Friday, September 19, 2008
THE Philippine National Police and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency stepped up their hunt for a Taiwanese tagged as the operator of a shabu storage facility in Masbate City Wednesday.
“Mr. Chong” uses the alias Jeffrey Villegas in conducting business. PDEA chair Dionisio R. Santiago said. To cover up his illegal activity, the suspect buys manganese in Milagros, Masbate.
The Masbate City Police Station and the PDEA raided the suspected shabu storage facility where they seized assorted shabu paraphernalia and chemicals used in manufacturing the drugs.
Masbate police director Senior Supt. Reuben Theodore C. Sindac said unit number 1 of the Kimberly Apartment in Barangay Nursery, Masbate City is being rented by “Mr. Chong.”
He said the suspect was not around during the raid led by Supt. Jeffrey Fernandez.
Sindac said they are questioning the owner of the apartment, Pablo Almoradie, a government employee.
Masbate hostage-taker killed after 10-hour standoff
0 comments Posted by masbate-philppines at 4:49 AMA hostage situation that lasted more than 10 hours in Masbate City ended on a bloody note with police snipers killing the hostage-taker Friday afternoon.
Radio dzXL reported that snipers from the police regional mobile group (RMG) fired at hostage-taker Roderick "Spike" Flores at 4:30 p.m., after negotiations proved futile.
The sniper fire was so intense that Flores' right hand was separated from his arm, the radio report said.
Nora Verano, the live-in partner whom Flores took hostage, was rushed to a hospital for trauma treatment.
Initial reports indicated Flores was seen carrying a grenade and a knife during the hostage drama, and appeared to be under the influence of illegal drugs.
The dzXL report said the intervention of local officials failed to convince Flores to release his hostage. - GMANews.TV
MANILA, Philippines - Anti-drug operatives on Wednesday are following the trail of a Taiwanese national believed to be behind an abandoned apartment housing suspected illegal substances in Masbate province.
Initial reports from the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency said that an undetermined quantity of “suspected assorted precursors" (main ingredients) of methamphetamine hydrochloride (shabu) was discovered at Kimberly Apartment in Provincial Subdivision, Purok 4, Nursery village in Masbate City.
In a telephone interview with GMANews.TV, PDEA information officer Derrick Carreon said that apartment owner Pablo Alcantara reported to PDEA’s field units in Masbate province that he saw chemicals believed to be ingredients of shabu.
According to Carreon, Alcantara told authorities that a certain Jimmy Villegas rents the apartment.
But PDEA Region 5 director Major Joven Parcon suspected that Villegas only serves as a front or an associate of Taiwanese national identified only as Mr. Chiong.
Follow-up investigations are being conducted, PDEA said. - Sophia Dedace, GMANews.TV
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Posted: 17 Sep 2008 08:50 AM CDT
Tabloid columnist, editors found guilty of libel
Ordered to pay over P1M in fines, damages
By Tetch Torres
INQUIRER.net
First Posted 19:44:00 09/17/2008
MANILA, Philippines—The Supreme Court has found columnist and former television anchor Erwin Tulfo guilty of libel for throwing “wild accusations” against a Customs official nine years ago.
In a 31-page decision, the high court second division also affirmed the libel conviction of Remate managing editor Susan Cambri, national editor Rey Salao, city editor Jocelyn Barlizo, and Philip Pichay.
They were ordered to pay jointly and severally lawyer Carlos “Ding” So of the Bureau of Customs-Intelligence Unit P1 million in moral damages for a series of articles that appeared in the tabloid Remate in 1999.
The high tribunal took note of Tulfo’s admission he wrote the damning stories against So without verifying the veracity of the information given him by his source.
“Journalists have a responsibility to report the truth, and in doing so must at least investigate their stories before publication, and be able to back up their stories with proof,” it said. “The rumors and gossips spread by unnamed sources are not truth.”
“Journalists are not storytellers or novelists who may spin tales out of fevered imaginings and pass them off as reality. There must be some foundation to their repots; these reports must be warranted by facts,” the high court added.
In his column “Direct Hit,” Tulfo accused So of massive corruption and extortion activities at the South Harbor where the Customs official allegedly amassed wealth.
In the articles that came out May 11, 12, 19 and June 25, 1999, Tulfo also theorized that So could be the richest government official and went on to say the lawyer was a disgrace to Iglesia ni Cristo.
So, in his libel complaint filed before the Pasay City Regional Trial Court, said his reputation has been tarnished because of Tulfo’s accusations.
On November 17, 2000, the lower court found Tulfo and his editors guilty of libel and sentenced them to a “prison correctional in its minimum and medium periods” or two years, four months and one day to four years and two months.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the lower court ruling.
But while it upheld the appellate court’s decision, the Supreme Court reduced the penalty to a fine of P6,000 for each count of libel from Tulfo and the five Remate officials, with subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency. The award of actual damages and exemplary damages was deleted.
The high tribunal rejected Tulfo’s argument of privileged communication and his defense that the stories he wrote spoke of “fair commentaries on matters of public interest.”
The high court said Tulfo did not exercise good faith in exercising press freedom.
“This is no case of mere error or honest mistake, but a case of a journalist abdicating his responsibility to verify his story and instead misinforming the public,” it said.