DOJ asks SC to transfer drug lab case from Virac to MM

MANILA — Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II has asked the Supreme Court to transfer to Metro Manila the illegal drug cases against a former National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) anti-illegal drugs unit head and eight others linked to the “mega shabu” laboratory discovered in Virac, Catanduanes in 2016.

In a four-page letter to the Supreme Court, Aguirre requested acting Chief Justice Antonio Carpio to transfer the cases against Augusto Eric Isidro from Virac Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 43 Judge Lelu Contreras to either a Quezon City or a Makati RTC.

He said the prosecution panel has filed a motion seeking to inhibit Contreras from the case due to delays in the issuance of a search warrant for the site where the drug lab was located. Contreras was the same judge who issued the search warrant.

Aguirre said that on Nov. 25, 2016, the judge told policemen who were requesting for a search warrant that she would only issue a certification if authorities could prove that the warehouse has no building permit.

The following day, police were surprised to see at the warehouse the judge, Virac Mayor Samuel Laynes, and Isidro’s wife Angelica Balmadrid-Isidro.

Though Contreras decided to issue the search warrant, Aguirre lamented that “despite the urgency, the presiding judge was not seen in her chambers the whole afternoon” and “it was almost night time of Nov. 26, 2016 when (the) search warrant… was issued”.

“This would also obviate the need for elaborate security arrangements for the state prosecutors and the witnesses as well. The transfer of venue will also insulate the proceedings from influence of threats from any groups affiliated with the accused,” Aguirre said in his letter.

The justice chief said that after a motion to inhibit was filed against her, the judge issued an order dated last March 21, directing the director of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency’s (PDEA) office in the Bicol region to proceed with the destruction of the shabu, controlled precursors, and essential chemicals, as well as the instruments and laboratory equipment seized from the warehouse.

He said the destruction of the drug evidence “is premature and highly prejudicial to the prosecution”.

Aguirre raised not only the alleged impartiality of Contreras but also the “political connection” of the accused.

“In addition to the impartiality of the presiding judge, the accused in these cases are politically connected and likewise yield an influence in the community. Thus, there is an imperious necessity to change the venue of trial of these cases,” he said.

Aside from Isidro, also named as respondents were Xian Xian Wang, Pido Bonito, Paolo Uy, Jayson Gonzales Uy, Lorenzo Flores Piñera II, Kidot Paolo Wee Palisoc, Phung Yuan Estorco, and Sheng Wang.

The case stemmed from the mega shabu laboratory inside a warehouse that authorities discovered and raided in Virac on Nov. 26, 2016.

Police seized in the operation 22.509 kg. of shabu and 359.75 kg. of ephedrine, as well as other equipment and chemicals used in the manufacture of methamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu. (PNA)

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