adopted the totality of
circumstances test in resolving the admissibility of and relying on out-of-court and in-
court identification of suspects. This test was adopted by this Court in People vs.
Teehankee, Jr. (G.R. Nos. 111206-08, October 6, 1995) and reiterated by in People vs.
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Timon (G.R. Nos. 977841-42, November 12, 1997) and in People vs. Arapok (G.R. Nos.
Freddie Alejo made out-of-court identification of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos
Santos. He also made in-court identification of Joel de Jesus, Lorenzo delos Santos,
Rameses de Jesus, Lenido Lumanog, Cesar Fortuna, and Augusto Santos. We assail both
identification as inherently weak and which should not have been relied upon as basis for
The first time Freddie Alejo was made to identify Joel de Jesus was when the
latter was arrested on June 19, 1996. The witness was first shown photos of Joel de Jesus
and the police officers brought the witness along with them to identify Joel de Jesus in
Freddie Alejo was again made to identify Joel de Jesus, this time together with
Investigation Division (CID) at Camp Karingal on June 21, 1996. Exhibit M, which is the
additional statement of Freddie Alejo pointing to Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos
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pinpoint Joel de Jesus whose picture has already been shown to him prior to the
identification but also by irregularities as the alleged police line-up was conducted with
no other civilian individuals in the line-up except for Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos
Since the alleged line-up was done in a police headquarters, necessarily, these
police officers would be in their proper uniforms. How, then, can anyone be mistaken in
singling out suspects in a police line-up when the other persons they are lined-up with are
all police officers? Is this how our police officers understand a police line-up: that
Going now to the evidence on record, when asked about the appearance of the
The witness was only able to describe two of the four suspects when the police
investigator took his sworn statement barely five hours after the incident occurred. With
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the description given by the witness, it can be safely claimed, that the witness was only
able to provide a basis for future identification of two of the four suspects.
This alone is already a clear indicator that this particular witness does not have
much recollection of the appearances of the suspects. And naturally so. The swiftness
with which the ambush was staged, the relative positions of the suspects in relation to the
witness, and the concurrence of several startling events happening all at the same time
would make it impossible for anyone to recall all the perpetrators. This was even
compounded by the fact that the witness’ life was also threatened at that time by the
suspect who pointed a gun at him which necessarily focused the witness’ attention to this
particular suspect.
It would have been different if the witness knew the identities of the suspects all
along. But in this case, the witness, having no previous association or acquaintance with
the suspects, saw them for the first time when the shooting incident happened. What was
stored in the memory of this witness were fleeting impressions of the appearances of the
suspects that could have been easily erased and replaced with the numerous other new
faces (including police investigators and bystanders) he encountered on that day that the
incident occurred.
Based on the order by which the incident occurred as narrated by the witness in
his sworn statement, it would have been natural for the witness to recall first the suspect
who opened the car, took the clutch bag, choked the victim, took the victim out of the car
and shot at the victim again because he did a lot of things that stuck to the witness mind.
Yet, from among the four persons he saw shooting at the victim, he readily recalled the
This is explainable as it is but natural for human memory to give more importance
to events that has personal significance. The other suspects are not as significant to the
witness as the suspect who pointed a gun at him because the three other suspects did not
do anything that attaches personal significance to the life of the witness at that moment.
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This particular suspect who pointed a gun at the witness attained a greater significance to
the witness as this particular suspect put the witness’ very life in danger.
So, if there was anyone whom the witness would strongly remember, it would
have been this suspect whom he narrated in his sworn statement to have pointed a gun at
him and twice yelled at him to come down from the guardhouse. But the testimony of the
witness reveal that he cannot even place this suspect who pointed a gun at him as among
the four he and other suspects saw around the victim’s car.
Several witnesses, including Alejo, saw only four suspects surround the black
Honda and shot at the victim. The person who pointed a gun at Freddie Alejo and who
shouted to him twice must necessarily be among this four suspects. Yet, based on Freddie
Alejo’s testimony and his identification of the suspects made in open court, this person
who pointed a gun at him, whom he identified as Joel de Jesus, was not among the four
persons he saw around the victim’s car. He named those he allegedly saw around the
victim’s car as Rameses de Jesus, Cesar Fortuna, Lenido Lumanog, and Augusto Santos.
This glaring inconsistency points that the memory of this witness is highly suspect
The in-court identification made by Freddie Alejo is likewise weak. Only two of
the suspects were described by Freddie Alejo in his sworn statement. And both these
descriptions given did not tie up with the physical appearances of the accused pinpointed
as those earlier described. For the rest of the accused, no prior description was ever given
by the witness.
Augusto Santos, Rameses de Jesus, and Cesar Fortuna were never described by
the witness. Thus, the in-court identification of these accused utterly lacks basis for want
of any prior description of the suspects upon which to anchor the identification made in
open court. The witness was never made to identify these accused from the time of their
arrest until the day that the in-court identification was made. Neither was there any
attempt to have these accused identified by the other eyewitnesses who came forward to
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the police investigators The in-court identification of these particular accused, therefore,
is nothing but a mere cursory pointing to the accused which can never amount to a
positive identification.
Interestingly significant is the fact that Freddie Alejo’s description of the suspect
given to the police investigator just five hours after the shooting incident did not match
with the characteristics of the accused identified in open court as Lenido Lumanog.
He described the suspect who opened the car, took the clutch bag, grab the victim
by the neck, drag the victim out of the car and shot at the victim when the latter was
bag nito ay 25 – 30 ang edad, payat, mahaba ang buhok na nakatali, maitim, may taas na
5’5” – 5’6”.” Such description did not match with the physical appearance of Lenido
From the way the witness used maitim and kayumanggi in describing two of the
suspects, he appears to have a good sense of telling the different hues of skin color. He
described the person who pointed a gun and shouted at him to be kayumanggi while he
described as maitim the suspect whom he said he saw open the car, took the victim’s
clutch bag, grab the victim by the neck, dragged the victim out of the car and shot at the
persons. Kayumanggi is lighter than maitim. And the witness himself used these words
without coaching from anyone. These were the words he associated with the skin color of
the persons he saw at the crime scene. If indeed it was Lenido Lumanog whom the
witness saw near the left front side (driver’s side) of the victim’s car, he would not have
used maitim in describing the suspect. Far from being just kayumanggi, Lenido Lumanog
is fair-complexioned. If indeed Lenido Lumanog was the person whom the witness saw at
the crime scene, to describe him as maitim would be to point to a mistake and flaw in the
witness’ perception and his ability to relate what he has observed. And this point goes
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directly to recall and communicate accurately affecting his credibility as a witness whose
testimony cannot be relied upon because his narration of his observations do not capture
Freddie Alejo described the suspect who pointed a gun at him in this manner:
“Iyong tumutok sa aking ay naka-asul na t-shirt, edad 30-35, 5’5”-5’6” ang taas,
katamtaman ang katawan, maikli ang buhok, kayumanggi.” Since the witness was only
able to give a description of one suspect who pointed a gun at him and yet in open court
he testified that there were two suspects who separately pointed a gun at him, it is not
clear as to whom among the two accused he pointed in court as those who pointed a gun
at him would this description be used as a basis. If this would be used as a basis in tying
up the appearance of Lorenzo delos Santos, then it would already be an utter mistake as
Lorenzo was in fact acquitted by the trial court. If this would be used for Joel de Jesus, on
the other hand, the same would also not tie up with the physical appearance of Joel de
Jesus who was just 22 years old then and not 30-35 and who stands 5’9” and not 5’5”-
Considering that the Judge who penned the decision in this instant case was not
the Judge who observed the testimony of Freddie Alejo when he identified the accused in
open court, there could have been no possibility that the level of certainty demonstrated
by the witness at the identification was ever considered in coming up with the decision.
Clearly then, none of the accused who have been handed down the death penalty
by the trial court was positively identified by witness Freddie Alejo applying the totality
The death sentence hanging over the heads of the five accused-appellants in this
case and the big possibility that the actual killers of the late Col. Rolando Abadilla are
still roaming freely necessitate revisiting what this Court has said in People vs. Arapok.
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Thus far, we have shown that the prosecution failed miserably in establishing that
the accused-appellants are the same persons as those seen by the witness at the crime
scene. We shall endeavor to show that the prosecution has likewise been unable to
But at this juncture, it is well to point out that the question asked of Freddie Alejo
when he was made to identify Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos was: “Sa mga
taong naririto ngayon sa loob ng upisinang ito, may makikilala ka ba sa kanila?” Such
line of questioning does not even establish any connection between the identity of the
D. The testimony of the witness in open court reveals incredible details that are
contrary to human experience.
The witness did not see the assailants for a long time. If ever he saw them, it was
only for a brief moment – “less than a minute,” in the words of the witness himself.
If ever he would be able to recall who were in the vicinity during that time, it
would be the two men whom the witness saw walking to and fro near his guardhouse.
One of these men, Lorenzo delos Santos, was acquitted after convincing the lower court
that he was not at the crime scene when the incident happened.
This point alone already casts a doubt as to the credibility of the lone eyewitness
prepresented in court. This witness testified that he saw Lorenzo delos Santos and in fact,
was emphatic in saying that he pointed a gun at him. But accused Lorenzo delos Santos
was able to prove and in fact, convinced the court that he was not at the crime scene. If
this witness’ recollection and memory of the person whom he alleged to have been
walking to and fro in front of the guardhouse where he was posted in the morning of July
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13, 1996 cannot be trusted, if this witness can err on pointing to a person whom he
allegedly saw for a longer period than the other witnesses whom he saw for only a brief
moment, then there is more reason to doubt his credibility in accurately pinpointing the
assailants whom he had seen only for the first time and for a very brief moment, under
The way the witness related how he saw the four men surrounding the car of the
victim, not all of them were facing him directly, in fact, two were standing with their
back towards the witness. The prosecution tried to establish that the perpetrators whom
they numbered 2, 3 and 4 during the trial, faced the witness when they heard their
When witness gave his narration of the incident during the police investigation, he
said that he was nervous and dumbfounded when a gun was pointed at him that he could
not move. (Question and Answer # 17, Exhibit L) During the trial, however, he said, he
did not become nervous (TSN, Testimony of Freddie Alejo, September 4, 1996, pp. 20-
22, 26) and made the court believe that he saw the other three perpetrators face him.
(TSN, Testimony of Freddie, August 20, 1996, p. 45; August 21, 1996, p. 76; September
4, 1996, p. 27-28) This attempt by the witness to make it appear that he was not nervous
to show that he was able to observe clearly and objectively the incident casts a doubt to
his credibility considering that his spontaneous statement given before the police
investigator voluntarily acknowledged his nervousness and fright during the shooting
incident.
A person to whom a gun was pointed would normally focus his attention to the
person who points the gun. This is the natural reaction to such a startling event as the fear
that one might get shot at would make the person attentive to the one holding the gun.
However, in his testimony in open court, the witness said that he looked at the three other
perpetrators who faced him simultaneously. How can a person look at the faces of three
different persons at three different locations at the same time? The physical impossibility
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of this feat points to the incredibility of Alejo’s testimony certain details of which run
As this Court has ruled in People vs. Belaje and reiterated in People vs. Atadero
The witness only saw the perpetrators for a brief moment. In fact, in his own
words, he admitted this to the police investigator when he answered “mabilis ang mga
The swiftness by which the crime was committed and the physical impossibility
of memorizing the faces of all the perpetrators of the crime whom the witness saw for the
first time and only for a brief moment under life-threatening and stressful circumstances
raise serious doubts as to whether the witness could accurately remember the identity of
the perpetrators of the crime. The eyewitness’ ability to correctly identify the perpetrators
of the crime was seriously undermined when one of the accused, Lorenzo delos Santos,
whom the witness allegedly saw for a longer period of time, was acquitted by the trial
court after presenting evidence that he was not at the crime scene at all.
This raises a serious doubt as to whether the accused, who have been languishing
in jail for more than seven years now, are the actual persons who were at the crime scene
and who perpetrated the acts complained of. The fact that this lone eyewitness presented
in open court has added material details in his testimony and whose recollection of the
assailants is shady cast a serious and not just a reasonable doubt as to whether the
accused whose lives hang in the balance with the imposition of the death penalty by the
lower court are the actual authors of the crime complained of.
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The witness actually saw four men at the crime scene. In fact, other witnesses also
narrated in their sworn statements that they saw four men around the car of the victim.
Increasing this number to six and testifying in such a way as to show concerted action
among them to establish conspiracy among all the suspects go directly to the
determination of the culpability of the accused. If the court would believe the testimony
of the witness there is a great likelihood that it will be convicting six (now reduced to five
when the lower court correctly acquitted one of the accused) men instead of four who
actually perpetrated the act. This would mean convicting men who are otherwise
innocent. This omission in the salaysay of the witness pertaining to a very material detail
that goes directly to the determination of the culpability of the accused shows that the
witness has, by his own account before the police investigator and his testimony before
the court, destroyed his own credibility, even committing perjury in the process.
witness Freddie Alejo, tried to clarify on the material discrepancy between the number of
suspects that the witness declared in his sworn statement given to SPO1 Edilberto S.
Nicanor. It is clear from the records that the prosecutors, instead of welcoming the
opportunity for the clarification of the material discrepancy, tried their best to block the
clarification.
Atty. Bagatsing:
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Atty. Corpus:
Atty. Bagatsing
Atty. Corpus
Court
Witness
Atty. Bagatsing
Atty. Corpus
Court
Atty. Bagatsing:
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Atty Corpus
Atty. Bagatsing
Atty. Corpus
Atty. Bagatsing
A: Yes sir.
Fiscal Sotero
Atty. Bagatsing
Atty. Corpus
Court
Atty. Bagatsing
Atty. Corpus
Atty. Bagatsing
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Court
Freddie Alejo in his sworn statement saying there were only four suspects and his
testimony in open court declaring that there were six persons who perpetrated the crime
was never fully explained by the prosecution. In fact, the prosecutors blocked all attempt
The number of suspects is a very important aspect of this case. Upon it hinges the
number of persons who should be held responsible and who should suffer the
corresponding penalty.
Thus the prosecution should have amply and sufficiently explained the addition of
two more suspects in the crime by this witness. But they did not. This eroded heavily the
witness’ credibility and has cast aspersion as to the truth of the other points he testified to
in open court. If this witness can add two more persons whom he never mentioned in his
earlier declaration before the police investigators, there is a great likelihood that he has
laced his testimony with other details that are contrary to what he has actually observed.
witness in open court should be sufficiently explained by the prosecution to erase any
implies that the contradictions are a result of a laced testimony not worthy of credence in
F. Freddie Alejo’s testimony might have been tainted because of the benefit given
to him by the family of the victim.
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prosecution as free from any improper motive to falsely testify against the accused in this
case and relies on this Court’s ruling in People vs. Platilla, People vs. Agunias, and
The lack of evidence of any improper motive on the part of the witness to falsely
testify against the accused does not in itself render the whole testimony of such witness
reliable. The contents of such testimony must be fully scrutinized as improper motive is
not the only ground or the only factor to be considered in assessing the testimony of the
witness.
The existence of motive to falsely testify against the accused is not the accused is
not the only ground or factor that could discredit a witness. Equally deplorable is the
Freddie Alejo was given housing accommodations by the victim’s family. This
was established when Merlito Herbas testified that Freddie Alejo was staying in the same
compound where the victim’s family provided them with housing accommodations.
In the instant case, the trial court discredited the testimony of the other security
guard, Merlito Herbas, for as the trial court has said, he is a disgruntled witness after he
did not receive the full amount of monthly salary and the coverage of the witness
However, the trial court failed to consider that Freddie Alejo, having been given
Thus, while indeed, Freddie Alejo might not have been moved by any motive to
falsely testify against all the accused-appellants, yet he might have been moved by the
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benefits he was receiving from the victim’s family to confirm whatever the police or the
The motive to favor the prosecution so he could continue enjoying the benefits
provided him by the victim’s family has, in fact, colored Freddie Alejo’s objectivity as a
witness.
Because of the benefits accorded him by the victim’s family, there is a great
likelihood that Freddie Alejo would willingly and blindly agree to whatever the police
and the prosecution would want him to say, including pointing to persons whom he did
not actually see at the crime seen, as the case of Lorenzo delos Santos has evidently
proved.
Absent any explanation for the discrepancies between Alejo’s narration in his
sworn statement and his testimony in open court, absent any corroborating evidence that
the accused are the same persons seen by the witness at the crime scene, absent any
showing that the witness knows the suspects too well as to be mistaken in ascertaining
their identity in court, the trial court’s findings as to the Freddie Alejo’s credibility and its
This Court has explained in People vs. Dy and Garcia why the trial court’s
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This explanation in according the trial court’s findings with finality finds no
application in this instant case because the Judge who penned the decision was not the
same Judge who was able to observe the demeanor of this particular eyewitness when the
testimony was presented in court. In such a case where the observations of the trial judge
as to the demeanor of a witness was not considered in arriving at the conclusions about
the credibility of the witness, there is no other way of testing the credibility of such
We have shown, through a careful scrutiny of Freddie Alejo’s testimony, that the
trial court’s findings on his credibility are arbitrary in that it relied heavily on the
testimony even if there were contradictions and omissions that were never explained. We
have also shown facts and circumstances of weight and influence that might have been
overlooked (like the glaring discrepancy in the description of the suspects with the
suspects that witness saw at the crime scene, also discussed as a separate assignment of
error), or misapplied (like the concept of positive identification having been misapplied
to the identification made by the witness in open court, which we assail as not a clear and
Add to this the bias that resulted from receiving housing accommodations and
probably other benefits from the victim’s family which the trial court failed to consider in
All of these, when considered, will surely affect the result of the case warranting
the setting aside of the trial court’s findings as to the credibility of witness Freddie Alejo.
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While we have already touched upon the discrepancy in the number of suspects in
assailing Freddie Alejo’s credibility, the trial court’s erroneous appreciation of the
independent and separate error altogether that goes to the trial court’s misappreciation of
evidence that is totally different from the result it produced - eroding the credibility of the
witness.
The trial court erroneously appreciated the sworn statement of Freddie Alejo
when it declared “that he saw four (4) men armed with handguns shoot at a car while he
was on guard duty at No. 211 Katipunan Avenue, Blue Ridge, Q.C. and that one (1) other
male person poked his gun near where he was stationed, asked him to come down and
ordered that no one must interfere.” (Joint Decision, page 24) This erroneous appreciation
It is very clear from the sworn statement of Freddie Alejo that he only saw four
[…]
When the affiant declared “Isa sa suspect na nasa tapat ko…” he was obviously
referring to one of the “Apat na hindi kilalang lalaki,” otherwise, he would have declared
that there were more than four men who were involved in the killing of the victim. In
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fact, the police investigators never bothered to clarify whether there were more than four
persons who perpetrated the killing because the other witnesses who were investigated
In the sworn statement of security guard Merlito Herbas executed at 11:40 of the
11. T – Sino naman ang bumaril sa taong ito, kung kilala mo?
Also, in the sworn statement of witness Cesar Espiritu given at 12:10 noon of the
It is clear, then, that several witnesses in the shooting incident were one in saying
This was even confirmed by P/Insp. Rogelio Castillo who was presented by the
prosecution and who testified, among others, as to the contents of their referral letter
when they forwarded the spent shells and slugs to the Crime Lab, saying, “The first
paragraph of our referral letter are (sic) as follows: “This refers to the shooting incident
under your investigation by your division committed on June 13, 1996 along Katipunan,
Proj. 4, Quezon City wherein the deceased victim is one Rolando Abadilla and the
suspect (sic) were about 4 unidentified male persons armed with firearm.” (TSN,
What is clearly stated in Freddie Alejo’s statement is that it was one of the four
suspects whom he saw surrounding the victim’s car, and not another man as the court
erroneously construed, who pointed a gun towards him and commanded him to come
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down from the guard house and that this very same suspect had to repeat the command
It was thus an error for the trial court to have appreciated Alejo’s sworn statement
as saying “that he saw four (4) men armed with handguns shoot at a car while he was on
guard duty at No. 211 Katipunan Avenue, Blue Ridge, Q.C. and that one (1) other male
person poked his gun near where he was stationed, asked him to come down and ordered
that no one must interfere” as this would, in effect, increase the number of suspects to
five.
While it appears on the record that the presence of the two security guards in the
vicinity of the crime scene cannot be doubted, the presence of Joel de Jesus and the
confirmation of the two security guards about Joel de Jesus’ participation in the killing of
The court should not have only ascertained whether the confirmation of the two
guards that Joel de Jesus was one of the perpetrators of the crime appear on the record,
but, more importantly, it should have ascertained whether such confirmations are reliable,
free from any doubt, and whether it establishes with moral certainty that Joel de Jesus
For if Joel de Jesus was indeed at the crime scene, how come he is not among
those whom the witness identified in open court as the four persons shooting at the victim
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whom the witness referred to in his sworn statement given to police investigators just five
There were only four suspects seen by all the eyewitnesses who were investigated
by the police. These four suspects must necessarily be those who were seen by all the
witnesses around the victim’s car: one at the driver’s side (front left); another near the
passenger’s side (front right), another at the rear right side of the car and the fourth at the
car’s rear left side. For Joel de Jesus to be at the crime scene, he must be among these
Freddie Alejo, in open court, pointed to Rameses de Jesus, Cesar Fortuna, Lenido
Lumanog and Augusto Santos as those whom he allegedly saw around the victim’s car.
This alone, already points to the fact that Joel de Jesus was not among those who were
seen at the crime scene on the very day the crime was perpetrated.
Add to this the fact that the two men allegedly walking to and fro in front of the
guardhouse where Alejo was stationed were just added belatedly in Alejo’s testimony and
Comparing his testimony in open court and his earlier sworn statement, the
reliability of the sworn statement is greater considering that it was given just five hours
before the incident happened. In the words of the trial court itself,
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Thus the trial court correctly held that Freddie Alejo’s testimony given at a later
This ruling by the trial court and its acquittal of Lorenzo delos Santos lead to the
conclusion that the testimony of the witness pertaining to the two men whom the witness
referred to as walking to and fro near his guardhouse for more than an hour prior to the
shooting incident is really not worthy of credence. In fact, the trial court correctly ruled
that “His court testimony, therefore, given at a much later date (August 1996) after the
arrest of Lorenzo delos Santos wherein SG Alejo narrated that there were two (2) men
loitering about near his post and that one after the other those two men barked at or
ordered him is weakened by what he had earlier told police investigators disclosing that
only one (1) person shouted orders to him.” The court, however, failed to go further as it
should have gone on to say that this one person who shouted orders at him was among
the four suspects who shot at the victim as this is necessitated by the various accounts
given to the police officers that there were only four men seen at the crime scene.
The trial court likewise ruled that Merlito Herbas also confirmed Joel de Jesus’
presence at the crime scene and relied on Herbas’ sworn statement where he pointed to
Joel de Jesus as one of those he saw at the crime scene. However, SG Merlito Herbas has
openly declared in court that Major Rodolfo made him identify Joel de Jesus. He recanted
this identification saying that he was just forced to say that Joel was among the suspects.
(TSN, Testimony of Merlito Herbas, March 27, 1998, p. 23, May 27, 1998, pp. 4-6).
Moreover, security guard Merlito Herbas categorically declared in open court that
all accused in this case were not the suspects he saw at the crime scene when the victim
was ambushed. (TSN, Testimony of Merlito Herbas, March 29, 1998, pp 18-18, 25).
From all the foregoing, the confirmation made by the two witnesses as to Joel de
Jesus’ presence in the crime scene cannot be said to have been done independently, free
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from any suggestion and with certainty. This raises a doubt as to whether Joel de Jesus
was indeed at the crime scene. For if he was indeed in the crime scene and was among
those who perpetrated the crime, he should have been one of the four suspects situated
around the victim’s car. Yet, in the testimony of the lone eyewitness presented in open
court, Joel de Jesus was not among the four who were around the victim’s car. The doubt
is even greater since another eyewitness who was not presented by the prosecution but
was presented by defense testified that he did not see any of the accused at the crime
scene.
The prosecution’s over reliance to a single eyewitness when there were other
eyewitnesses who came forward during the investigation and who expressed their
court.
It is the prosecution’s duty to prove the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt. It is their duty to present the other eyewitnesses to make sure that no mistake in
the prosecution never bothered to corroborate Alejo’s testimony and identification with
Such attitude of the prosecution in not presenting the other eyewitnesses calls for
the operation of Rule 131 Sec 3(e) of the Revised Rules of Court which states that:
that the other eyewitnesses would also testify that the accused are not those they saw at
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The trial court, in ruling that the presence of Joel de Jesus at the crime scene does
appear on the record, relied on the identification made by Freddie Alejo and Merlito
We have already assailed the manner in which police investigators made Freddie
Alejo identify Joel de Jesus as it was through a show-up where the witness was shown
pictures of Joel de Jesus and was brought to Fairview to identify Joel just before police
Likewise, the identification made by Herbas was not freely executed as it was
done not only with police interference but with direct suggestion and prodding by Major
independent identification made by the witness but were suggested by the police officers.
Herbas testified that he identified Joel de Jesus on the suggestion of Major Rodolfo who
pointed Joel de Jesus to him. (TSN, Testimony of Merlito Herbas, March 27, 1998, pp.
But the court dismissed Herbas’ testimony saying that Herbas appears to be a
disgruntled witness whose need for job and money did color his perception and attitude.
The trial court noted that Herbas, together with Alejo, were offered sanctuary by the
family of the victim. But despite this notice and admittance of the fact that Freddie Alejo
was likewise given free living quarters in a compound owned by the victim’s family, the
trial court failed to consider this as a factor that could likewise color Freddie Alejo’s
Thus, while the trial court viewed Herbas as an interested witness it failed to see
Alejo in same way. Both security guards were housed in the Libis compound of the
Abadilla family after the incident. But the Court prefers to dwell on Herbas’ apparent
disgruntledness about the Abadilla family’s promises of salary and witness protection –
that this “did color his perception and attitude” (p. 25, fourth to eighth paragraphs).
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Presumably, Alejo was not disgruntled and was happy with the Abadilla family’s
arrangements for him. Would that not also color his perception and attitude? Were the
Court’s “eyes wide shut” to this and other inconsistencies, contradictions and
discrepancies as regards Alejo? Such unequal treatment is also violative of the equal
protection clause.
Thus, Freddie Alejo, who was given certain benefits by the family of the victim
could have simply agreed to confirm what the police and prosecution would ask him to
confirm even if the same would be contrary to what he has seen so that he could continue
This could have explained why this witness added two more persons among the
suspects when he was so categorical in saying that there were just four men he saw as the
malefactors.
All these point to one thing: Joel de Jesus was never at the crime scene at all. And
in the same way that (Lorenzo delos Santos), whom Alejo allegedly saw walking to and
fro in the vicinity for more than an hour, together with Lorenzo delos Santos, before the
shooting incident happened, was correctly acquitted by the trial court, Joel de Jesus must,
of necessity and being similarly situated as Lorenzo delos Santos, in that they were just
both added to the number of actual suspects seen at the crime scene, should have been
acquitted as well.
And all this point to another thing: that the confessions extracted from Joel de
Jesus, aside from being inadmissible in evidence because they were uncounselled and
coerced confessions, were not true accounts of what transpired at the crime scene but
were forced upon him by the police investigators who tortured him into admitting his
participation in the crime and into pointing to other persons as his cohorts.
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
A. The confessions of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos bear all the marks
of inadmissibility that the Constitution speaks of in the Bill of Rights.
In People vs. Muleta, the Court reiterated its ruling in People vs. Santos (283 SCRA
443), that “A confession is not admissible unless the prosecution satisfactorily shows that
it was obtained within the limits imposed by the 1987 Constitution.” (309 SCRA 148,
161).
Far from showing satisfactorily that the confessions offered in evidence were
obtained within the limits imposed by the 1987 Constitution, the prosecution failed
miserably to prove that the Constitutional safeguards were met when the alleged
suspects with competent and independent counsels of their own choice, the safeguards
against self-incrimination, and the proscription against use of force, torture, violence and
coercion were met when their alleged extra-judicial confessions were taken.
What is shown in the records of this case is that all these safeguards enshrined in
the Constitution, expounded by the statutes and repeatedly elucidated by this Honorable
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People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos were not provided with competent and
independent counsel of their own choice when they allegedly executed their extra-judicial
confessions. Instead, the police officers engaged the services of counsels who have been
their favorite choice in many cases where suspects allegedly confess their commission of,
or their participation in the commission of, crimes. In most of these cases where these
counsels were engaged by the police officers to assist the suspects in executing their
extra-judicial confessions, such suspects would later recant their alleged confessions
because these were extracted from them through torture, force, violence, intimidation and
coercion.
Neither Joel de Jesus nor Lorenzo delos Santos were allowed to talk with any of
their relatives. And instead of allowing them to talk with a lawyer of their own choice,
the police officers brought them to lawyers who were chosen not by the suspects but by
Lorenzo delos Santos, were all taken without the proper assistance of competent and
independent counsel:
4. Salaysay of Lorenzo delos Santos given to SPO2 Pio L. Tarala at the IBP
Office at 3:10 p.m. on June 21, 1996 in front of Atty. Florimond C. Rous.
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People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
The portion in the sworn statement where Joel de Jesus was supposed to have
Even if it appears that the suspect was asked whether he understands his right to
be assisted by a lawyer of his own choice. But he was never asked whether he has a
lawyer whom he chooses to assist him during the custodial investigation. This was
confirmed by SPO2 Jose A. Garcia in his testimony. (TSN, October 1, 1996, p. 89) It is
one thing to be apprised of one’s rights and it is another to be asked whether one is
exercising such right. It is clear that Joel de Jesus was never given the chance to exercise
his right to choose the lawyer he wants to assist him during the custodial investigation.
Making a suspect understand his right to be assisted by a lawyer of his own choice is
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People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
It is only when a suspect says that he does not have a lawyer that one should be
provided him by the government. In this case, the police officers simply forced upon Joel
de Jesus the services of Atty. Confesor B. Sansano. Thus it was the police and not Joel de
SPO2 Jose Garcia, Jr., the police investigator presented by the prosecution,
confirmed through his testimony that he did not ask Joel de Jesus whether he had any
lawyer of his own choice. (TSN, October 1, 1996, p. 89-90) Instead, the police officers
only had Atty. Confesor B. Sansano in mind. It was they who brought the suspect to the
IBP Office. And in fact, even at the IBP office, where there was a lady lawyer when they
arrived together with Atty. Florimond Rous, these police officers never bothered to check
the possibility of letting Joel de Jesus confer with the lady lawyer but instead waited for
Atty. Sansano to arrive. (TSN, Testimony of P/Insp. Rogelio Castillo, August 15, 1996,
pp. 132-139).
The testimony of P/Insp. Rogelio Castillo is also very revealing about the choice
of counsel. When asked whether he is aware of R.A. 7438, he answered that “As far as
the provision of the law is concerned, I did comply and I did my part because I secured
the services of counsel.” (TSN, August 15, 1996, p. 46). It is therefore clear that it was
the police officers who secured the counsel for the accused. Police officers are not
supposed to secure the services of counsel for the accused. This alone, is again an
indicator that the counsel who assisted the suspect when he purportedly executed his
extra-judicial confession was never the counsel of choice by the suspect. In People vs.
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People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
If indeed Atty. Sansano conferred with Joel de Jesus before taking the statement,
he did so for only about 5 minutes (TSN, September 25, 1996, p. 126-128). In People vs.
Suela, this Court, in holding that the extra-judicial confession therein of Edgardo Batocan
was obtained in violation of his constitutional rights, pronounced, “This appellant did not
finish first year high school. Yet, Atty. Rous, who is touted by the prosecution as a
competent and independent counsel, interviewed Batocan – before the latter gave his
confession – for only around “five minutes.”” (373 SCRA 163, 182-183). This is not
enough time to apprise a suspect of his constitutional rights and afford him a meaningful
understanding of the consequences of his waiver of those rights. As this Court has said:
Aside from failing to effectively inform Joel de Jesus of his constitutional rights,
Atty. Sansano, if indeed he was present during the alleged taking of the extra-judicial
confession, failed to protect the rights of the accused, not only at the inception of the
formal investigation but also during its progress and until the suspect was made to sign
the document. That a person under custodial investigation must be properly and
effectively assisted by a competent and independent counsel was explained fully by this
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People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
The prosecution tried to show the court that the assisting counsel was present all
throughout the investigation until the confessant signed the document transcribing the
latter’s alleged confession. Yet a very glaring proof tells the court that this was not so.
The investigation ended at 5:55 p.m. as appearing in the document itself (Exhibit E-6)
1996, p. 76, October 1, 1996, pp. 33-34) but the signature of Joel de Jesus was affixed at
5:00 p.m., (Exh. E-6-5 and E-6-6) a physical impossibility since the document could not
have been signed before the taking of the statement was even finished.
That the document was signed even before it was finished does not only point to
means that the affiant was not given any chance to read the statement before he signed it.
It also means that the affiant was not given proper advice by counsel before he was made
The length of time that Joel and Atty. Sansano conferred prior to the alleged
taking of the confession and the discrepancy between the time that the investigation
allegedly ended and the time it was signed point out that the assisting counsel, if indeed
he assisted the suspect at the time the confession was purportedly taken, rendered a
meaningless assistance in the light of what this Court has ruled in People vs. Deniega as
follows:
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
This additional statement allegedly taken from Joel de Jesus on June 21, 1996, at
9:30 a.m. at the CID Office, CPDC, Camp Karingal, Quezon City, was taken totally
While it states in a note that “Affiant was duly apprised of his Constitutional
rights,” such note does not meet the requirements of a meaningful understanding that
Edilberto S. Nicanor at the IBP Office of Quezon City on June 21, 1996 merely stated
This cursory and summary apprisal cannot suffice and does not meet the strict
is taken from him. In fact, the document itself does not show that all the rights of the
accused were sufficiently explained to the accused and he was made to think about the
While Atty. Florimond C. Rous might have been present when this alleged
statement was taken, this counsel failed to competently assist the accused to ensure that
the latter’s rights are amply protected and that his decision to give a confession before the
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
A glaring fact also points that the accused was simply asked to sign the additional
statement. It was allegedly started at 5:00 p.m. but Joel de Jesus was also made to sign
the document at 5:00 p.m. This means that the statement was already prepared when
accused was brought to the IBP Office to have the document signed.
The extra-judicial confession of Lorenzo delos Santos was taken from him
Florimond Rous to bolster their claim that the statement was voluntarily given and that
However, the testimony of Atty. Rous indicates that he not render a meaningful
Q: Did you not bother to ask Mr. Delos Santos when was he
apprehended?
A: No sir.
Q. Did you not bother to ask the police investigators
accompanying him when did they apprehend Mr. Delos
Santos?
A: No, sir.
Q: It did not concern you?
A: I don’t know, sir. (TSN, October 15, 1996, p. 70)
This is very revealing of the attitude that counsel has over the whole thing. He
does not even know whether the circumstances of arrest or the personal circumstances of
Atty. Rous also testified that it was the police officer who propounded the basis
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People of the Philippines vs. Fortuna, et. al.
S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
While Atty. Rous was present, he did not even bother to explain to the accused,
before the alleged statement was taken, about the nature of those rights and the
consequences of waiving them. Instead, Atty. Rous left everything to the police officer.
There was also no showing that Lorenzo delos Santos was ably assisted by Atty.
Rous as the interrogation progressed. He was just within hearing distance but he never
bothered to confer with Lorenzo regarding the specific answers he was then giving and
advising him as to their effects, counseling him that he still has the option to remain silent
and change his mind about giving any confession. Instead, Atty. Rous just let the
Even before Lorenzo delos Santos signed the statement, what Atty. Rous did was
merely ask the accused whether he was willing to sign the same.
Q: How about you, what did you do after delos Santos read
his statement?
A: After he read the questions and answers, I asked him if
these were the questions and answers that were given to
him and the answers that he gave and he said these were
the questions and these were the answers given. Then I
asked him if he was willing to sign the statement and if
he was willing to sign it freely and without pressure and
he said he was willing to sign the statement without any
pressure or force, sir. (ibid. pp. 28-29)
Atty Rous never bothered to check again with the accused whether he understands
all the consequences of his waiver of his constitutional rights before signing the
statement.
Moreover, Atty. Rous, while appearing confident with his answers during the
direct examination, appeared tentative, unsure and unable to remember the details during
cross-examination. He started his answers with “I think” for twelve times (ibid., pp. 52,
63, 69 (2x), 72, 79 (2x), 95, 100, 102, 130, & 142) and with “I don’t recall” twenty-two
times (ibid., pp. 57, 58, 60, 61, 64 (2x), 67, 68, 84, 96 (2x), 101, 129, 138, 140, 142, 146
(2x), 15, 159, 162, & 164). He also answered “I guess so” (ibid., p. 65) and “I think so”
(ibid., pp. 66, 68) twice each and “I don’t know” (ibid., p. 67) and “I don’t remember”
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
statements based on documents he allegedly signed, he would give a lame excuse that he
is already 48 years old and that his memory is already short. (TSN, Testimony of Atty.
Atty, Rous does not even recall the name of the investigator who brought the
affiant (ibid., p. 67) even if the name of the investigator was already mentioned. (ibid., p.
68).
He even candidly admitted, “As I said again I don’t recall vividly any more what
transpired during that time and during that day.” (ibid., p. 66). Pressed for explanation,
the good counsel just gave old age as a convenient excuse saying, “Well, I am 48 years
old, sir, and it’s expected that my memory would already fall short.” (ibid., p. 58).
All these indicate the lack of competence of the counsel provided by the police
officers to Lorenzo delos Santos when the latter allegedly executed his sworn statement.
Lorenzo delos Santos was able to prove that he was not at all at the crime scene,
proving that the statement allegedly taken from him were just forced upon him by the
police. He was just asked to sign the alleged confession without him having read the
same and that the document was brought to Atty. Rous. (TSN, December 9, 1998, pp 18-
20).
When the trial court acquitted Lorenzo delos Santos because he was able to prove
that he was not at the crime scene, such acquittal rendered his extra-judicial confession
pertaining to the crime ineffective. Giving credence to such extra-judicial confession and
at the same time acquitting the particular accused who gave the extra-judicial confession
on the ground of evidence presented that he was not at the crime scene would be
2. In two separate cases, this Court has previously noted the incompetence
of counsels whom the police investigators sought to assist the suspects in
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
We are duty bound to raise to this Court’s attention, and it might also interest the
Court to note, that in the cases of People vs. Deniega and People vs. Suela where the
extra-judicial confessions of the accused were not admitted in evidence, all the accused
complained of torture and violence by the police investigators who extracted said
confessions from them. But more interestingly, in both cases, Atty. Confesor B. Sansano
and Atty Florimond Rous were the counsels who assisted the confessants.
In fact, the incompetence of both Atty. Sansano and Atty. Rous to serve as
assisting counsels for the suspects brought to their office was already noted by this Court
In People vs. Suela, the Court again had the opportunity to comment on Atty.
Sansano’s lack of proper understanding of his role as counsel for a suspect during a
custodial investigation.
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
should not have concerned him because his duty was to his
clients and not to the prosecution or to the police investigators.”
How then, can Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos have been assured of an
able and competent assistance from these counsels who have been proven to protect not
the interest of the suspects brought before them for legal assistance but that of the
Both Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos were forced to confess to the crime
and to implicate their co-accused through the use of torture, force, violence, coercion and
intimidation which vitiated their free will in signing the confessions presented by the
prosecution in court. They were also detained in secret places and were held
incommunicado by preventing them from making any contact with any other person
during their confinement while their confessions were being extracted from them.
All these prove that the confessions offered by the prosecution also fail the test of
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
The use of torture and violence to the persons of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos
Santos rendered their confessions involuntary which calls for the operation of the
In fact, it was not only Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos who were tortured
and held incommunicado, but all the other accused in this case were similarly treated by
their captors.
All the accused in this case, together with their wives, filed their complaint before
the Commission on Human Rights. Their case also caught the attention of Amnesty
International which has come up with a special report about their plight.
injuries inflicted upon their persons. They instituted administrative action against the
police officers who subjected them to torture. They were examined by a reputable
physician whose findings were submitted before the trial court, the Commission on
All these rule out any iota of doubt that all the accused in this case were indeed
tortured and forced into admitting their alleged participation in the crime.
Thus, voluntariness of the confessions of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
The exact opposite of this ruling now calls application in the instant case. The
confessions submitted by the prosecution and admitted in evidence by the trial court
should be rendered inadmissible as they should have never been admitted at all.
While the prosecution tried to show that the custodial investigation was
purportedly conducted in the IBP Office of Quezon City in the presence of counsel, a lot
Again we take the documents one by one to show this Court the glaring indicators
investigation but were already prepared by the police officers and were presented to the
accused who were forced and intimidated into signing the same.
If, indeed, Atty Confesor B. Sansano was present during the time when the
suspect was being apprised of his constitutional rights in his supposed extra-judicial
confession, how come that he was never asked whether he is willing to accept Atty.
Sansano as a lawyer provided by the government in the absence of a lawyer of his own
choice. The prosecution tried to establish this through the testimony of SPO2 Garcia,
however, this was not borne in the purported sworn statement of Joel de Jesus. And the
The way the question and answer was transcribed points that this has been
prepared somewhere else and was only brought to the office of the IBP for the signing.
The following questions and answers in the sworn statement allegedly given by
Joel de Jesus in the sworn statement he purported executed at the IBP office in front of
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Atty. Sansano contain very glaring indicators that will engender a well-founded belief
that these statements were not a recorded face-to-face question and answer between a
police investigator and a suspect. For if these are indeed a result of a face-to-face
questioning, the natural flow would be to ask a particular fact, one at a time.
T: Ano naman ang iyong pangalan, edad, at iba (sic) bagay ukol
sa iyong tunay na pagkatao?
S: Ikaw JOEL DE JESUS y VALDEZ, alias “TABONG”, 22
taong gulang, may-asawa, tricycle driver, tubong Banga
Caves, Camarines Sur at nakatira sa No. 49 Ruby St., Bgy.
Fairview, Quezon City.
The use of “Ikaw” instead of “ako,” while it might have been a typographical
error, is a serious slip which points that it was another person and not Joel de Jesus who
supplied and related the facts written. A person who is asked his name would simply give
his name without his alias. And it would be unnatural for a person to reveal his address,
and in this instance, his provincial and city addresses, without being specifically asked
about them. “Iba pang bagay tungkol sa iyong pagkatao” is too general a formulation to
These other supposed answers also give out other details not called for by the
question. When asked about the type of motorcycle, the natural answer would only be
Kawasaki. But here it appears that the witness volunteered the Plate Number. It would
have been believable if the questioning went in such a way as to elicit these data one at a
time for that is the natural flow of a custodial interrogation. And it goes against the
natural attitude of persons, especially those being interrogated, to answer only what is
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
Atty. Florimond Rous testified that he assisted Joel de Jesus when the latter
document itself contain a passage saying, “Iyan pong lalaking iyan na nakasuot ng puting
In his testimony, however, Atty. Florimond Rous said that Lorenzo delos Santos
had already left his office when investigators brought in Joel de Jesus for the execution of
the alleged additional statement. (TSN, Testimony of Atty. Florimond Rous, October 15,
How can Joel de Jesus then point to Lorenzo delos Santos when the latter was no
longer at the office of Atty. Florimond Rous when the alleged identification was made?
Even without pointing to the other irregularities showing that the suspect was not
ably assisted by Atty. Rous, the fact alone that the person being identified was not in the
same room where the identification allegedly took place is enough to discredit the whole
And as we will show in the discussion of the testimony of Atty. Florimond Rous
when we assail the admissibility of the alleged extra-judicial confession of Lorenzo delos
filled with statements claiming that he can not recall the details of the events that
transpired in his office when the alleged statements were purportedly taken.
c. Joel de Jesus additional salaysay dated June 21, 1996, 9:30 a.m.
The line-up allegedly included SPO2 Jose Garcia, Jr., PO1 Florencio Escobido,
D/P Alexander Dalay, Rameses de Jesus, SPO2 Cesar Fortuna, SPO1 Jorge Manabat,
Lenido Lumanog, D/P Roger Roxas, PO2 Romeo Costibolo and PO1 Elmer Monsalve.
The identification was alleged to have been conducted inside the CID Office and
necessarily all the police officers were in their duty uniforms and only the other accused
were in civilian clothing. How can this be a proper police line-up when the persons
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S. C. G. R. No. 141660-64
presented to the one who is supposed to identify suspects are the suspects themselves and
no one else.
In fact, the way the question was formulated, “sa mga taong naririto ngayon sa
opisinang ito, sino sa kanila ang makikilala mo?” was not even a proper formulation to
This shows that this particular document, aside from being inadmissible for
having been taken without the assistance of any lawyer at all, is also of no probative
value as it does not meaningfully link the accused to the commission of the crime.
It is also mind boggling why the police never bothered to have the accused
identified by any of the witnesses who came forward and expressed their willingness to
testify just after the incident occurred. Not even Freddie Alejo, the eyewitness presented
Alejo was only made to identify Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos. The
identification of Joel de Jesus is even doubtful as it have been the result of suggestion
from the police because Alejo was shown pictures of Joel de Jesus which was compared
cartographic sketches as evidence of the basis for the arrests of the accused.
The irregularity in the procedure by which the police conducted the case
investigation, especially in not tapping the eyewitnesses who came forward and were
willing to testify, in identifying the suspects in a police line-up, raises serious suspicion
that these eyewitnesses would not have pointed to the accused in this case as the actual
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Rogelio Castillo and SPO2 Jose Garcia, Jr. do not tie up on material details pertaining to
Rogelio Castillo said that they went to the City Hall Compound at around 1:00
p.m. on June 20, 1996 to look for a lawyer who could assist Joel de Jesus in the execution
of the latter’s extra-judicial confession. Castillo testified that his men scouted for lawyers
and he was left at the lobby. (TSN, August 15, 1996, p. 130). SPO2 Jose Garcia, on the
other hand, testified that when they arrived at the City Hall, it was Lt. Rogelio Castillo
and another investigator who went to the second floor to look for a lawyer. (TSN,
September 25, 1996, pp. 63-66). And that he, together with Joel de Jesus and SPO1
These witnesses also testified that they arrived at the City Hall Compound at
about 1:00 p.m. (TSN, August 15, 1996, p. 129), that they had to scout for lawyers for
about 15-20 minutes according to Castillo (TSN, August 15, 1996, p. 130) while
according to Garcia it took them about 25-30 minutes to look for a lawyer (TSN,
September 25, pp. 64-65), that when they arrived at the IBP Office, Atty. Confesor
Sansano was not yet around so they had to wait for another 5-7 minutes according to
Garcia (TSN, October 1, 1996, p. 46) while according to Castillo they had to wait for
about 15-20 minutes (TSN, August 15, 1996, p. 135), that Atty. Sansano talked with Joel
de Jesus for about five minutes according to Garcia (September 25, 1996, p. 127) while
Castillo testified that Atty. Sansano conferred with Joel for about 30 minutes (TSN,
Comparing the testimonies of Castillo and Garcia as to the time elapsed for each
Time Elapsed
Event Castillo Garcia
Scouting for a lawyer 15 – 20 min. 25 – 30 min.
Waiting for Atty. Sansano to arrive 15 – 20 min. 5 – 7 min.
Atty. Sansano’s conference with Joel de 30 min. 5 min.
Jesus
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states that the statement was taken from 1:10 p.m. Taking the time frame according to the
two witnesses, it would have been impossible to start the taking of Joel’s statement at
1:10 p.m.
If we use Castillo’s testimony, the probable start of taking Joel’s statement would
have been 2:00 or 2:10 p.m. while if we use Garcia’s testimony, it should have started at
1:35 or 1:42 p.m. This is nowhere near the 1:10 p.m. written on the heading of Joel de
We have also pointed out earlier that the taking of the statement was allegedly
finished at 5:55 p.m. as appearing in the document itself and as confirmed by the police
officers. Yet, Joel de Jesus signed the document at exactly 5:00 p.m. How can this
prosecution that the purported taking of the extra-judicial confessions of Joel de Jesus
and Lorenzo delos Santos allegedly at the IBP Office in Quezon City Hall ever really
happened.
Moreover, certain facts advanced by the prosecution itself support the testimonies
of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos that their Constitutional rights to remain silent
Police Sr. Inspector Jose B. Macanas, witness for the prosecution, testified as to
the particulars of the arrest of Joel de Jesus, Cesar Fortuna and Lorenzo delos Santos.
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Capt. Macanas testified that Joel’s arrest was effected by the PARAC and CPDC
operatives at about 4:00 p.m. on June 19, 1996 (TSN, November 12, 1996, p. 28) after a
stake-out which began at 2:00 p.m. that same day. Freddie Alejo was with the CPDC
operatives where he was shown pictures of Alias Tabong before he was made to identify
1. just after Joel de Jesus was arrested, he was turned over to the CID-CPDC for
investigation (p. 30);
2. on that same day, the CPDC investigators informed the team of Capt.
Macanas through their superior Col. Baluyot, that Joel de Jesus “made some
revelation (sic) with regard to his participation in the killing of ex-Col.
Abadilla (p. 32-33);
4. Between 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. of June 19, 1996 (TSN, December 10, 1996, p. 21),
the group was allegedly led by Joel de Jesus somewhere in Fairview along
Ruby Street wherein his other alleged companions namely Ram, Lorenzo
delos Santos, Ogie, one Alias Cesar could be found, (TSN, November 12,
1996, p. 35) based on Joel de Jesus’ purportedly volunteered information (
TSN, December 10, 1996, p. 18);
5. Joel led them to the house of Ram de Jesus but they did not find Ram there.
Instead, Joel de Jesus pointed to Cesar Fortuna and the arresting team,
immediately effected the arrest of the latter, minutes before midnight. (TSN,
November 12, 1996, pp. 36-40);
6. Past midnight that same evening, the operatives apprehended Lorenzo delos
Santos. (TSN, __________) look for transcript.
This chain of events leading to the arrest of Cesar Fortuna and Lorenzo delos
Santos establish that Joel de Jesus was interrogated by the police operatives just hours
after his arrest on June 19, 1996. Based on information extracted from Joel de Jesus,
without informing him of his Constitutional rights and without the assistance of counsel,
the police operatives established the names of the other accused in this case.
From the foregoing account of Capt. Macanas, it is clear that Joel de Jesus was
already subjected to police questioning and interrogation on June 19, 1996, just after he
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was arrested. Such interrogation was conducted upon the person of Joel de Jesus without
the assistance of any counsel. In fact, this corroborates the assertion made by Joel de
Jesus that he was asked a lot of questions after he was tortured into admitting his
participation in the crime. Such interrogation made by police officers without any
Constitutional rights.
And taking into account that Joel de Jesus was arrested not just by a single police
officers but by joint operatives from the PARAC and the CPDC, the pressure that police
Deniega:
Yet, the prosecution tried to convince the court through documentary and
testimonial evidence that Joel de Jesus executed his extra-judicial confession on June 20,
1996 at the office of the IBP Quezon City Chapter properly, orderly and with the
If, indeed, the extra-judicial confession of Joel de Jesus was regularly taken only
between 1:10 and 5:55 p.m. of June 20, 1996, with the assistance of a competent counsel
and without any force, violence, intimidation, threat or torture, how come that the police
operatives were already able to ascertain the names of the other accused in this case and
had, in fact, arrested Cesar Fortuna and Lorenzo delos Santos on the midnight of June 19,
1996?
The fact is, as Joel de Jesus related before the court, that he was tortured and
forced to admit his participation in the ambush slay of the late Col. Rolando Abadilla,
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and was also forced to implicate the other accused in this case. Joel de Jesus was
interrogated without the assistance of counsel on June 19, 1996, the results of which were
the transcribed and typewritten sinumpaang salaysay (Exh. E to E-6) allegedly taken
This also bolsters the testimony of Joel de Jesus that the statement he was made to
sign before Atty. Sansano was already prepared even before they went to the Quezon
City Hall of Justice and that he was not interrogated in said office but in the safehouse
Surely, the exacting standards fixed by the Constitution were not met in the
instant case. There is no other remedy than to invoke the exclusionary rule with regards
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The trial court’s erroneous admitting in evidence of the coerced and tortured
extra-judicial confessions of accused Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos, as just
discussed, is only the tip of the iceberg of the trial court’s weak commitment, low regard
and poor appreciation of constitutional and human rights of arrested, detained and
accused persons.
This is exemplified by the fact that the trial court’s appealed 32-page Joint
Decision of July 30, 1999 (Annex A) gives only four short paragraphs (in pp. 26-27) to a
discussion of the tortured saga of Joel de Jesus from whom no less than three extra-
judicial confessions were extracted. Contrast this with the extensive discussion of this
matter in four pages (pp. 912-16 of the RTC record) of the Memorandum for accused
And it was not only Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos among the seven
original accused or six remaining accused who suffered “the works:” warrantless
arrests, 4 violation of the Miranda rule, 5 arbitrary detention, 6 secret detention, 7 torture, 8
uncounselled statements, 9 coerced confessions, 10 as this and the other appellants’ briefs
will show.
Even more telling than these briefs are the physical, photographic, medical and
expert evidences to that effect (see esp. accused Fortuna’s Exhibits 5 to 9, 58, 61 to 66,
79 and 82 under his Formal Offer of Evidence dated April 19, 1999). Only one with
“eyes wide shut” will fail to see the “third degree” (if there was a higher degree number,
4
Constitution (Const.), Art. III, Sec. 2; and Rules of Court, Rule 113, Sec. 5.
5
Const., Art. III, Sec. 12(1).
6
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), Art. 9; International Covenant of Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR), Art. 9(1); and Revised Penal Code (RPC), Art. 124.
7
Const., Art. III, Sec. 12(2).
8
Const., Art. III, Sec. 12(2); UDHR, Art. 5; and ICCPR, Art. 7.
9
Const., Art. III, Sec. 12(1) & (3).
10
Const., Art. III, Sec. 12(2) & (3).
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we would use it) from which the accused “graduated” from what was literally a four-day
The accused and their relatives filed, at the first opportunity, complaints for
torture and other human rights violations (e.g. as unlawful arrest, arbitrary detention,
physical injuries, etc.) against the arresting and detaining police officers before the
Commission on Human Rights (CHR) (see e.g. accused Fortuna’s Exhs. 65 & 66). The
After-Mission Report of the CHR Special Investigators dated 27 June 1996 (Annex 5 of
Exh. L of accused-appellant Lenido Lumanog’s “Motion for New Trial and Related
XXX
The Resolution of the CHR itself dated 26 July 1996 (accused Fortuna’s Exh. 79)
September 1996 criminal charges against 19 identified and about 10 unidentified persons,
mostly police officers, for illegal arrest (RPC, Art. 269), arbitrary detention (RPC, Art.
269), delay in the delivery of persons arrested to the proper judicial authority (RPC, Art.
125), grave threats (RPC, Art. 282), grave coercion (RPC, Art. 286), incriminatory
machinations (RPC, Art. 363), falsifications (RPC, Arts. 171 & 172), violation of the
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rights of persons arrested, detained or under custodial investigation (RA 7438, Sec. 4-a &
b), and violation of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, RA 3019, Sec. 3-a & e).
But since then, September 1996, up to the present, October 2003, or seven years,
the Abadilla murder suspects’ complaints for various human rights violations or the
the DOJ, without it filing the appropriate criminal actions in court. In the meantime, on
July/August 1999, or in three years, five of them (thus “Abadilla 5”) were convicted and
sentenced to death in the criminal case at bar. One wonders what happened to the
constitutional guarantees not only of speedy disposition of cases under the Constitution’s
Art. III, Sec. 16 but also the more fundamental equal protection of the law under the
It was this long delay in the termination of the preliminary investigation of the
Abadilla murder suspects’ complaints for torture and other human rights violations
which, among others, became the subject in October 2000 of an Amnesty International
special report “The Rolando Abadilla murder inquiry – an urgent need for effective
not just a matter which is of public knowledge and therefore of judicial notice (Rule 129,
Sec. 2) but a matter of international public knowledge, which the Court actually took
direct judicial notice of by way of its Resolution dated 4 July 2001 referring to the NBI
for appropriate action a DOJ 1st Indorsement dated 4 April 2001 regarding “three sacks
containing 23,619 letters from different [foreign] persons relative to their requests for a
full, independent and impartial investigation into the alleged complaint of torture suffered
The AI report had this thoughtful thing to say, among others, in their and others’
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10) 2002, the Philippine Daily Inquirer published an award-winning unprecedented five-
day (Dec. 10-14) special report on the “Abadilla 5: Story straight out of martial law
pages,” including on “Torture forced three to ‘confess’” (PDI, 12/11/02, pp. 1, 18).
[Incidentally, this PDI special report is the subject of the Abadilla family’s Motion to
Cite in Contempt dated December 19, 2002.] The PDI special report won the Excellence
in Specialized Reporting Award from the Society of Publishers in Asia 2003 Editorial
Excellence Awards and second prize in the Jaime V. Ongpin Awards for Excellence in
Journalism for investigative reports in 2002. One does not win prestigious journalistic
If the truth about the torture of the “Abadilla 5” is not forthcoming from the
criminal justice system, especially its long pending preliminary investigation at the DOJ,
then the truth must out from other sources to set them free. The criminal justice system is
not the only way to ferret out the truth. It may be found through, among others, divine
The trial court’s Joint Decision dismissed all the physical, photographic, medical
and expert evidences of gross violations of constitutional and human rights by way of this
facile and specious reasoning: “While Joel [de Jesus] claimed that his confessions were
taken with the use of violence, the fact is Joel admitted that he was brought to the IBP
Quezon City Chapter inside the Q.C. Hall of Justice for said confessions (except the
second one were a police line-up was formed) and to the city Fiscal’s offices also located
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in the Hall of Justice, on the 4th floor.” (Joint Decision, p. 26, last paragraph, italics
mine).
So what if Joel was brought to the IBP Quezon City Chapter office (which was
done under close police escort and with a police-prepared statement)? Was that enough
to meet the required degree (if we may use this term again) of “competent and
independent counsel preferably of his own choice” 11 and “adequate legal assistance” 12?
identification or line-up of suspects (U.S. vs. Wade, 388 U.S. 218; and People vs. Usman
Hassan, 157 SCRA 261). And that the following are not deemed independent counsel:
PAO lawyers, 13 police lawyers, 14 and prosecutors. 15 The right to counsel refers not to
pro-forma and perfunctory counsel but to “effective and vigilant counsel” (People vs.
Lucero, 244 SCRA 425; and People vs. Bacamante, 248 SCRA 47). And this covers
not only the moment of signing a police-prepared statement but more importantly the
prior period of custodial investigation and tactical interrogation – “from the time the
confessant answers the first question asked by the investigating officer until the signing
of the extra-judicial confession.” For violation of this right to effective and vigilant
counsel in one case, the confession obtained despite assistance of counsel was excluded
by the Supreme Court and the accused was ACQUITTED (People vs. Bacamante, 248
SCRA 47).
dismissal in other cases. In one case, the long delay in the termination of the preliminary
procedural due process and to speedy disposition of cases, the latter under the
Constitution’s Art. III, Sec. 16. Accordingly, the case was DISMISSED by the Supreme
11
Const., Art. III, Sec. 12(1).
12
Const., Art. III, Sec. 11.
13
People vs. Olvis (154 SCRA 513).
14
People vs. Labuac (G.R. No. 80764, September 28, 1992).
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In a number of cases, this Court has not hesitated to grant the so-called “radical
relief” and to spare the accused from undergoing the rigors and expense of a full-blown
trial where it is clear that he has been deprived of due process of law or other
With more reason should radical relief be granted in the case at bar where there
have been multiple violations of constitutional rights of the accused from their
itself, as will be shown in the discussion of the next Assignment of Error VII.
Part of that radical relief must be the application of several exclusionary rules in
order to exclude inadmissible evidence pursuant to the Constitution’s Art. III, Secs. 3(2)
and 12(3), in order to remove the “fruit of the poisonous tree” 17 – but in the case at bar, it
is not just one “fruit” and not just one “tree” because of multiple violations of
constitutional rights. And so, we have come to a point where the realm of human rights
overlaps with the realm of evidence, both its admissibility and its appreciation.
dated 25 November 1999, he specifically prayed, among others, that the case against all
the accused “be dismissed as radical relief for gross violations of their constitutional
rights.” But this was denied by the trial court in its appealed Order of January 25, 2000
(Annex B), which stated (in p. 6) among its reasons for such denial: “The argument on
alleged weak commitment, low regard and poor appreciation of human rights of the
accused by this court is better addressed to the Commission on Human Rights or to the
Supreme Court, lest this court be accused of another perceived violation of such rights in
15
People vs. Viduya (189 SCRA 403).
16
Tatad vs. Sandiganbayan (159 SCRA 70), citing Salonga vs. Cruz Pano (134 SCRA 438), Mean vs.
Argel (115 SCRA 256), Yap vs. Lutero (105 Phil. 3007) and People vs. Zulueta (89 Phil. 880).
17
See the instructive discussion of this concept in the death penalty case of People vs. Alicando (251 SCRA
293).
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Rather than face squarely this human rights issue with the importance it deserves
(Const., Art. II, Sec. 11: “The State values the dignity of every human person and
guarantees full respect for human rights.”), the trial court takes the path of least resistance
and passes the buck to the CHR or to the SC, even showing a cavalier attitude in the
process. The courts are supposed to be the last bulwark of constitutional and human
rights but the trial court in the case at bar was not equal to this task. 18
The first indication of the trial court’s bias or unfairness against accused Lenido
Lumanog in its appealed Joint Decision of July 30, 1999 (Annex A) is that he was left out
in its presentation of the respective individual defenses of the accused (pp. 7-16). Only he
(among the six remaining accused) was left out. Even his sidekick co-accused Rameses
de Jesus was given the benefit of such a presentation (pp. 10-12). In fine, the defense he
presented through counsel was effectively not heard by the trial court. This leaving out
was a violation of his constitutional right to procedural due process (Constitution, Art. III,
Sec. 1 and 14[1]) and particularly his right to be heard by counsel (Const., Art. III, Sec.
14[2]; also International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Art. 14[3][d]); and
The “explanation” for that leaving out is found later in the appealed Joint
Decision – a further indication of the trial court’s bias or unfairness against accused
18
Following Constitutional Commissioner Fr. Joaquin G. Bernas, S.J.’s statement during CONCOM
deliberations on July 18, 1986 regarding the abolition of the death penalty, “I grant that the judges will
have difficulty, but I suppose that the judges will be equal to their tasks,” as quoted in the death penalty
case of People vs. Munoz (G.R. No. L-38969-70, February 9, 1989).
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Lumanog – when it takes his non-testifying as a point against him (p. 29, fifth
paragraph):
Co-related with our first point, the trial court apparently thought that, because he
did not testify, his defense was not substantial enough to present along with those of the
other accused who all testified. But even worse, the trial court took it against him “as a
quasi-confession.”
To support this “inference,” the trial court cites People vs. Delmendo (not
Dolmendo, 296 SCRA 371). But this Second Division ruling is of doubtful
constitutionality, and the Court sitting en banc should set things right and reverse that
Delmendo doctrine, in accordance with the Const., Art. VIII, Sec. 4(3). It clearly offends
against the constitutional right to remain silent (Const., Art. III, Sec. 12[1]). Against the
implementing rule of criminal procedure which specifically provides that “His silence
shall not in any manner prejudice him.” (Rules of Court, Rule 115, Sec. 1[d], italics
supplied) And against other Supreme Court rulings as recapitulated in People vs.
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Relevant also are the constitutional rights against self-incrimination (Const., Art.
III, Sec. 17; also ICCPR, Art. 14[3][g]; and Rules of Court, Rule 115, Sec. 1[e]) and the
presumption of innocence (Const., Art. III, Sec. 14[2]; also Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, Art. 11; ICCPR, Art. 15[2]; and Rules of Court, Rule 115, Sec. 1[a]). In
fact the latter presumption is the basis for the rule “chiseled in our jurisprudence… that
the onus is on the prosecution to prove the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt.”
(People vs. Lucero, 244 SCRA 425, at 435) It is a more paramount constitutional
young Filipina will not charge a person with rape if it is not true. (People vs. Godoy, 250
SCRA 676).
It bears noting that, perhaps in like manner that accused Lumanog did not testify,
neither also did he (unlike some of his co-accused) sign any extra-judicial confession
incriminating himself and others under severe duress, including torture. Silence can also
trial court in its appealed Joint Decision, particularly against accused Lumanog, is his life
22 April 2002 (Exh. L) appended to his “Motion for New Trial and Related Relief” dated
26 April 2002, in this automatic review before the Supreme Court, said:
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testified in the event of new trial on the Alex Boncayao Brigade (ABB) angle,
particularly his non-involvement in this Leftist rebel group and in the Sparrow unit-style
time, on his associations with persons of military and police background as a security
agency branch manager, Guardians Brotherhood chapter president and candidate for
councilor in Quezon City, and on his ordeal of torture, incommunicado detention and
Unfortunately, the said Motion for New Trial was erroneously denied by the faultily
premised Resolutions dated 28 May 2002 and 17 September 2002 in this automatic
review.
A. The trial court’s reasoning in not giving credence to the defense of Augusto
Santos was not based on any evidence but on mere conjectures.
In brushing aside the defense of Augusto Santos, the trial court wrote:
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Indeed, this court, on numerous occasions, has ruled that “an alibi buttressed by
flimsy attempt to place the accused in another place when in fact such accused was
indeed at the crime scene can easily be detected. While such an alibi is highly suspect,
there are also instances when factual circumstances reveal that the alibi presented is
reliable and truthful even if they are presented by the accused’s relatives.
For indeed, there are instances when there would be no one else who could be
presented in court other than the accused’s relatives. The fact alone that the defense of
alibi is buttressed by a relative, while it renders the testimony suspect, does not
instantaneously and automatically discredit the testimony given. It is not the relationship
per se of the witness with the accused that renders the testimony suspect, rather, it should
be the content and the nature of the story related in court that makes it suspect of having
In this case, Jonas Ayhon’s testimony that his wife Dorothy gave birth and was
confined at the Fabella Hospital where he and accused Augusto Santos fetched them on
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June 13, 1996 is supported by documentary evidence, the birth certificate of the child
which shows the date of birth and the date of discharge from the hospital.
The evidence presented corroborates Augusto Santos’ claim that he was with his
brother-in-law between 7:00 in the morning until 2:00 o’clock in the afternoon on June
13, 1996 which was the precise time that the complained crime happened. The
corroborating evidence, especially the birth certificate, cannot be easily concocted nor
fabricated.
Just because Augusto Santos lives in Fairview and Jonas Ayhon lives in Makati
does not make it impossible for these two men to have come from Jonas house in
Buendia to go to Fabella Hospital in Sta. Cruz, Manila at 7:00 in the morning. No factual
or legal basis can justify the trial court’s saying, “How on earth Augusto will proceed
first to Buendia, Makati before 7:00 in the morning to fetch Jonas when Augusto as well
as Jonas could have more reasonably and easily gone straight separately to Fabella
Hospital in Sta. Cruz, Manila (behind the Central Market) is largely amazing.” (sic)
The fact that Augusto Santos had to come from Fairview and had to be in Buendia
at 7:00 in the morning of June 13, 1996 means that Augusto had to leave Fairview earlier
than 7:00 a.m. Augusto’s presence at the Fabella Hospital from the time they arrive there
in the morning until 2:00 p.m. effectively rules out any possibility that Augusto Santos
The trial court also ruled that the necessity of Augusto’s presence in the hospital
together with his brother-in-law to fetch her sister and her new-born baby should have
been explained and reflected in evidence because in the words of the decision, “In our
family life, it is usually the womenfolk who are expected to help fetch a woman who has
just delivered in a hospital. Yet, here, it appears that not one woman from either the
family of Jonas or his wife Dorothy came over to help fetch Dorothy from the hospital.”
Just because there were no other women who went with Jonas and Augusto to
fetch Dorothy and her child from the hospital does not render this fact untrue. While the
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conjectures of the trial court that “it is usually the womenfolk who are expected to help
fetch a woman who has just delivered in a hospital,” could be accepted as a general
observation yet, this would not be true in all circumstances. For folks of simple means, a
man would be more helpful than a woman in carrying all the things that the mother and
child used while confined in the hospital. And especially when there are no other people
to help out, it no longer matters whether one is accompanied by a man or a woman for it
is not the gender of the helper that matters but the assistance he/she can render.
While the evidence is bereft of any explanation why it was Augusto who went
with Jonas to fetch the mother and daughter, this fact, alone, does not render untrue the
fact that Augusto was with Jonas on the exact hour and date that the complained crime
happened. Instead, this bolsters the fact that it was Augusto alone, himself and not
anybody else, who went with Jonas to fetch his wife and child from the hospital. This
effectively ruled out the possibility that there could have been another person who went
with Jonas and that Augusto was not needed in fetching Dorothy and the child from the
hospital.
Absent any strong proof to place Augusto Santos at the crime scene and to
attribute to him the acts complained of, the alibi presented by accused Augusto Santos
that he was at the Fabella Hospital together with his brother-in-law from about 7:00 in the
morning until about 2:00 in the afternoon to fetch his sister Dorothy and her new-born
baby who was discharged from the hospital on June 13, 1996, the same day that the
B. The trial court disregarded the alibi presented by Lenido Lumanog based on
mere conjectures.
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Jesus that they were in Pampanga at the time when the late Col. Rolando Abadilla was
ambushed, the trial court pronounced that the “secret-theory” of the accused is difficult to
dig. The trial court reasoned out that “the bisperas in a rural setting is a truly people-
crowded night” and as such it would have been impossible for the accused to be digging
for gold, as what they are advancing in their defense because the presence of a lot of
people. This reasoning by the trial court is not supported by any evidence but is rather
occasion, yet this is not always the case. It normally depends, first and foremost, on the
nature and grandness of the celebration and the means of the celebrants. Fiestas and
weddings would normally include the bisperas in the celebration but not wedding
It was thus error for the trial court to anchor its disregarding of Lumanog’s and
From the testimony of Costobolo and Rameses de Jesus, they helped in the
cooking when they woke up at 10:00 a.m. of June 13, 1996. That the food were cooked
just in time for lunch indicate that the wedding anniversary celebration was just a small
one and therefore, disproving the trial court’s unsupported objection that there might
have been a lot of people in the vicinity where the accused were secretly digging for gold
In assailing the defense presented by Lumanog the trial court reasoned out:
them for and yet, there was absolute silence on their part of the
defense they now poise upon this court. (Joint Decision, p. 27).
Why should the trial court discredit the defense raised by the accused through the
testimonies of Rameses and Costibolo because of the latter’s failure to mention said line
In the first place, when the CHR lawyers took the sworn statements of the
accused, they were investigating the torture and other possible human rights violations
committed against the accused by the police. These lawyers were not concerned about the
defense of the accused in the murder case filed against the latter. Naturally, the questions
would focus on the circumstances surrounding their arrests and how their rights were
It is then absurd and unthinkable why the trial court expected the accused to raise
their defenses before the lawyers of the CHR whose main concern was to investigate
It might have also escaped the notice of the trial court that on June 26, 1996, all
the accused were still reeling from the torture they suffered in the hands of the police that
In fact, on June 26, 1996 when the CHR doctor examined the accused, the doctor
noticed hesitancy on the part of Lumanog to talk. In his testimony, Dr. Jesse Rey T. Cruel
said:
What is evident in the doctor’s observation about the accused is the hesitation and
the lack of trust to the persons conducting the investigation for human rights violations.
Such hesitation is a possible result of fear after what they have gone through in the hands
of the police. It is also evident that the accused were made to understand that the CHR
personnel were there to investigate the possible human rights violations against the
accused. Given this premise, how then can these accused be expected to relate their
stories constituting their defense in the murder case when the same were not called for at
that time?
Thus, the trial court’s appreciation of the failure of the accused to relate their
defenses to the CHR lawyers as basis for disregarding such defense is misplaced.
C. The defense of alibi presented by the accused in this case gains significance
with the weakness of the prosecution’s evidence that does not concretely pin
down the suspects as the ones who committed the crime.
There are a lot of instances, as in this case, that alibi and denial are the only
defenses available to the accused. For how else would the accused counter the
accusations that they were the ones who committed the crime than by denying their
participation in it and by presenting in court their whereabouts to prove that they were not
The defense of alibi cannot be given credence and is greatly weakened when there
is a strong evidence of positive identification that establishes with moral certainty the
presence of the accused at the crime scene and evidence establishing the culpability of the
Positive identification gains more credibility when the witness has all along
known the suspects personally and he saw them commit a crime. In such situations, there
is less likelihood that the witness would be mistaken in ascertaining the identity of the
suspects. However, when the witness does not have any previous association with the
suspects and more so when the witness only saw the suspects for the very first time at
that moment when they were committing a crime, there is always a possibility that the
witness might not be able to accurately ascertain the identity of the suspects. Especially
so when the witness only saw the suspects for a very brief moment and under highly
stressful conditions.
The possibility of accurately identifying the suspects in this case is even made
more difficult as the witness would be recalling four different suspects. As the records
have shown, the witness was only able to describe two of the four suspects just five hours
after the incident happened. (Question and Answer # 21, Exhibit L-1)
The only link given by the prosecution establishing Augusto Santos’ participation
in the commission of the crime is the identification made by Freddie Alejo in open court.
Such identification as we have earlier discussed is unreliable and does not establish with
moral certainty that it was indeed Augusto Santos whom Freddie Alejo saw as one of the
Not even the proferred extra-judicial confessions of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo
delos Santos, though they are inadmissible in evidence for having been obtained thru
unconstitutional means, point to Augusto Santos as being at the crime scene. The only
mention made in the sworn statement of Joel de Jesus is that of a certain Ogie who was
with Lorenzo when they allegedly fetched Joel from his place in Fairview. But this
certainly did not place Augusto Santos at Katipunan where the crime took place.
Similarly, for Lenido Lumanog, the only evidence establishing his presence at the
crime scene is Freddie Alejo’s in-court identification which we have already shown to be
short of meeting the totality of circumstances test. Both the alleged extra-judicial
confessions of Joel de Jesus and Lorenzo delos Santos cannot be used in evidence for
having been obtained through unconstitutional means. As this Court has held in People
vs. Repe in disregarding the extra-judicial confessions of two co-accused against the other
accused,
With no other evidence linking the accused to the crime except the questionable
in-court identification and inconsistent, albeit tainted, testimony of Freddie Alejo, there is
In such an instance, their defense of alibi gains credibility and should be looked
into by the court. This Court has, in a number of cases, given credence to alibi as
summed up and enumerated in People vs. Gregorio, (G.R. NO. L-35390, June 29, 1982):
prosecution, the prosecution must rely on the strength of its own evidence, and not on the
weakness of defense, to establish the guilt of the accused. As we likewise implore the
doctrine that the guilt of the accused must be proven beyond reasonable doubt.
for a political assassination (and for some of the accused, no knowledge even of
Abadilla). There were even serious inter-personal rifts involving criminal charges and
counter-charges between accused Joel de Jesus on one hand and Lorenzo delos Santos
and Augusto Santos on the other. How then, can this motley group of quarrelling
individuals agree to come together and carry out the killing of Abadilla?
This also goes against the ruling on evident premeditation which apparently has
just been presumed by the trial court. How can there be evident premeditation among
individuals who have deep animosities between them even hailing each other to court?
Absent such evident premeditation, the imposition of death penalty by the trial
court goes against an earlier death penalty case for murder where the Supreme Court
modified the penalty by reducing the RTC’s death sentence to reclusion perpetua because
the killing, although qualified by treachery, was not attended by evident premeditation or
In light of the weak and unreliable evidence linking the accused to the actual
commission of the crime as the identity of the suspects were not sufficiently established
and no strong link was ever presented to tie up and pin the identity of all the accused with
19
People vs. Saliling (294 SCRA 185).
those of the suspects seen at the crime scene, the question of motive gains significance
The question of motive gains even more importance when viewed from the light
that the prosecution touts Freddie Alejo’s testimony as free from any motive to falsely
For while the prosecution is harping on the failure of defense to prove any
improper motive on the part of their lone eyewitness to testify falsely against all the
accused, the prosecution fails to see and realize that it is them which failed to advance
any evidence that would prove any motive on the part of all the accused to kill the late
“Generally, proof of motive is not necessary to pin a crime on the accused if the
commission of the crime has been proven and the evidence of identification is
convincing.” (People vs. Alviar, No. L-32276, September 12, 1974, 59 SCRA 136, 160).
In this case, the evidence of identification, far from being convincing, is actually
doubtful, weak, and might have been colored to favor the prosecution so that the witness
who was receiving benefits from the victim’s family could continue receiving those
benefits.
have considered whether motive was established by the prosecution to aid in nailing and
pinning down the accused with moral certainty as the ones who actually committed the
crime.
It is quite ironic that the prosecution, which has the burden of proving the guilt of
the accused, never presented in court the physical evidence gathered from the crime
scene. This attitude of the prosecution towards the physical evidence is revealing in that it
raises the presumption that such evidence is withheld because it would be adverse to their
cause.
Relying heavily on the testimony of a single eyewitness, when there were other
eyewitnesses present at the crime scene who came forward to the police investigators and
August 7, 1996, pp. 116-118), plus the physical evidence gathered from the crime scene
speaks volume about the prosecution’s fear that if these other evidences were presented
in court, they would not be able to pin down the accused as the ones who did the crime.
Irony upon irony, the trial court, whose duty it was to ascertain with moral
certainty the guilt of the accused, simply disregarded the physical evidence presented by
the defense but relied instead on the shaky testimony of the lone eyewitness presented
before it.
In a major case like this of murder and eventually five death sentences, the trial
court should have been more careful about anchoring conviction on the testimony of one
witness (considering there were so many others around during the incident), and should
have been more desiring and discerning of better evidence. Physical evidence, for one, is
more reliable because it basically speaks for itself (res ipsa loquitor) – it cannot be
coached what to say; neither can it lose or change its memory. Coupled with expert
In the case at bar, the closest to this were the ballistics examination reports of
PNP Crime Laboratory ballistics expert Reynaldo de Guzman and the relevant bullet
slugs and spent bullet shells. But this is mentioned only “in passing” in one short
paragraph (fourth paragraph, p. 14) of the appealed Joint Decision of July 30, 1999
(Annex A). The trial court actually prefaces the said paragraph with the phrase “In
passing.”
Even then, the trial court sorely missed the more important point or conclusion
about the ballistics examinations. It focused on the two handguns brought by accused
SPO2 Cesar Fortuna to gunsmith Dante Montevirgen and the finding that “the bullets and
bullet shells found in the crime scene at bench (sic) did not come from any of said
firearms” which turned out to belong to two of Fortuna’s fellow police officers (Joint
Decision, p. 14, second to fourth paragraphs) Incidentally, one of these firearms had
been positively, but it turned out later mistakenly, identified by Rolando Abadilla, Jr.
during the June 26, 1999 press conference as the firearm his father was carrying at the
The trial court completely missed the conclusions of several ballistics reports that
the fired bullets and cartridge cases in the Abadilla murder “were fired from one and the
same firearm” in the killings of Leonardo Ty, Nestor Encarnacion and Suseso de Dios, as
shown by accused Cesar Fortuna’s Exhs. 2-4, 71-75 and derivative exhibits under his
The trial court also failed to note and pursue the relevant angle on this indicated in
accused Fortuna’s formal offer of Exh. 71, which was stated in p.12 (RTC record, p. 96
evidence, the accused were never charged or even investigated for the killings of Ty,
Encarnacion and de Dios. Their “role” it seems was only to be charged for the Abadilla
murder. As for the ABB angle of this murder, this is important as additional evidence to
establish the innocence of all the accused, none of whom are ABB members. We shall
discuss this more extensively under the last two assignment of errors. For now, we deal
mainly with the probative value of the ballistics evidence, including vis-à-vis the so-
called positive identification by the lone security guard eyewitness for the prosecution,
Freddie Alejo.
The prosecution had characterized the ballistics reports in the case at bar as
“inconclusive and cannot exculpate the accused from liability, considering they were
positively identified by Alejo…” (Opposition dated October 25, 1999, p. 6). The trial
court for its part, in its appealed Order of January 25, 2000 (Annex B, p. 8) stated: “In
considering the testimony of expert witness Firearm Examiner Reynaldo de Guzman, this
court found no sufficient reason to render as incompetent and incredible the testimony of
the eyewitness by the alleged finding or conclusion that the bullets and cartridge cases in
the Abadilla murder match those in killings with a link to the ABB.” Note the trial
finding or conclusion as merely “alleged” when in fact it was the actual finding or
All courts, including the Supreme Court no less, are familiar with the experience
stated in Salomon vs. IAC (185 SCRA 352, 361-62), to the effect that “witnesses may
forget or exaggerate what they really know, saw, heard or did; they may be biased and
therefore tell only half-truths to mislead the court or favor one party to the prejudice of
the other.” This is why the Supreme Court directs that trial courts should not ignore
physical evidence because “physical evidence is of the highest order. It speaks more
We now quote from two authoritative books on ballistics, one foreign and one
local, from the library of PNP Crime Laboratory Firearms Identification Division Chief
From the classic textbook by Hatcher (“one of the truly great Firearms men of all
From the definitive local textbook by the long-time former Chief of Ballistics of
the NBI:
With this backdrop from foreign and local ballistics experts, it should suffice for
now to cite one outstanding firearms identification case in the Philippines, the Supreme
Court per curiam decision in the Timbol brothers case 22 where it referred to “certain
elementary principles of ballistics” and used the word “conclusively” several times to
20
Major General Julian S. Hatcher, Lieutenant Colonel Frank J. Jury and Jac Weller, Firearms
Investigation Identification and Evidence (1957) 1.
21
Domingo R. Del Rosario, Forensic Ballistics (3rd ed, 1996) 68.
22
People vs. Timbol (G.R. No. 47471-47473, 1943), reprinted in The Lawyers Journal, March 31, 1946, p.
109.
We shall discuss these two assignment of errors together since they both involve the
ABB angle and they both pertain to motions and proceedings after the trial and judgment
of conviction but while this was still in the reconsideration stage. Assignment of Error
XI involves the appealed Order dated January 25, 2000 (Annex B), while Assignment of
Error XII involves the appealed Orders of January 26 & 28, 2000 (Annexes C & D,
respectively).
At first glance, this would appear to involve the same issue/s raised in the
companion certiorari case of G.R. No. 142065 (Lumanog vs. Salazar, Jr., 363 SCRA 719)
which was consolidated with the case at bar. But that involved a petition mainly for
certiorari (Rule 65) where the main cause of action was respondent trial judge’s grave
led by accused Lenido Lumanog a last opportunity to prove their innocence by way of
introducing additional evidence on the hitherto untouched but plausible ABB angle. In
fine, the certiorari case dealt with an error of jurisdiction. On the other hand, herein
Assignment of Errors XI & XIII deal with errors of judgment, even without grave abuse
of discretion. The certiorari decision is final and is not the subject of herein
appeal/automatic review. The subject of the latter are the above-mentioned Orders of the
In fact, in the certiorari Decision of September 7, 2001 in G.R. No. 142605, the
XXX
We are thus now questioning the subject orders of the trial court in the herein
main case on automatic review. In the trial court’s subject Order dated January 25, 2000,
the only direct ground it could give for the denial of accused Lumanog’s motion/s (e.g.
his Manifestation and Motion dated 15 December 1999) to introduce additional evidence
While the records do not indicate that accused were ABB operatives, the same
The records will bear out that the ABB angle was not merely “based on alleged
news reports.” This is belied by the outlined and indicated pieces of evidence on the
a) Evidence linking the ballistic match between the Abadilla, Leonardo Ty and
Suseso de Dios killings (already part of the record) with the ABB angle in the Ty
and de Dios killings. For example, the ABB angle in the Ty killings is shown by
police investigation reports (Annexes 1 & 2 of the said Memorandum)
b) Written statements from and media interviews with ABB leaders claiming or
reiterating responsibility for the Abadilla killing. For example, the RPA-ABB
statement of December 26,1999 (Annex 4 of the said Memorandum). Also, the
June 27, 1996 interview with the ABB head Sergio Romero by then SkyCable
news manager David Celdran featured in the banner headline story of the July 2,
1996 issue of Philippine Daily Inquirer (Annex 6 of the said Memorandum).
c) AFP and PNP intelligence material showing the ABB angle in the Abadilla
and Ty killings, such as material that was basis for the Philippine Army
Commanding General’s Press Statement in October 1997 (Annex 3 of accused
Lumanog’s “Supplement to the Motion for Reconsideration” dated 25 November
1999 in the RTC) and the Inquirer’s report on the PNP Intelligence Group’s
arrest of the alleged leader of the ABB team responsible for the Abadilla killing
(Annex 1 of accused Lumanog’s “Addendum to Supplement” dated 13 December
1999 in the RTC).
In fact, at that time, January 2000, various additional pieces of evidence were still
unfolding and coming out, as later developments would show. It is really not just news
1. ballistics evidence showing a match between the Abadilla killing and other
acknowledged ABB killings (e.g. those of Leonardo Ty and of Suseso de Dios)
2. the ABB’s own early media statements and interviews in 1996 claiming
responsibility (including the June 27, 1996 interview of ABB head Sergio Romero
by then Skycable News Manager David Celdran wherein Romero reiterated ABB
responsibility for the Abadilla killing and exonerated the accused)
7. several police investigation reports showing the ABB angle in the Abadilla, Ty
and de Dios killings (and possibly in still unavailable police and military
intelligence reports)
Relevant to all these is the Supreme Court Decision in the case of the ambush-
killing of U.S. Col. James N. Rowe, People vs. Continente and Itaas (G.R. Nos. 100801-
02, August 25, 2000) where for the first time there is judicial notice of the ABB. In the
case at bar, one of the indications of the ABB angle submitted was the Philippine Army
Commanding General’s Press Statement in October 1997 attributing to the ABB both the
Rowe and Abadilla killings, among others (see Annex 3 of the accused Lumanog’s
“Supplement to the Motion for Reconsideration” dated 25 November 1999 in the RTC).
As for the news reports, these are not entirely worthless as “hearsay evidence”.
These can also be considered as basis for “judicial notice of matters which are of public
knowledge” (Rules of Court, Rule 129, Sec. 2). And as leads to secure witnesses and
other evidence, including by a compulsory process. For example, the news report
featuring the June 27, 1996 interview of ABB head Sergio Romero by then Skycable
News Manager David Celdran wherein Romero reiterated ABB responsibility for the
Abadilla killing and exonerated the accused (Annex 6 of the abovesaid Memorandum)
was a lead for the subpoena, if necessary, of Celdran to testify thereon if introduction of
Decision of March 2, 2001 in Estrada vs. Desierto, et al. (G.R. Nos. 146710-15) and
Estrada vs. Macapagal-Arroyo (G.R. No. 146738) upholding the constitutionality of the
in the Decision, 40 (30 percent) were taken from the Philippine Daily Inquirer, 12 (9
percent) from the Philippine Star, 2 (1 percent) from the Manila Bulletin, and 1 (0.7
percent) from the Manila Standard. No less than the Supreme Court has relied on
newspapers when the life of the nation was at stake. (In the case at bar, it is the lives of
It turns out that the trial court itself actually relies on news reports, as shown in
another passage of the appealed Order dated January 25, 2000 (p. 4, second par.): “…as
surely as she have (sic) seen on t.v., as she claimed, and also on the morning papers the
faces of all the accused…” In an earlier passage (p. 3, fifth par.), the trial court referred
to “ the time when the ambush-slay of the victim as well as the arrest of the then suspects
(including Joel) was the talk of the town.” And that was because of news reports and
other media coverage. The trial court is, therefore, estopped from denigrating news
admissions or confessions are admissible in evidence, as ruled in the recent death penalty
case of Pablito Andan (People vs. Andan, 269 SCRA 95; see also People vs. Vizcarra,
115 SCRA 743). If such evidence can be admitted against the declarant to the point of
making him liable by death penalty, with more reason can such evidence be admitted to
Such declarations against penal interest have also been considered exceptions to
the hearsay rule and thus admissible to exculpate the accused. The best exposition on this
procedure, unreasoned rules of evidence, and cumulative authority, would say that if a
the person charged with the crime, and there was other evidence indicative of the
truthfulness of the statement, the accused man should not be permitted to go to prison or
to the electric chair to expiate a crime he never committed. Shall judges trained and
experienced in the law display less discerning common sense than the layman and allow
23
People vs. Toledo and Holgado (51 Phils. 825, 839) which has a number of other passages relevant to the case at bar, including quoted
paragraphs from Professor Gilmore’s classic Book on Evidence. See also People vs. Surio (56 Phil. 774) and People vs. Caparas
(102 Phil. 787).
In the case at bar, there was other evidence indicative of the truthfulness of the
ABB’s repeated and consistent claims of responsibility for the Abadilla killing, such as
those already outlined above. Any fair and impartial tribunal would not have missed it.
truth” when it ruled that “The requisites on the applicability of the rule on declaration
against interest, as an exception to the hearsay rule, were not convincingly shown before
this court as being present in such alleged press statements of the ABB.” The January
26, 2000 hearing, revealed that the trial court was referring to the requirement of “unable
to testify”, i.e. ABB leaders or spokespersons were not unable but only unwilling to
(Revised Penal Code, Art. 11[4]) – in this case an ABB leader or member who takes the
witness stand to claim command or direct responsibility for the murder of Col. Abadilla
faces the very real risk of lethal retaliation from friends and supporters of the late
considered a supreme law of necessity. If “avoidance of greater evil” can justify an act
which would otherwise be felony, including grave ones, then with more reason can it
The trial court then reversed the proper order of things when it stated “While the
records do not indicate that accused were ABB operatives, the same records do not bear
that they are not.” The trial court imposed on the accused the burden of proving that they
were not ABB operatives! In the first place, the accused were not charged with a
political offense such as rebellion, which would have favored them. But the truth of the
For example, at the time of their arrests in June 1996, accused Fortuna was an
SPO2 with the PNP Traffic Management Command (see his Exhs. 81 & 83) while
accused Lumanog was a businessman with several enterprises in Fairview, Quezon City,
including a security agency, with the usual police and military links (see the separate
attached to accused-appellant Lenido Lumanog’s “Motion for New Trial and Related
Relief” dated 26 April 2002 in this automatic review). At any rate, the trial court itself
admits that “the records do not indicate that accused were ABB operatives.” Coupled
with additional evidence on the ABB angle in the Abadilla killing, this should lead to the
Speaking of burden of proof, the defense does not have the burden of proving the
guilt beyond reasonable doubt of the ABB for the Abadilla killing. That is the job of the
prosecution. As it is, they have shirked from their sworn duty to prosecute “all persons
who appear to be responsible for the offense involved” (Rules of Court, Rule 110, Sec.
2). It has taken the defense to ferret out the ABB angle. But the defense does this not to
go after anybody but rather to save the innocent accused. The defense knows with moral
certainty that the accused are innocent beyond reasonable doubt. But its burden is only to
establish reasonable doubt about their guilt to entitle them to an acquittal (Rules of Court,
Rule 133, Sec. 2). The proposed additional evidence on the ABB angle serves this
purpose and is sufficient in itself to tilt the balance against the trial court’s finding five
accused guilty beyond reasonable doubt on the basis of their “positive identification” by
The latest marshalling of proposed additional evidence on the ABB angle in the
case at bar is found in accused-appellant Lenido Lumanog’s “Motion for New Trial and
Related Relief” dated 26 April 2002 with 10 pages of argument and discussion plus 21
exhibits and 21 annexes submitted during this automatic review stage in accordance with
the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 124, Sec. 14 in relation to Rule 125, Sec.
1, which is hereby incorporated and made an integral part of this appellants’ brief by
reference. The said Motion notes “The persistency and consistency of the ABB angle in
the Abadilla murder over the past six [now seven] years starting with the first claim of
The said Motion also points out which of the proposed additional evidence on the
ABB angle are “undoubtedly newly-discovered,” i.e. after the trial court’s appealed Joint
Decision of July 30, 1999, and those which are “not necessarily newly-discovered in the
strict sense” but can be seen in a new light when co-related with other evidence even if
also not strictly newly-discovered. The best example of this in the case at bar is the
ballistics evidence (e.g. accused SPO2 Cesar Fortuna’s Exhs. 2, 3, 74 & 75 under his
Formal Offer of Evidence dated April 19, 1999) which were already part of the evidence
presented during the trial but their connection with the ABB angle was not yet seen by
angle, the best example is object evidence: the Omega wrist watch (Exh. A[Motion])
taken from the slain Col. Abadilla by his ambushers and turned over by an ABB
personality to Fr. Roberto Reyes on 5 January 2000, as narrated in his Affidavit (Exh. A
of the abovesaid Motion for New Trial). The wrist watch, described as “Omega gold-
plated wrist watch 1377” and “De Ville Quartz” (TSN, 1/26/00, pp.23, 25-26) matches
the description of the wrist watch in the very first page of the appealed Joint Decision of
July 30, 1999 quoting the Information charging all the accused (except Augusto Santos)
for theft of the pistol, wrist watch and wallet taken from the slain Abadilla.
But when Fr. Reyes made an “Urgent Independent Motion for Leave of Court to
Present Vital Evidence” dated January 19, 2000 assisted by his own counsel, the trial
court at the hearing of this motion on January 26, 2000 issued this appealed Order of the
same date in open court denying the motion for these reasons:
As for belatedness, it was not Fr. Reyes who was belated but the ABB personality
who approached him on 5 January 2000. Perhaps the call of conscience comes late for
some persons. But this belatedness should not prejudice the petitioners-death convicts by
resorting to technicalities to suppress the truth which could save innocent lives. Anyway
the judgment of conviction was not yet final and was still in the reconsideration stage
As for hearsay, granting without admitting that Fr. Reyes’ proposed testimony on
what the ABB personality said to him was hearsay, still there would be other aspects of
administration of justice but, in a death penalty situation, is this more important than
In Fr. Reyes’ Urgent Independent Motion (p.2, par. 14), he explains that “He
seeks to do this independently and impartially to help the Court in arriving at the truth.
He also seeks to do this as a witness of God, and not for any side, whether defense or
presentation would benefit the accused, the latter should not be prejudiced as appearing to
defense witness. As for the prosecution, its track record in refusing to even consider the
ABB angle (dismissing it without thinking) and in being content to stick with their hard-
earned legal victory of conviction of five innocent fall guys does not inspire confidence.
partisan? What about the non-partisan side of truth and justice which the Court is
supposed to represent? Why can’t a civic-spirited citizen who has come upon some vital
evidence go directly to the Court, with the assistance of independent counsel who is also
Under present rules, “Experienced and impartial attorneys may be invited by the
Court to appear as amici curiae to help in the disposition of issues submitted to it” (Rules
of Court, Rule 138, Sec. 36). Can there not be other non-lawyer “friends of the Court” to
But the trial judge apparently did not consider Fr. Reyes as a “friend of the
Court,” as can be gleaned from its appealed follow-up Order dated January 28, 2000
(Annex D). This Order is notable not so much for its elaboration of the reasons given in
its first Order dated January 26, 2000 (Annex C) denying Fr. Reyes’ Urgent Independent
Motion as it is for its passion against the Catholic Church and a personal hostility against
Fr. Reyes, even copy furnishing various religious leaders and groups who have had no
participation at all in the case, just so as to discredit Fr. Reyes in the religious
community.
Fr. Reyes never had a real chance with his Urgent Independent Motion to Present
Vital Evidence. Aside from the trial judge’s personal hostility against him, his Urgent
Independent Motion heard on January 26, 2000 was already preempted the previous day
by the appealed Order dated January 25, 2000 (Annex B) which denied all pending
motions from several accused, including that seeking to introduce additional evidence on
the ABB angle – which was what Fr. Reyes’ vital evidence was all about. He had to be
denied for the trial court to be consistent, even if it was consistency in error.
The gravest error of the trial court in denying accused Lumanog and Fr.Reyes a
chance to present additional/vital evidence on the ABB angle of true responsibility for the
Abadilla murder is its disregard of the Supreme Court’s guidance of liberality in death
penalty situations like the case at bar. It is time that we recapitulate this guidance, some
1. The ruling in People vs. Del Mundo (262 SCRA 266, at 273):
2. And the ruling in People vs. Marivic Genosa (G.R. No. 135981, September 29,
3. Then, there is the Decision in People vs. Ernesto Ebias (G.R. No. 127130,
October 12, 2000) with some parallelisms to the case at bar like the confession made by
another person that it was he who really committed the murder, in relation to issues of
newly discovered evidence and new trial as against earlier positive indentification during
the trial. There is also citation (in p. 17 of Ebias) of the ruling in People vs. Del Mundo.
The important point or principle in Ebias is that “We cannot in good conscience convict
accused-appellant and impose upon him the death penalty when evidence which would
possibly exonerate him may be presented by him in a new trial.” (italics supplied) The
case was “reopened” and remanded for the purpose of allowing the defense to present
4. Still another Decision to consider is that in People vs. Gallo (315 SCRA 461)
where the Supreme Court reiterated its “authority to suspend the execution of a final
judgment or cause the modification thereof as and when it becomes imperative in the
higher interest of justice or when supervening events warrant it.” (italics supplied) With
more reason when judgment is not yet final like in the case at bar. Interestingly, in
Gallo, the Court agreed with the OSG in its stand to join accused-appellant in praying for
5. There is the case of People vs. Alipayo (324 SCRA 447, at 465) where the
Supreme Court itself admitted in evidence the birth certificate attached to the motion for
reconsideration of one accused Jellie Lipa after the Court’s decision affirming the
convictions, which proved his minority, even “while this issue was never raised below,”
thus saving him from lethal injection. In the case at bar, the ABB angle was raised
during the reconsideration stage in the RTC, and there is yet no Supreme Court decision
of affirmation. In other words, with more reason should the instant Petition have been
granted.
minority was also appreciated in favor of the accused even as “This point has not been
raised either by the prosecution or the defense. But we consider it because an appeal in a
criminal case opens it up for review on any question, including one not raised by the
parties.” In the case at bar, the defense did raise the ABB angle but respondent judge
suppressed it. Again, with more reason should the instant Petition have been granted.
7. Depriving the herein death convicts of a last chance to prove their innocence
accused of a full and fair trial,” applying by analogy the rulings regarding depriving
(G.R. No. 121176, July 8, 1999) citing People vs. Crisologo (150 SCRA 656), and
Estrada (G.R. No. 130487, June 19, 2000). Parazo resulted in a re-trial while Estrada
resulted in a remand “for further proceedings,” which is among the relief prayed for in
The foregoing very good rulings are all for very good reason: our courts, the
individual to death. Thus, cases involving the death penalty should be treated with less
reliance on technical rules, such as in the cases recapitulated. The herein accused-
appellants invoke the equal protection that was given the accused in all those cases,
that there is, however, a consuelo de bobo of sorts in the appealed Order of January 26,
And going to the said TSN (1/26/00, pp. 8-9), one finds the trial court’s admission
as offer of proof certain evidentiary documents on the ABB angle proferred by Atty.
Bagatsing. These are covered, added to and explained in his “Supplemental To The Oral
Still on the said TSN (1/26/00, pp. 20-21), after questioning (but not placing on
the witness stand) Fr. Reyes and his counsel, the trial court said:
[Defense counsels then adopted the offer of proof of Fr. Reyes through counsel.]
The trial judge was not equal to his task and so passed the buck to the Supreme
Court. The buck stops here, and we can only hope and pray that the justices will be equal
to their tasks.
We submit that all the proposed additional evidence on the ABB angle, as
marshalled in accused-appellant Lumanog’s “Motion for New Trial and Related Relief”
dated 26 April 1999, and earlier incorporated herein and made an integral part hereof by
reference, be likewise all considered part of the offer of proof of the defense. Take note
that the prosecution (OSG and private prosecutor) never interposed any opposition to the
said Motion for New Trial nor to accused-appellant Lumanog’s “Urgent Motion for
Speaking of consuelo de bobo, this was precisely the trial court’s mode in its
appealed Joint Decision of July 30, 1999 when it dismissed the first four minor charges of
theft and illegal possession of firearms before convicting the “Abadilla 5” for the main
charge of murder and imposing the death penalty. But those first four dismissals may
turn out to be more than just consuelo de bobo when given a good look.
Take especially the dismissal of the theft charge (Crim. Case No. Q-96-66679)
which is closely tied to the murder charge (Crim. Case No. Q-96-66684). It was the
murder of Abadilla which made possible the theft of his pistol, wrist watch and wallet in
the same ambush incident. In fine, the murderers were also the thieves. Note that both
murder and theft charges were conspiracy charges. But Augusto Santos, while included
among the conspirators charged with murder, was not included among the conspirators
charged with theft. This belies the conspiracy theory in the judgment of conviction for
murder. On the other hand, if we must be consistent and logical about conspiracy, then
the dismissal of the theft conspiracy case should also mean the dismissal of the murder
conspiracy case because, as we said, the murderers were also the thieves. And therefore
to Fr. Reyes shows not only who were the thieves but also who were the murderers.
Then take the dismissals of the three illegal possession of firearms cases against
Lorenzo delos Santos (Crim. Case No. Q-96-66680), SPO2 Cesar Fortuna (Crim. Case
No. Q-96-66682), and Rameses de Jesus (Crim. Case No. Q-96-66683). In any case,
none of the three cal. .38 revolvers recovered as “illegally possessed firearms” from these
three accused were used for the murder of Abadilla, as ballistics evidence shows that cal.
.45 and 9 mm. pistols were used. Neither were any of the three recovered cal. .38 cal.
revolvers the pistol stolen from the slain Abadilla which was a cal. .45 pistol. All told,
these dismissals and facts should even reinforce and strengthen the defenses and
In the end, the defense should not be begrudged the proffer of all defenses
possible for acquittal of all the accused-appellants not just on reasonable doubt of guilt
RELIEF
a) the appealed Joint Decision of July 30, 1999 (Annex A) and Orders dated
January 24, 26 and 28, 2000 (Annexes B, C & D, respectively) in Crim. Case No. 96-
66679 to 84, RTC Branch 103, Quezon City, finding accused-appellants Lenido
Lumanog, Augusto Santos and three others guilty of the murder of ex-Col. Rolando
Abadilla and sentencing them to death, and denying reconsideration, new trial and other
relief, be SET ASIDE AND REVERSED and ALL accused-appellants be ACQUITTED;
b) the death penalty, at least for murder under R.A. No. 7659, be declared
UNCONSITUTIONAL; and
c) such further, incidental and other relief as may be just and equitable be granted
to ALL accused-appellants, including radical relief for the gross violations of their
constitutional and human rights.
LEANDRO C. AZARCON
Collaborating Counsel for Accused-
Appellant Augusto Santos
1840 E. Rodriguez Ave., Cubao
1109 Quezon City
IBP OR No. 530589
Manila III – 1/6/03