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Volume 8 – Issue 47 • 16 Pages
AUGUST 21-27, 2015 Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
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4 SC justices hit Enrile bail Majority decision smacks of ‘selective justice’ by tarra
QuisMundo Inquirer.net
ASSoCIATE Justice Marvic Leonen slammed the Supreme Court’s majority decision allowing Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile to post bail and secure temporary release from a year’s detention while the plunder charges against him are being tried, saying it cast doubt on its impartiality and set a dangerous precedent. In a dissenting opinion, Leonen said the bail grant “by the majority is a special accommodation” for Enrile. “It is based on a ground—humanitarian— never before raised before the Sandiganbayan or in the pleadings filed before this court.” Leonen said the decision was “especially tailored” for the 91-year-old Senate minority leader, who surrendered in July last year after he was indicted for allegedly pocketing P173 million in kickbacks for allowing the diversion of his pork barrel allocation to ghost projects and fake foundations.
“Not only is this contrary to the rule of law, it also undermines the legitimacy and the stability of our entire judicial system,” Leonen wrote. “With his solid reputation in both his public and his private lives, his long years of public service, and history’s judgment of him being at stake, he should be granted bail,” said Associate Justice Lucas Bersamin’s ponencia. “The currently fragile state of Enrile’s health presents another compelling justification for his admission to bail, but which the Sandiganabayan did not recognize,” said the high court in a 17page ruling. “In our view, his social and political standing and his having immediately surrendered … indicated that the risk of his flight or escape from this jurisdiction is highly unlikely,” they said. The court’s decision, along with the dissenting opinion, was released on Thursday—two days after the court spokesperson read a one-paragraph news brief stating simply that the magistrates had allowed Enrile to post bail.
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FREE MAN. Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile left his detention place in the Philippine National Police (PNP) General Hospital on Thursday, Aug. 20. the 91-year-old senator went to the Sandiganbayan to appear for the application of his P1.45 million bail as he faces trial for plunder over the pork barrel scam. Inquirer.net photo
Enrile out on bail, says his faith in justness of Judiciary vindicated PH Consul General confers with Fil-Am NYC by Marc Jayson
cayabyab
Inquirer.net
AFTEr one year in hospital detention, Senator Juan Ponce Enrile is now a free man—for now. Leaving his detention place in the Philippine National Police (PNP) General hospital at 5:55pm on Thursday, Aug. 20, the 91-year-old senator arrived at the Sandiganbayan at 6:30pm to appear for the application of his P1.45 million bail as he faces trial
DATELINE
for plunder over the pork barrel scam. “Today I’ve been released out of custody. I would like to state for the record that my faith in the probity and justness of our Judiciary has been vindicated,” Enrile said in a brief interview. “I would go back to my work and have no interest except the interest of our country,” he added. Clerk of Court Third Division
USA
FroM ThE AJPrESS NEWS TEAM AcroSS AMEricA
New app aims to push Asian American voter participation in 2016
Atty. Dennis Pulma signed the release order served on the accused party. Meanwhile, Presiding Justice Amparo Cabotaje-Tang approved the bail application. Pulma said Enrile’s bail is only for his provisional release as he still faces trial for plunder for his alleged involvement in the scheme of spending his Priority Development Assistance Funds (PDAF) to ghost projects for kick-
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Customs to impose tighter rules for balikbayan boxes by Kathleen
Martin
Philstar.com
For the 50th anniversary of the Voting rights Act, 18 Million rising, an Asian American digital activist group, launched a new Indiegogo campaign to create a translation matching app designed to increase voter participation in next year’s presidential elections. The mobile app, called VoterVoX, is described as “one part civic tech, one part grassroots organizing, and three parts cultural con-
MANILA - The Bureau of Customs said it may impose tougher measures on balikbayan boxes for fear that these tax-free packages are being used by traders to smuggle goods into the country. “The existing rules are obsolete and we may have to reassess our coordination and processes with consolidators for stricter and improved compliance,” Customs Commissioner Alberto Lina said in a statement. “our spot checks from several warehouses show how misconstrued the rules may have become. People are sending in used clothing, home appliances
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Overseas voters registration
breaches .6M mark
TWo months before the deadline, the overseas voters (oV) registration has surpassed the 600,000 mark. The Department of Foreign Affairs yesterday said the oV secretariat reported that foreign service posts processed 249,512 new oV registrants from the Middle East and Africa; 123,993 from the Americas; 68,124 from Europe and 91,088 from Asia and the Pacific, while overseas voter registration centers in the Philippines processed 68,106 applications. Six registration centers were opened at the
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Chief Technology Officer Minerva L. Tantoco
NEW YorK—Consul General Mario L. De Leon, Jr. met with New York City’s Chief Technology officer, Ms. Minerva L. Tantoco on Tuesday, Aug. 18 at the New York City hall. The position of Chief Technology offer was created under the administration of Mayor Bill De Blasio, and is the city’s way of acknowledging the importance technology plays both in the city’s needs and the lives of New York residents. Ms. Tantoco is the city’s firstever Chief Technology officer, and it is a testament to her abilities that Mayor De Blasio appointed her to that position. Ms. Tantoco comes to the office with sterling credentials, having served in a variety of positions in the private sector, most recently as the Chief Technology officer of the Union Bank of Switzerland. She holds four patents for technology-related inventions. Consul General De Leon initially congratulated Ms. Tantoco on her appointment to the position. Ms. Tantoco replied that she wanted to help the city in developing its technology policies. She mentioned that the Mayor’s office of Technology and Innovation was established because of the recognition that
Consul General Mario De Leon, Jr. congratulates Ms. Minerva Tantoco on her appointment as Chief Technology Officer.
technology is a valuable tool for economic and human development. Ms. Tantoco then said that New York City is bent on developing its own technology sector and to keep New York on the cutting edge of technology innovation. on top of that, the city government is also trying to increase the delivery of internet services to its residents, 20% of whom have no access to technology. onsul General De Leon and Ms. Tantoco then discussed the possibility of partnerships be-
tween Philippine and New York universities and colleges, noting that several schools in other states have already done so. Another topic of mutual interest was intergovernmental partnership with regard to emergency management. Ms. Tantoco and the Consul General both agreed on the importance of technology in matters relating to disaster preparedness and response, especially since the Philippines has seen more than its fair share of violent typhoons, and New York has experienced
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VP Binay laments demolition job in Senate Fil-Ams on US mercy ship relish homecoming by bernice
caMille V. ManilaTimes.net
Senators Antonio Trillanes and Koko Pimentel continue their investigation on the alleged anomalies against Vice President Jejomar Binay on Thursday, Aug. 21. It marks the first year anniversary of the Senate inquiry on Binay’s alleged anomalies. Senate photo by Cesar Tomambo
bauzon
ThE camp of Vice President Jejomar Binay on Thursday, Aug. 20 lamented the “demolition job” during the Senate blue ribbon subcommittee hearing on the alleged ghost beneficiaries of the senior citizen program in Makati City. “Demolition through Powerpoint, as always. We heard nothing but half-truths that will not stand in court but are intended for media consumption,” Joey Salgado, head of Binay’s media affairs, said in a statement. he denied Arthur Cruto’s al-
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ABoArD USNS MErCY—Some USNS Mercy crew members with Philippine roots were reunited with their relatives in the country during their stay in Subic Bay Freeport last week. hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Stephanie Madridejo, 21, had a rare opportunity to spend time with some of her relatives from Quezon City. “I am excited to see my relatives in the Philippines. It’s been years since I last visited them and I have cousins whom I will meet for the first time,” Madridejo told the Inquirer before the reunion. Madridejo, whose parents are Filipinos, is a medical student and lives in San Diego, California. She is assigned to the intensive care unit on the Mercy during the hospital
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