Will there be another weaponized DOJ under this administration?

“I would go after my oppressors. There has to be justice. There must be accountability “. This statement comes from former Senator and Justice Secretary Leila de Lima following her first acquittal from three drug-related cases last year.

Yesterday, the court granted her bail, and she is provisionally released after six years and eight months detention inside Camp Crame. In a decision dated Nov. 10 under case no. 17-167, Presiding Judge Gener Gito of the Muntinlupa RTC Branch 206 , said “Wherefore, premises considered, the respective Motions for Reconsideration of the concerned accused are granted. Thus, the Order of the Court dated June 07, 2023, is reconsidered. Consequently, accused De Lima, Franklin Jesus Bucayu, Ronnie Dayan, Joenel Sanchez and Jose Adrian Dera are allowed to post bail in the amount of three hundred thousand pesos (P300,000.00) each,”

De Lima thanked her supporters, the press, and President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s administration “for respecting the independence of the judiciary and the rule of law.”

De Lima was detained in 2017 shortly announcing a  Senate investigation into President Duterte’s drug war.  She was  accused of taking drug money while she was justice secretary and jailed on non-bailable charges.  The constitutionality of  arrest was even voted on and affirmed by the Supreme Court twice, 9-5 in April and 9-6 in October,  2017.

Throughout the trial, her heated exchanges continued against  Duterte together with former Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre, whom she called a “certified liar”.  Recent  recantation of witnesses Rafael Ragos and Kerwin Espinosa  pointed to Aguirre as the person behind the false accusations. After this bail, the trial on her alleged complicity will of course continue, but the possibility of prosecution is weakened if not entirely  lost. 

But the hardest questions focus on what happens next to her oppressors, Duterte and Aguirre. What about the   damage on the Department of Justice for its  weak prosecutions? From what we have seen, there is a long history of government prosecutors under  different Presidents being used to invent falsified charges against political opponents and critics. .

After EDSA tres, former President Erap Estrada was jailed for seven years, convicted by Sandiganbayan but  later granted executive clemency by then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, against the advice of  then  yellow political leaders.

When former President Noynoy  Aquino took over,  then Comelec chairman now Mandaluyong Mayor Benjamin Abalos, was jailed for eight months at a police detention cell   for the non-bailable thirteen counts of  electoral sabotage and co-accused former president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo during the Pnoy  administration.  Eventually they were both granted bail by a Pasay court.

On another case during Pnoy’s time, Mrs. Arroyo underwent hospital arrest for four years  on a plunder charge regarding the P366M alleged misuse of PCSO funds. The Supreme court voting  11-4 , acquitted  Arroyo  on July 2016, a month after  Pnoy stepped down for incoming President Duterte.

And as mentioned earlier, Pnoy’s DOJ Secretary De Lima was the “flavor of the month”  during  Duterte’s six years and bail was granted only yesterday  with our new and incumbent President Bongbong Marcos.

If one examines these political circuses experienced by presidents Erap Estrada, and Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, chair Ben Abalos and now former Senator De Lima, our government’s Department of Justice have been “used” not once,  but several times to create false, invented, and manufactured  charges against the incumbent administration’s  own and perceived political enemies. And so far, all ended up being refuted by the courts.

Will this political weaponization of the Department of Justice stop now that former Senator De Lima have been granted bail?

Or perhaps the better question: which political critic or enemy  is  next to be jailed  under the present  dispensation?

New hope for Manila Bay reclamation seen in new PRA chairman-designate Alex Lopez

A major revamp looms at the Philippine Reclamation Authority  (PRA) after  President Marcos jr. appointed a new set of  Board Directors led by chairman designate  Alexander T. Lopez.

“As a lawyer, economist, and most importantly, as a Filipino, I stand with the President in recognizing the imperative need for balance in our pursuit of development. Reclamation projects are vital for the nation’s progress, but we must ensure that this progress does not compromise the livelihoods of our fishermen and the integrity of our environment,” Lopez said.

Controversies continue to hound  reclamation projects in Manila bay from Navotas to the province of Cavite.  In August, all reclamation activities were suspended by the President as he ordered a review of their compliance with environmental regulations and their impacts.

PRA chairman designate Lopez, whom I personally know as “incorruptible” in all his public service stints , vowed to steer the  PRA through a new era, aligning its directives with principles of social justice, economic interests, national security, and environmental protection.

At the core of Lopez’s vision is the principle of balance, aiming to facilitate robust economic development through meticulously planned reclamation projects without jeopardizing the well-being of fishermen and the preservation of natural resources.

Lopez also called for unity, urging everyone to move forward together toward a future where progress and environmental responsibility coexist.

“Hand in hand, we will work towards a future that is both economically sound and environmentally sustainable. I am deeply honored to serve as the Chairman of the Philippine Reclamation Authority and am committed to steering the nation’s development in the right direction,” he added.

Also appointed in the Board was Chemical engineer Cesar Siador Jr as general manager and chief executive officer  and former QC Congressman Anthony Peter “Onyx” Crisologo.  Siador served as regional director of the DENr-Environmental Management Bureau.

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