10/18/2010
Remember the “Alabang Boys”  drug and bribery case involving state prosecutor John Resado?  Remember  the shit that hit the Department of Justice (DoJ) fan in 2009 when  Resado was accused by the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) of  illegally releasing drug suspects Richard Brodett, Jorge Joseph and  Joseph Tecson because of purported “defects” in PDEA’s case?
The  DoJ prosecutors at that time rallied around Resado. The two agencies  then traded charges.  Government was thus compelled to conduct an  independent investigation, where it found a suspicious, unsatisfactorily  explained P800,000 deposit in Resado’s account on the same day he  signed that infamous resolution.
Good thing someone pursued the  Alabang Boys and Resado cases. PDEA agent Maj. Ferdinand Marcelino at  that time impressed the nation by standing up to the browbeating of then  DoJ Chief Raul Gonzalez and other DoJ top brass.
Meantime, let us  be reminded too, of the case that hit international news with the  headline, “Philippine judge sacked, another suspended over bribery  scandal,” involving Justice Vicente Roxas and Associate Justice Jose  Sabio, where three other justices were suspended for not taking the  appropriate action.
The scandal arose after Sabio revealed a  P10-million bribe offer by a lawyer of Meralco but which he didn’t  report until months after, whereas Roxas was dismissed for offering  fabricated transcripts of deliberations to a review panel investigating  that scandal and writing a ruling on the petition without first  consulting the Court of Appeals justice involved.
There is a large  volume of seamy stories on our justice and judicial system. So when I  heard the DoJ’s lawyers quibbling about technicalities in the amnesty  for the Magdalos, I thought: “Who are they to talk?”
They of all  people should realize that the power to grant amnesties bestowed upon  the Office of the President — the office, not the person — is absolute.  The progenitors of our Western (or American) constitutional tradition  recognized the potential of any system of laws and government to be  flawed. Thus they provided the power, under the checks and balance  principle, to the highest elected official representing the almighty  people to resolve such issues in behalf of the people themselves.
The  anomaly though in our current political and cultural set-up is that  power is being wrested from the people’s hands by the politicians and  bureaucrats, many of whom have been corrupted and controlled by the  powerful oligarchs, Gloria Arroyo, and foreign interests. And this is  the only reason Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV has not been able to sit in  the Senate despite the earnest efforts of his 11 million voters.
For  truly, the struggle of Trillanes is the struggle of the people to wrest  back the power that is supposedly theirs, peacefully and legally,  despite all the obstacles put in place by the bureaucratic and political  usurpers of that power.
Take this issue of the Makati trial  court’s handling of Trillanes’ case which, despite having taken over  seven years of hearings and deliberations, has not been resolved to this  day. While most perceive this murderously slow grind as normal for this  country’s courts, by international standards, two years is already a  denial of the fundamental right of the accused to “a fair and speedy  trial,” the rectification of which should be an outright dismissal.
But  the tragedy of our society is that the flaws and infirmities of the  system have been so accepted because they have plagued us so long. Alas,  those who shrug the injustice to Trillanes off are really condemning  themselves to suffer that same fate soon.
I heard the DoJ  prosecutors complaining about having “labored long and hard these seven  years preparing and arguing” the case against Trillanes.  But have they  actually thought of the hardships the senator, his wife and children,  his family, friends and comrades underwent over seven years and seven  months of being behind bars, and of being unable to travel the  10-kilometer stretch leading to the halls of the Senate where he was  elected by the people to serve?
The parties carping against the  amnesty, such as those “unnamed legal experts” quoted by a mainstream  pro-Arroyo paper when the Oakwood protest occurred, are undeserving of  serious consideration because they have not done their share in standing  up to the corruption of the system as the Magdalos and Trillanes have,  or risked their whole profession, as what Alan Paguia laid on the line  when he criticized the Edsa II transgression of the highest court of the  land.
The high prominence being given to criticism of the amnesty  from a motley crew of non-entities does not surprise me. I am aware  that the party with the most to lose when the amnesty for Trillanes is  perfected, i.e. Gloria Arroyo and her cohorts, is moving to fan the  criticisms to cover the real issues that led to the Oakwood protest and  the astonishing victory of Trillanes over Arroyo’s moneyed candidates in  2007: The unprecedented levels of perfidy, treason and corruption of  that regime, which continues today with Arroyo’s reign in Congress and  her factotums ensconced in the government bureaucracy.
As for  Teddy Te’s comment, I understand his belief in his infallibility, but  even he must admit that it is the system that is corrupt through and  through — like a Kryptonite that even his super legal brain cannot  overcome.
The entire nation, with the 11 million voters of  Trillanes, must take action now to shout down the voices of petty  tyrants who are attempting to usurp the power and the sense of justice  of the people.
Text to radio and TV programs; start hanging  posters in your windows and vehicles; start the teach-ins in schools;  and declare to the world, “Justice for Trillanes, justice for all!”
(Tune  in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on  1098AM; watch “Justice for Trillanes, Justice for All” on Politics  Today, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., Tuesday, with Teofisto  Guingona, RG Guevarra and co-host Abby Aquino on Global News Network,  Destiny Cable Channel 21; visit our blogs,  http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and http:hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel) 
Source:  The Daily Tribune
URL: 
http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101018com4.html