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Interagency feud weakens anti-drug campaign

By VERA Files

(Conclusion)

Last Jan. 13, President Arroyo proclaimed herself the country’s anti-drug czar, stepping into the feud between the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency and the Department of Justice over the “Alabang Boys,” the three young men arrested and detained for illegal drug pushing and who allegedly tried to bribe their way to freedom.

Except for ordering DOJ officials and prosecutors to go on leave, Arroyo has kept mum on the charges of bribery, inefficiency and conflicts of interest that were exchanged between prosecutors and antinarcotics officials and agents. Her move has resulted in an uneasy peace between warring agencies that are supposed to work closely together in the anti-drug effort.

“The anti-drug campaign requires a united front, a harmonious relationship with other agencies,” a senior police official said. But he lamented that the attacks on both the PDEA and DOJ have “destroyed institution(s), including those who are innocent.”

Law enforcers say there has been a long running feud, with antinarcotics agents frustrated at the frequency with which prosecutors drop charges against suspects, and prosecutors complaining that law enforcers fail to build cases strong enough to stand up in court. Judges have also been accused of acquitting known drug lords.

Aside from this, there is the problem of credit-grabbing among the different agencies involved in the anti-drug campaign, and interference of politicians in drug cases. Also, the post of PDEA director general, held at present by former Armed Forces chief of staff Dionisio Santiago, is reportedly being eyed by politicians.

Under Republic Act 9165, PDEA became the lead government agency in the government’s anti-drug campaign. It works with other law enforcement agencies, including the Philippine National Police’s Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operation Task Force (AIDSOTF), National Bureau of Investigation Anti-illegal Task Force and the Customs Task Group/Force in Dangerous Drugs and Controlled Chemicals (CTGFDDCC). Street-level operations are handled by the police districts, while the cases are filed and prosecuted by the DOJ. The 17-member Dangerous Drugs Board draws up policies and programs on drug prevention and control.

All the agencies are under Arroyo, either directly like PDEA and DDB or indirectly like the DOJ and the PNP. “Structurally, she doesn’t have to do anything more. She has always been the anti-drug czar,” a PDEA official said.

In Metro Manila, the police districts undertake the bulk of the anti-drug operations. The PDEA accounts for 3 to 5 percent, mostly high-level cases.

Indeed, bribery takes place at all levels, but not everyone is on the take, the official said.

In high-level cases, PDEA arresting teams have been offered P5 to P6 million for the release of the leader of the drug syndicate and P1 million for each apprehended member.

Maj. Ferdinand Marcelino, head of PDEA’s Special Enforcement Services, has disclosed he was bribed twice, an initial P3 million that later went up to P20 million, and that prosecutors were offered P50 million to secure the release of the “Alabang Boys.”

In the case of judges, high-level suspects are known to offer from P20 million to P50 million, depending on the stage the case is in. The nearer it is to promulgation day, the larger the bribe, according to anti-drug officials.

Counternarcotics agencies also cited “persistent reports from independent sources” of involvement of local officials, including mayors and governors, in the drug trade.

PDEA officers have long complained of how prosecutors and the DOJ would drop charges against drug suspects without basis. “Hinuhulog talaga ang mga kaso (They really drop cases),” said a PDEA official. “You have to always be on guard and question what they do.”

After the “Alabang Boys” scandal broke out, Senior Superintendent Adzhar Albani, PDEA regional director, said DOJ Secretary Raul Gonzalez ordered Lucky Ong, one of the two Chinese nationals arrested in Zamboanga during a raid on a shabu laboratory last year, removed from the charge sheet.

“The anti-drug campaign per se is difficult. But some people are even making it even harder for us,” Santiago said.

Prosecutors and the PNP, in turn, have complained that PDEA cases are weak because field personnel lack the training on law enforcement, including proper procedures on arrest and detention, crime scene investigation, and the collection, marking and inventory of evidence. “Intelligence is different from investigation,” the PNP officer said.

Credit-grabbing, meanwhile, has been a common complaint raised against PDEA by police districts. Anti-drug agents in the PNP said they have done work against the biggest drug dealers, some of whom were not even in PDEA’s list of top ten. They did intelligence operations and engaged in buy-bust operations, only to have the PDEA claim credit for their work.

Police districts also said PDEA should provide more financial support to operations of cash-strapped police stations. PDEA had a P750 million budget last year.

They said the operating expenses of police stations are often not enough to cover costs for buy-bust operations, especially with the spike in shabu prices. A test buy alone, to collect samples for lab testing before the police launch an operation, would entail P500. During the drug bust, a police station needs to allot from P8,000 to P16,000 to buy one to two grams of shabu.

As Arroyo named herself drug czar, she also kept mum on the fate of three key figures in that controversy: Justice Secretary Raul Gonzalez, who had met with the suspects’ lawyer on Dec. 23; Justice Undersecretary Ricardo Blancaflor, who had pressed PDEA to release the suspects on Dec. 19; and PDEA’s Santiago whose men arrested the suspects in September and exposed the alleged bribery of DOJ officials in the first place.

The President’s silence came as no surprise to officials in the anti-drug agencies who said Arroyo was merely playing safe and was keeping the peace with three people who were instrumental in her rise to power and continued stay in office.

Sources in the defense establishment said Arroyo owes a debt of gratitude to Santiago for having helped put her in power during EDSA 2 in 2001 and ensured her shaky stay in the months that followed.

Then chief of the Special Operations Command and a seasoned combat officer, Santiago was said to be instrumental in convincing then Armed Forces chief of staff Angelo Reyes to withdraw the military’s support from Estrada. Arroyo has recalled in her speeches how Santiago “was in fact the earliest of the commanders to put his career on the line and cast his lot with the people.”

On May 1 that year, Santiago led the troops that defended Malacanang from angry Estrada followers who tried to unseat Arroyo. He was then overall commander of Joint Task Force Libra which the military created to protect Arroyo.

In 2002, Arroyo named Santiago, whom she fondly calls “the Chuck Norris of the Delta Force of the country,” Armed Forces chief of staff.

Gonzalez was named DOJ secretary in June 2004, shortly after Arroyo was proclaimed winner in the presidential elections. He was named to the post just weeks after he took part in the presidential canvass of votes as congressman from Iloilo, overruling opposition protestations of massive cheating in the 2004 elections. He is remembered for answering opposition complaints with the word “Noted.”

Now on leave, Blancaflor was first recruited to the Arroyo government by then National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales but never held office at the National Security Council.

Instead, he was posted at Malacanang, manning the “war room” along with former military intelligence officer Col. Victor Corpus and then Presidential Management Staff chief (now Ambassador to Greece) Rigoberto Tiglao that closely monitored political developments, including Arroyo’s opponents.

Blancafor has told friends that he mustered support for Arroyo in 2005 amid allegations of her hand in electoral fraud, documented in wiretapped phone conversations known as the “Hello, Garci” tapes. As members of the Cabinet were defecting, Blancaflor “shepherded” reporters to the Alabang residence of Fidel V. Ramos for the press conference during which the former president declared he was standing behind Arroyo.

Blancaflor was later appointed undersecretary at the Department of National Defense and the DOJ, but without portfolio.

Blancaflor and lawyer Felisberto Verano Jr., counsel for “Alabang Boys” Richard Brodett and Joseph Tecson, are contemporaries at the Ateneo de Manila Law School and brods at the fraternity Utopia. State Prosecutor John Resado, who dismissed the charges against the “Alabang Boys,” is Verano’s former law student at the Far Eastern University.—Yvonne Chua, Ibarra Mateo, Luz Rimban and Ellen Tordesillas


(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look into current issues. Vera is Latin for “true.”)

Published inIllegal DrugsVera Files

31 Comments

  1. bitchevil bitchevil

    That’s to be expected when one agency tried to solve the drug problem and another that’s in cahoots with the drug syndicates. PDEA was doing a good job under a good Director and efficient operatives; but the prosecutors under DOJ simply destroyed all the efforts.

    Instead of creating an independent body to investigate the alleged bribery involving DOJ men, the government ordered NBI under DOJ to handle the investigation. And of course the result was to be expected: NBI cleared DOJ. It’s like a subordinate clearing his boss.

    And that’s not the end. NBI is now charging Major Macelino for contempt and obstruction of justice. And as Anti-Drug Czar, what’s the Evil Bitch doing about it?

  2. “And as Anti-Drug Czar, what’s the Evil Bitch doing about it?”

    Good question, BE.

  3. bitchevil bitchevil

    She should have appointed herself as Anti-PDEA or Anti-Marcelino Czar.

    A bit off topic:

    The Senate Blue Ribbon and public works committees are ready to investigate the World Bank’s exposé on a cartel of contractors in the Philippines as one of those blacklisted by the WB was also allegedly involved in a P70-million bribery of a person close to Malacañang to bag a P1.4-billion project for the rehabilitation of EDSA.

  4. I would go as far as “not only weakens but is destroying the anti-drug campaign.

  5. ParengPepe ParengPepe

    Everyone wants their 15 seconds of fame. They want to show us that they are important, that we need them to keep us same from harm.

    In the final analysis, the drug pushers are released back on the streets, our children are once again put in danger, and we all get it in the posterior.

    Nakakasuka talaga! Pwe!!!

  6. SULBATZ SULBATZ

    Elections is around the corner. Plain and simple. From where I come from, meaning from where I am assigned now, a rise in kidnapping cases and drug-related cases rise a year before elections. Money money money. That is all there is to it.Kidnap-politics and narcopolitics are two realities we either fail to see or refuse to acknowledge. Think about it.

  7. bitchevil bitchevil

    The kidnapping of the three health workers in Mindanao could be part of the fund raising campaign for the crooks in Malacanang. Drug lords are also a big source of revenue. And notice that nothing is heard about anti-jueteng operations. Untouchable Bong Pineda continues to go on with his usual activities.

  8. Sulbatz, the Red Cross workers were kidnapped right inside the provincial capitol compound, a few steps away from the hall of justice and provincial jail. How is that even possible? Not even one cop available to secure the most important government building of the province?

  9. SULBATZ SULBATZ

    Tongue,
    I know the place very well. I, too, am puzzled why it happened there. But everything is possible in a place like that. I’ll try to get some details about it.

  10. This incident is giving us a big black eye in the international community. Now WB has exposed the rigging of bids at DPWH, our recent #1 rank as the most corrupt country in SE Asia, and the suspension of aid from the Millenium Challenge Account for the Ombudsman’s failure to curb graft. From black eye, we also now have swollen lips, and a bloody nose. Save for Sudan, Somalia and Burma, we prolly have the most disfigured image among nations. Shame!

  11. bitchevil bitchevil

    You guys have military background and are familiar with intelligence operations. Some of the kidnappings might be the works of government agents.

  12. rose rose

    as anti drug czar putot will demand for more money from the drug lords..she needs money more desperataely..she needs to stay as pang gulo by hook or by crook and forever…

  13. Anti-drug Czarina daw? Ang hilig talagang magpatawa ni Gloria Dorobo hindi naman siya komikera. O di nakalaya na tuloy ang mga drug traffickers at nakaligtas na iyong mga sinuhulan na akala mo talagang mga malinis. Puede ba huwag na silang magmaang-maangan.

    Iyon namang mga taga-NBI, siyempre susundin nila kung ano ang gusto noong gunggong na amo nila. Baka nga naman sila ang matanggal sa trabaho. Golly, ano iyan? For survival na lahat ang mga unggoy sa Pilipinas. Kawawang bansa! Wala nang pag-asang tumino hanggat nandiyan ang mga walanghiya! Sorry na lang sa hindi pa nakakaalis ng bansa. Tiis na lang ba sila hanggang pati sila makurap? Yuck!

  14. Pero bilib na ako sa tapang ng apog ng mga pilipino ngayon. Dito nga kulung-kulo ang dugo ko doon sa isang pilipinang taga Bacolod na nagpabuntis sa kalaguyo niyang pilipino, tapos para maka-stay ng Japan, kinutsaba ang isang racketeer na hapon na pinatayong ama niya ang isang may kapansanan sa utak na hapon para kilalaning anak iyong anak nila noong pilipino. Hayun ginulo ang sistema ng mga hapon.

    Nabigyan ng Japanese citizenship ang anak at permit na makapanuluyan siya sa Japan. Ngayon may kaso siya. Kawawa pati iyong batang tatlong taon na kasama sa kaso. Tarantadong mga magulang.

    Pero ang masagwa, hindi na nahiya si Inday, hindi pa nangilabot sa ginawa niya na pinaako sa isang may sira sa ulong hapon ang anak niya sa kabit niya. Talaga daw ganoon sabi naman noong pastor na pilipino. Mahirap daw kasi ang buhay sa Pilipinas. Dios mahabagin! Tapos sa ibang bansa sila nagkakalat? Yuck!

    Makes me wonder kung natural sa mga taga-Negros ang gumawa ng mga kawalanghiyaan tapos magyabang pa.

  15. chi chi

    It is siRauloGoon who weakens the anti-drug campaign with the imprimatur of his lady bitch Gloria.

    Sana ay painumin ng mga 20 ecstasy drug si Goon nang happy ang kanyang ending.

  16. bitchevil bitchevil

    20 ecstacy wouldn’t be enough for Goonz. He needs 2,000 tablets of those.

  17. Gloria Arroyo has once again succeeded in embarrassing herself to every eyes of Filipino people in appointing herself “Drug Czarina” for a government that professes rule of law, this singular act of infamy marks a watershed in its all time low posture in good governance as many Filipinos including myself wonder whether what we now practice is rule of law or the jungle.The “Alabang Boys” scandals leaves a serious dent on the integrity and Judicial value of a Justice Department that suffers serious credibility problem arising from the most dubious electoral process in any democracy on the surface of the earth.

    Gloria Arroyo personifies democracy and civility in governance and what happened to her cannot be said to be personal embarrassment as an individual but a collective and compound indictment on a government that lacks focus on any index of development, bearing in mind that what it says from one side of the mouth is in gross contradiction and radical departure to what comes out from the other side. The outrageous conduct by the government met in equal measures by spontaneous of outrage from men and women of good conscience in the Philippines, as torrents of condemnation trailed the bizzare and absurd gestapo-like operation that returned Philippines few years adrift of the stone age.

    I salute Major Marcelino as a brilliant, fearless and highly resourceful drug cartel exterminator,he has paid his dues by fighting corruption and enemies of the states and its related matters to the best of his ability to the commendation million of Filipinos and consternation of insignificant few, who now see a window in the Gonzales justice department to embark on a vendetta. For many Filipinos who’s brain and conscience are still intact,Major Marcelino did put his life on the line in service to humanity and history will vindicate him as one with burning desire fired by genuine patriotism to make our country join the league of developing countries with potentials for good governance. But, alas, this dream and vibrant aspiration is about to be killed at the drawing board. Impatient with the corrupt, and having absolute disdain for some filthy rich,San Marcelino,este,Major Marcelino tried to bring sanity and restore order in a society whose heart and soul is about to be captured by the devil.

  18. MPRivera MPRivera

    itong sina bitche at chi, sobrang lulufet sa gustong mangyari doon sa inaamag na sickretary of justice upang matapos na ang kayang di end.

    ‘yung isa benteng tabletas, ito namang isa benteng botelya, eh paano matutunaw ‘yun? lusaw na’t alabok an ang katawang ng huklubang ‘yun andoon pa rin ‘yung benteng botelya.

    ikaw talaga, bitche, lufeeeet!

    painumin mo na lang ng isang banig na immodium at dalawang 240ml na botelya ng calamine!

  19. MPRivera MPRivera

    ay, mali!

    2,000 tablets daw pala!

    sorweee!

  20. MPRivera MPRivera

    “Pero bilib na ako sa tapang ng apog ng mga pilipino ngayon………” – grizzy.

    yuko, plis huwag mong i-generalize.

    ibang pilipino o ilang pilipino dapat.

    mas tama ding “meron kang kilalang pilipinong matapang ang apog”.

    nakakasakit ng kaloobang madamay ang hindi dapat madamay.

  21. MPRivera,
    I could not open my mail box.I forgot my password.I’ll create another e-mail account and I’ll let you know.

  22. MPRivera MPRivera

    President Arroyo ‘gags’ PDEA reg’l offices: official

    http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/01/20/09/president-arroyo gags pdea-reg’l offices-official

    **********************************************

    ginagago nga talaga ng pinakamataas na maliit na babae tayong mga pinoy.

    tanga at gago lamang ang maniniwala sa kanyang mga kasinungalingan at pagmamalinis na kulapol naman ng kasalaulaan!

  23. MPRivera MPRivera

    ewan ko sa iyo!

    kung saan saan mo kasi inilalagay ang mga susi mo!

    galit ako sa iyo dahil hindi mo man lamang ako naalalang kumustahin habang nasa piling ka ng iba’t nagpapakaligaya at ako naman ay mamataymatay sa pag-aalalang baka kung napaano ka na.

    welkam bak! ay lab yu!

  24. Masyado kasi akong abala doon sa pinuntahan ko.Pagbalik ko naman dito ay napili akong mag jury duty at hindi pweding tangihan dahil magmumulta ako at ikukulong.Katatapos lang at iniwanan na ako ni misis sumakay na siyang mag-isa sa PAL at sinalubong na lang siya doon sa mabuhay.Hindi ko alam kung saan niya nailagay ang kwadernong pinagsulatan ko ng mga kodigo.Sasalunungin na lang daw niya kami doon paglapag ng PAL.

  25. MPRivera MPRivera

    mawalang galang na sa may bahay.

    pareng cocoy, just in case na nakalimutan mo ang daan papunta sa ating tagpuan, eto: MRivera@almabani.com.sa. diyan mo ako matatagpuang sa iyo ay naghihintay na lugaan, este luhaan.

  26. From Rey Tamayo, Jr:

    Hindi lingid sa kaalaman ng publiko lalo na sa mga peryodista’t mamamahayag ang pagpapairal ng random drug test sa mga kabataang estudyante na iminungkahi ni Pangulong Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

    Hindi sa tumututol ako sa mabuting layunin ng pamahalaan na maging anti-illegal drugs czar ang bansang Filipinas…Ngunit mas makatuwiran sana kung ang unang isasailalim sa drug test ay ang mga pulitiko at ang mga nasa gobyerno para magkaaalam kung sinong mga drug adik sa pamahalaan.

    Komo ang mga nanunungkulan sa pamahalaan ang siyang nangunguna sa ating bansa, mas may rason kung sila muna ang isasalang sa sinasabi nilang drug test.

    Nais ko lang naman ipaabot ang liham kong ito bilang isang kabataang nakikiramdam sa takbo ng magulong pulitika sa ating bansa.

  27. bitchevil bitchevil

    Just FYI…this is very interesting!

    NY nuns sue Pinay over ‘tuyo’
    By Cristina DC Pastor Philippine News Updated January 15, 2009

    NEW YORK – It may be a cultural thing, but when you’re up against a congregation of nuns and your neighbors in an apartment building in Manhattan, a lawsuit would make an interesting anthropological study in ethnic tension.

    The Missionary Sisters of Sacred Heart (MSSH) in Manhattan has filed a complaint against a Filipino-American couple, Michael and Gloria Lim, over a Filipino delicacy called tuyo (dried fish), and its funky cousin, the tinapa (smoked fish).

    The case is now with the Manhattan Supreme Court.

    Reports say Gloria was smoking fish outside her apartment window when the smell – noxious stench to the nuns, divine aroma to the Lims – of the salted fish wafted throughout the Gramercy apartment building.

    The “foul smell” was too strong the nuns suspected it was coming from a decomposing body and called in the Fire Department.

    According to reports, the firemen searched every unit of the building and were able to trace the source of the smell to the Lims’ unit.

    They knocked, and when no one came to the door, the NYFD came barreling in.

    Gloria, a nurse, found her door knocked down and was obviously peeved.

    It appears the MSSH leases the unit to the Lims and may have authorized the assault.

    “I cook dried fish,” Gloria defiantly declared to the NY Post.

    The average American may find it puzzling how one can derive pleasure of the palate from dried fish. Foodie Andrew Zimmern, who has been to the Philippines and braved balut (fertilized duck egg with an embryo) and Soup No. 5 (bull’s rectum and testicles soup, believed to be a powerful aphrodisiac) , might be able to share the gustatory experience.

    Gloria was referring to the tuyo, a Philippine staple usually eaten with steaming hot rice and fresh tomatoes. Some eat theirs dipped in vinegar and crushed garlic paired with fried rice and sunny side up egg.

    Dried fish is not a Philippine exclusive. It is an essential in the traditional Chinese and Malaysian fried rice along with chopped spring onions, garlic and chili. Sometimes, it is pulled and sprinkled on chocolate porridge or champorado.

    Food with a strong salty taste like tuyo or tinapa might be too intense for the morning stomach, but many Filipinos would never leave for work in the morning without having it for breakfast.

    In the lawsuit filed by the nuns, Gloria was even more adamant. She was quoted as saying that “she is causing the smell by cooking and/or smoking fish, and she is going to continue to do it.”

    The complaint appears to divide the apartment tenants, some finding themselves squarely on the side of the sisters who find the smell “potentially dangerous to life and health,” and some defending the FilAm family’s right to eat their own ethnic food in the privacy of their home.

    “This is plain racist,” comes a shout-out from a supportive blogger.

    The complaint says some tenants closer to the Lims’ unit have moved out, and that the Lims have been warned repeatedly about the smell emanating from their 16th floor apartment unit. Gloria, a 30-year resident of the US, denies this.

    Which side to take, undecided tenants turn to what’s stated in the housing rules: Cooking smelly food is not allowed.

    The nuns are seeking $75,000 in damages. They made it clear that they have nothing against Filipinos as a people.

  28. Bobitz Bobitz

    Ang arte naman niyang mga Nuns na yan. Parang di mga madre, hindi ba sila puedeng magtakip ng ilong ?
    Paki bigay nga sa akin ang exact address ng MSSH na yan at dadalhan ko ng Bagoong !

  29. bitchevil bitchevil

    That was a retaliation by the nuns of the charges against their brother-priests of their sex crimes.

  30. MPRivera MPRivera

    bitche,

    baka naman akala nu’ng mga madre ay pinapahiya sila ng mag-asawa dahil sa pagpapakalat ng amoy na kasing amoy ng kanilang hindi hinuhugasang……paa!

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