From the Files: The Binays

THE Department of Interior and Local Government has served today the suspension order issued by the Office of the Ombudsman on Makati City Mayor Jejomar “Junjun” Binay Jr.

The anti-graft body issued March 11 the six-month preventive suspension on Binay and 15 other City Hall officials over charges of alleged corruption in the construction of the Makati City Hall Building II, a report published on gmanetwork.com said.

Junjun Binay is the namesake of his father, the vice-president of the Philippines. He is one of the seven members of the Binay family, most of whom are into politics.

He started his political career as a chairman of the Sangguniang Kabataan or youth council in Makati.

The Binays are among the political families that rose to power after the EDSA People Power Revolt in 1986. Read more about them in this 2007 report of PCIJ former deputy director Jaileen Jimeno originally published on the iReport magazine.

Click on here or on the photo to read the full article.

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VICE-PRESIDENT JEJOMARY BINAY, left, with President Aquino during happier times | PCOO Photo

Pols, polls & the ties that bind: ‘Candidates’ to Comelec chairs

By Rowena F. Caronan and Malou Mangahas
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism

FILIPINOS CHOOSE the people who will run their government through elections. Yet they do not hold the power to choose who will run the elections. That authority rests on the President, who appoints the chairperson and six commissioners of the Commission on Elections. For the appointment to be binding, however, a confirmation from the Commission on Appointments is needed.

With the retirement of Comelec Chairman Sixto S. Brillantes Jr. on February 2, the executive and legislative departments should now be selecting individuals fit for the chairmanship post. The next Comelec head will also be President Benigno S. Aquino III’s second Comelec chair appointee, who will be partly responsible for the preparations for the 2016 presidential elections.

As early as last September, the names of Justice Secretary Leila M. de Lima and retired Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Eduardo B. Nachura had floated as potential replacements for Brillantes. Three other names emerged recently: former Supreme Court Associate Justice Roberto A. Abad, Manuel ‘Mar’ Roxas II’s election lawyer Joe Nathan P. Tenefrancia, and Cagayan de Oro City Representative Rufus B. Rodriguez.

In a recent program on the local cable news channel ANC, Brillantes himself mentioned Winston M. Ginez of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) and National Police Commission (Napolcom) Executive Officer and Vice Chairman Eduardo U. Escueta as the other possible candidates for the post.

Apart from Brillantes, two other commissioners, Lucenito N. Tagle and Elias R. Yusoph, also retired on February 2, leaving two more vacancies in Comelec to be filled up.

Each commissioner, including the chairperson, serves a total of seven years without reappointment. The law further requires that each commissioner be a natural-born Filipino who is at least 35 years old at the time of appointment. The chairperson and majority of the six commissioners must be “members of the Philippine Bar who have been engaged in the practice of law for at least 10 years.” In addition, they must not have participated in the immediately preceding election – a stipulation that should automatically eliminate Rodriguez from the list, since he ran (and won) in the 2013 polls. Rodriguez, however, is said to be actively lobbying to be named Comelec chief.

In a nutshell, to ensure elections run fairly, efficiently, and transparently, without violence or fraud, the Comelec chairperson and commissioners must have proven credentials in election law and have no political bias or potential conflicts of interest. To help assess if the mentioned names pass such standards, here are some background information on them:

Roberto A. Abad

It has been barely a year since former Supreme Court Associate Justice Roberto A. Abad retired from government service.

In 2012, Abad was among those nominated to be head of the high tribunal following the impeachment of Chief Justice Renato C. Corona. Abad’s position back then was that Aquino should appoint a sitting Supreme Court magistrate as the new chief justice so the judiciary could “forgive” the President and the House of Representatives for Corona’s impeachment. He clarified, though, that he meant that both sides should forgive each other.

Abad further admitted before the members of the Judicial and Bar Council (JBC) that he regarded Corona as “a personal friend” and took part in the weekly masses held by Supreme Court employees during the impeachment trial.

Having chaired the Supreme Court Committee on Internal Rules, as well as on Jail Decongestion, Abad said that among his priorities if appointed chief justice would be to address the problem of overcrowded jails.

Abad is known as the ponente, or the justice writing the court’s rulings, of the high tribunal’s decisions on the contentious Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, where majority of the justices voted in favor of keeping libel as a criminal offense. He also penned the 2010 SC decision on the Vizconde murder case where Hubert Webb, son of former senator and ex-basketball star Freddie Webb, was acquitted along with seven other defendants because of the prosecution’s failure to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.

Abad made headlines as well in 2012, when he supported Comelec’s decision to purchase from Smartmatic-TIM precinct count optical scan (PCOS) machines for the 2013 polls. News reports quoted Abad as saying that the government entering into a lease contract with an option to purchase is a common practice. The Supreme Court later junked the petition questioning the contract’s legality.

While Abad’s statements may have supported Comelec’s purchase of PCOS machines, he wrote the high tribunal’s decision that found the commission committing grave abuse of discretion when it disqualified Rommel Apolinario Jalosjos, who had settled in Zamboanga Sibugay after spending 26 years in Australia, from running in the May 2010 polls as a gubernatorial candidate.

The 71-year-old Abad obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree from Manuel L. Quezon University in 1966 and law from the Ateneo de Manila University in 1968, where he was an honor student.

Abad passed the bar in 1968 and began his law practice at the Jose W. Diokno law office as associate lawyer for one year. In 1969, he entered government service as technical assistant and later associate attorney in the office of Supreme Court Chief Justice Fred Ruiz Castro. He moved to the Office of the Solicitor General in 1975. By 1985, he had become Assistant Solicitor General. He held the post for one year under the supervision of then Solicitor General Estelito P. Mendoza, who later became head of the defense panel for former President Joseph E. Estrada in his impeachment and plunder cases in 2001. Abad found himself opposite his former boss when he served as counsel for the Equitable Banking Corp. and its officers and branch managers, who testified against Estrada during his impeachment trial.

Abad left government service and began his 23 years of private practice in 1986. He put up The Law Firm of Roberto A. Abad & Associates, and served as its senior partner until his appointment to the Supreme Court in August 2009.

Abad also taught at the University of Sto. Tomas-Faculty of Civil Law for 33 years and became its dean from 2008 to 2009. He authored “Practical Book in Legal Writing” (Special Student Edition) in 2002 and “Fundamentals of Legal Writing” in 2004.

He has rendered free legal aid for the Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG), the Department of Social Welfare and Development, a church-based group, and a non-profit organization.

Eduardo U. Escueta

Napolcom’s vice chairman and executive officer since 2008, Eduardo U. Escueta has worked closely with at least three secretaries of the Interior and Local Government, namely Ronaldo ‘Ronnie’ V. Puno under President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and the late Jessie M. Robredo and incumbent Manuel ‘Mar’ Roxas II under President Benigno S. Aquino III.

Ronnie Puno, a former congressman, is better known as the political architect and campaign manager or adviser of three presidents: Fidel V. Ramos, Joseph Estrada, and Arroyo. But Escueta’s ties to politics and politicians go a long way back.

Escueta came to public light first as a partner of the ACCRA Law or the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices whose prominent founders include two senators: Juan Ponce Enrile and Edgardo J. Angara. In the ’90s, Escueta co-founded his own law firms – the Escueta Tan Acut & Madrid Law Offices, and later, the Escueta Yasay Law & Partners that is also known as the Escueta Regalado Atienza Mendoza and Bernabe Law Office.

It was as an ACCRA lawyer that Escueta became one of the respondents in the civil cases that the Presidential Commission on Good Government filed to assert the government’s claim over the coco levy funds. Named respondents in the cases were “the ACCRA lawyers” – former senator Edgardo J. Angara, Enrile, Jose C. Concepcion, Avelino V. Cruz, Teodoro D. Regala, Rogelio A. Vinluan and Eduardo U. Escueta – who incorporated, represented, and served as dummies of the principal respondents: strongman Ferdinand E. Marcos, his widow and now Ilocos Norte Rep. Imelda Romualdez Marcos, Marcos crony Eduardo ‘Danding’ Cojuangco Jr., Danilo Ursua, and 71 corporations.

Nine Supreme Court justices, including then Chief Justice Corona, voted with finality on the cases on April 12, 2011 in favor of Cojuangco and the registered owners of the shares. Three associate justices – Conchita Carpio Morales, Ma. Lourdes Sereno, and Arturo D. Brion – cast dissenting votes. Four others — Antonio T. Carpio, Eduardo Nachura, Diosdado Peralta, and Teresita de Castro — abstained because they had either served as co-petitioner (Carpio) or solicitor general (Nachura), or simply did not take part in the vote.

But years after the cases were filed, Escueta resumed working with and for the coconut industry. From July 1998 to 2000, Escueta was Administrator of the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA), which had run into a number of controversies.

The “Small Coconut Farms Development Project (SCFDP),” a 10-year project funded with a US$121.8-million loan from the World Bank. Of the total, US$80.92 million was allocated for the procurement of farm inputs and assigned to PCA, and $40.88 million to the Department of Agriculture, for the purchase of equipment and vehicles, consultants’ services, training, studies and extension, and research. A project evaluation report would later say that “the government procured a total of 11.1 million bags of fertilizers that cost P2.3 billion,” but distributed these for free to farmer beneficiaries in far-flung areas throughout the country.

The PCA thus had to spend millions for hauling and delivery services. For the first six years, it paid private forwarders P600 million; in the years coinciding with Escueta’s watch, it hired five separate contractors in three different years and paid more than P309 million. The deliveries came one to three years after the fertilizers had been purchased, and were thus no longer useful to the beneficiaries.

In its agency audit report on PCA in 2000, the Commission on Audit found that “a total of 530,522.42 bags of damaged and undelivered fertilizers that entail more than P130 million was spent for nothing.”

The report added, “COA estimated that at least 40 percent of funds intended for fertilizer deliveries have been malversed.” The project ended in 2000 but PCA had continually failed to respond to COA’s recommendations.

It cited another report which Sergio T. Eulogio, then PCA consultant and deputy administrator for corporate services branch, had submitted to Escueta, that said P275.730 million of PCA funds “had been used by former PCA officials to finance private concerns, including the drive of the Ramos administration to change the Charter (Cha-cha).”

Eulogio’s report alleged that retired Gen. Virgilio David – Excueta’s predecessor in PCA who was also appointed by President Fidel V. Ramos – supposedly “manipulated and converted” training programs for farmers “into convenient venues or political rallies to create a critical mass of the population… (to) create a coalition of coconut farmers and non-coconut farmers for the PIRMA campaign to amend the Constitution.”

As executive officer of Napolcom since 2008, however, Escueta has launched a number of administrative reforms, including:

* In December 2014, Napolcom said “criminals on the loose and spurious and fake warrants of arrest may soon be things of the past” with the launch of the Philippine National Police’s Clearance Systems through e-projects (e-blotters, e-warrants and e-rogues), and the formation of the Crime Research and Analysis Center (CRAC).

* In July 2014, “to boost the morale” of Philippine National Police (PNP) members, Napolcom approved the rank promotion of police officers to fill up 47,185 promotional vacancies for Senior Police Officer 1 (SPO1) to Police Superintendent under the Second-Level Regular Promotion Program. Escueta said that the PNP has been authorized to fill 975 promotional slots for superintendent; 1,035 for chief inspector; 1,273 for senior inspector; 1,904 for inspector; 11,219 for SPO4; 11,360 for SPO3; 14,484 for SPO2; and 4,935 for SPO1. There are no vacancies for PO2 and PO3 ranks. Over a dozen other police officers have also been promoted since 2013 to star rank.

* The conduct of periodic PNP entrance tests to hire 10,000 new policemen, according to the budget approved for the PNP. In October 2013, entrance exams conducted in major cities drew 33,014 examinees but only 8,345 or 25.28 percent passed. This month, too, Napolcom reported that only 9.7 percent or 2,052 out of 21,154 examinees passed the PNP promotional exams it conducted last November.

But one number that continues to rise is something Escueta could not curb yet: Every year about 20,000 policemen are named in complaints for various offenses, or over one in every 10. Last year, 72 policemen were charged with violation of human rights. Escueta said the figure is not alarming at all considering that the PNP has about 150,000 total personnel.

Yet while police matters clutter Escueta’s desk, coconuts have a special place in his heart. Despite his duties at Napolcom, he remains enrolled as the “corporate secretary” and one of three directors for Luzon of COCOFED, or the Philippine Coconut Producers Federation, Inc. (formerly the United Coconut Planters Association).

Meanwhile, in the Escueta Yasay Law & Partners’ web profile, Escueta lists his practice to be focused on “Civil Law, Criminal and Administrative Litigation, Public Advocacy, Special Projects, Corporation Law, and Election Law.”

The president of Class ’72 of the UP College of Law, ex-president of the UP Alumni Association, and a Batch ’68 member of the Sigma Rho Fraternity, Escueta’s brush with elections were few and far between. On at least two occasions, it did not even turn out to be good.

Sen. Miriam Defensor Santiago and Ang Pahayagang Malaya newspaper soon exposed the participation of PCA in the Charter change campaign launched starting 1997 by PIRMA or the People’s Initiative for Reform, Modernization, and Action. A project linked to then outgoing President Ramos, PIRMA advocates said they had gathered over six million signatures of voters as a people’s initiative project to pursue charter change.

On Aug. 27, 1999, Malaya ran a story titled “PCA funding of PIRMA confirmed,” citing disclosures by PCA sources. On Jan. 11, 2000 Santiago called for a Senate investigation into reports that Escueta’s predecessor in PCA, Virgilio David, had used millions of pesos of PCA funds and property to help bankroll PIRMA and launch a smear campaign against Ramos’s critics, using part of the World Bank loan to purchase fertilizers.

A second misencounter with elections came just recently for Escueta and his COCOFED family. On May 22, 2012, COCOFED filed a “manifestation of intent” to run for party-list seats in Congress in the May 2013 elections. The manifestation listed Escueta as COCOFED corporate secretary, even as he was then serving as Napolcom vice chairman and executive officer.

Comelec disqualified COCOFED and 11 other party-list groups for failure to comply with accreditation requirements. The Supreme Court threw out COCOFED’s appeal in August 2013.

Winston M. Ginez

When he was designated chairman of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) on April 30, 2014, Winston M. Ginez found himself defending his appointment, which critics said was a reward for his participation in the 2012 impeachment trial of Chief Justice Corona.

But then he was not the only private prosecutor at that trial who ended up with a government post. Also appointed like Ginez were private prosecutors Al Parreño (who also came from LTFRB) and Arthur Lim, both of whom are now Comelec commissioners. A third, Jose F. Justiniano, has been named Justice undersecretary. Former House prosecution panel manager Joseph Emilio Abaya, meanwhile, is now Transportation and Communications secretary.

Ginez replaced Jaime Jacob, who had resigned as LTFRB chairman in March 2014 after two years of service.

Under Ginez’s leadership, the LTFRB has conducted regular inspection of buses to reduce the number of colorum units and make sure that bus companies comply with the policies. The bureau has since suspended many bus lines.

Ginez graduated valedictorian in his accounting and law classes at the San Beda College, and placed third in the 1995 bar exams. He was a law professor at San Beda from 1997 to 2005. From 2006 to 2007, he served as acting president of the Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Pasay.

Ginez had a short stint as auditor at Punongbayan & Araullo before he studied law. He then worked as a litigation, corporate, and tax lawyer at ACCRA Law. In 1999, he became vice president for legal and corporate affairs at the Pacific Ace Management Corp. In 2003, he founded the Quial Ginez Paras & Beltran law office (now Quial Beltran & Yu law office) together with three other lawyers.

Ginez was also once the chief of staff of Government Service Insurance System trustee Jesse H.T. Andres.

Leila de Lima

This would be the second time Justice Secretary Leila M. de Lima has been eyed to head the commission where her father was once chairman. In 2011, de Lima’s name had also been floated as possible successor to then outgoing Comelec Chairman Jose Armando R. Melo.

In October 2014, de Lima topped a survey of the National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) for possible replacements for Brillantes. She obtained nearly two-thirds of the vote, followed by incumbent Comelec Commissioner Luie Tito Guia and former Supreme Court Justice Nachura.

De Lima was a distinguished election lawyer before Arroyo appointed her as chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) in May 2008. In 2007, de Lima became part of the Supreme Court’s sub-committee on election rules alongside fellow election lawyers Brillantes, Romulo Macalintal, and Pete Cadra. These election lawyers, including de Lima, had earlier called the attention of the Supreme Court to alleged anomalies in trial courts with regard to handling of poll cases. The sub-committee proposed new rules of procedure in election contests before the courts involving elected municipal and barangay officials.

When Aquino took office in 2010, he selected de Lima to lead the Justice Department. De Lima became infamous for defying the Supreme Court’s temporary restraining order that allowed Arroyo to travel abroad in 2011. Because of this, three disbarment complaints were filed against de Lima in 2012, which in turn jeopardized her nomination for the post of Supreme Court chief justice that had been vacated by impeached Corona.

De Lima was born in Iriga City to Vicente B. de Lima and Norma E. Magistrado. She studied at La Consolacion College from elementary to high school. She majored in history and political science in De La Salle University. She took up law at the San Beda College, where she graduated class salutatorian in 1985.

De Lima began her law practice working as a legal staff in the Office of Supreme Court Justice Isagani A. Cruz for three years. She moved to private practice in 1989, working at different law firms until 1998, including the law offices founded by former Solicitor General and now Supreme Court Associate Justice Francis H. Jardaleza and former Senator Raul S. Roco.

In July 1998, she and a colleague established De Lima & Meñez law office, where she was managing partner until March 2007.

Martin T. Meñez was de Lima’s head executive assistant and became director in 2013 of the DOJ’s Witness Protection, Security, and Benefit Program (Witness Protection Program).

In January 2014, The Manila Times reported that de Lima, an ex-officio member of the Judicial and Bar Council, had lobbied for Meñez’s inclusion as a candidate for associate justice of the Court of Appeals. The Internal Rules of the JBC, which screens applicants for positions in the judiciary, automatically disqualifies candidates “with pending criminal or regular administrative cases, and criminal cases in foreign courts or tribunal, or who had been convicted in any criminal or administrative case where the penalty imposed is at least a fine of more than P10,000, unless he/she has been granted judicial clemency.”

Meñez, The Times said, “is a respondent in the case docketed under IS XVI-INV-IBF-00200, titled Jorge G. Cruz vs. Rufo Colayco, Martin T. Meñez, et al.” involving the alleged falsification of land titles. Supreme Court Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes A. Sereno, JBC chair, reportedly ignored the pending case against Meñez who was even shortlisted by the JBC, “to make de Lima happy.”

From 1993 to 1995, de Lima was secretary of Electoral Tribunal of the House of Representatives. She has also handled classes on election law, business organizations, persons and family relations, statutory construction, and introduction to law, among others, at the San Beda College of Law.

Antonio Eduardo B. Nachura

Former Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Eduardo B. Nachura has had an extensive experience in government service, having worked in all the three branches of the government under three presidents.

In the Executive branch, 74-year-old Nachura had served as commissioner of the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (1993-1994) and undersecretary for legal affairs and legislative liaison of the Department of Education, Culture, and Sports (1994-1998). He was chief presidential legal counsel (February-March 2006) and solicitor general (2006-2007) under President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. In February 2007, Arroyo sent him to the Supreme Court but he reached the mandatory retirement age of 70 on June 13, 2011.

Nachura was a two-term representative of the second district of Western Samar. He won twice in the 1998 and 2001 elections but had also lost twice in the race for the same position in 1992 and 2004. He first ran under the Lakas-NUCD party of former President Fidel V. Ramos in 1992 and then switched to Liberal Party in the subsequent elections.

Nachura was elected chair of the Committee on Higher and Technical Education in his first term in Congress, and the Committee on Constitutional Amendments in his second term. He was a member of the House Prosecution Panel during the impeachment trial of President Joseph Ejercito Estrada in 2001. In 2010, he swore Arroyo into office as Pampanga’s second district representative.

As Arroyo’s legal counsel in 2006, Nachura penned Presidential Proclamation No. 1017, which placed the country under a state of national emergency. As Solicitor General later, he handled the legal battle against two of Arroyo’s highly disputed directives – the “calibrated preemptive response” policy on street demonstrations and Executive Order No. 464, which prohibited government and military officials from testifying in congressional inquiries without clearance from Arroyo. The Supreme Court eventually ruled that parts of these measures were unconstitutional.

Interestingly, one of Nachura’s notable cases before the Supreme Court had him arguing against Comelec. The petitioner Sigaw ng Bayan questioned Comelec’s dismissal of its petition for amendment of the 1987 Constitution through a people’s initiative. The Supreme Court denied the petition.

Nachura was also the DepEd undersecretary who accredited anew the CKL Enterprises owned by supplier Jesusa ‘Susie’ de la Cruz. The accreditation allowed CKL to grab a questionable P81.7-million contract to supply 185,086 units of plastic armchairs to public high schools.

Nachura was born in Catbalogan, Samar, where he studied in public schools from elementary to college. He obtained his A.B English degree from Samar College (1963) and law, from the San Beda College (1967), where he graduated first honorable mention. He placed seventh in the bar exams in the same year. He earned his doctorate in public administration from the Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila.

From 1977 to 1983, Nachura was assistant corporate secretary of Government Service Insurance System (GSIS), and soon became its vice president and corporate secretary until 1985. He also worked for a year as president and general manager of the Grains Insurance Agency Corporation. In 1986, he established the Robles Brillantes Nachura Ricafrente & Aguirre Law Firm together with former Comelec Chairman Sixto S. Brillantes Jr. among others.

Nachura was dean of the Arellano Law School from 1992 to 1994.

Joe Nathan P. Tenefrancia

Joe Nathan P. Tenefrancia was a private prosecutor during the impeachment trial at the Senate against then President Estrada in 2001, and helped in his subsequent trial for plunder and perjury before the Sandiganbayan anti-graft court that lasted until 2007.

Tenefrancia was one of the lawyers of the Carpio Villaraza & Cruz or CVC Law – but more popularly known as “The Firm” – who assisted the prosecution in Estrada’s impeachment trial. The Firm had among its prominent clients Jose Miguel ‘Mike’ Arroyo, husband of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who had served as Estrada’s Vice President beginning 1998. In her campaign for the vice presidency, Arroyo listed in her1998 summary of election contributions “Joe Nathan P. Tenefrancia” and “Avelino J. Cruz Jr.” as donors, respectively, of P200,000 and P5 million.

Estrada stepped down from power and Arroyo was installed President in January 2001. She promptly designated Antonio T. Carpio, one of CVC Law’s founders, as chief presidential legal counsel. Avelino J. Cruz Jr., another CVC law founder, was named his deputy. Carpio’s post soon passed on to Cruz who would also later serve as Arroyo’s executive secretary until August 2004, and defense secretary until he quit in 2005. In October 2001, Carpio became Arroyo’s first appointee to the Supreme Court.

(The Firm – which had called itself “The Lawyers to Presidents” – had also been mobilized by the Ramos administration where Carpio served as presidential legal counsel.)

The Firm’s third founder, F. Arthur ‘Pancho’ Villaraza, stayed on as its managing partner, even as two other partners, Simeon V. Marcelo and Inocencio P. Ferrer Jr., served Arroyo’s government as Solicitor General and Finance undersecretary, respectively. Marcelo would later be appointed Ombudsman by Arroyo.

Tenefrancia, meanwhile, was appointed assistant secretary for legal affairs of the Presidential Management Staff in February 2001. He was chief presidential legal counsel from January 2004 to August 2004, and later senior deputy executive secretary for legal affairs of the Office of the Executive Secretary from September 2004 to December 2005.

Cruz, Marcelo, and Tenefrancia eventually went back to The Firm. In 2010, Tenefrancia served as counsel of Interior and Local Government Secretary Manuel ‘Mar’ Roxas II when he ran for vice president. He was also the deputy national director of the group Aquino-Roxas Bantay Balota that was formed to watch the votes of Roxas and now President Benigno S. Aquino III. Tenefrancia is the counsel on record in Roxas’s election protest case against Vice President Jejomar C. Binay.

Currently, Tenefrancia is the managing partner at Cruz Marcelo & Tenefrancia, one of two factions that emerged after The Firm broke up in 2013. (The other group is Villaraza & Angangco.) Among those who joined the Cruz group was Mike Arroyo’s former spokesperson, Patricia Bunye.

Tenefrancia has degrees in mining engineering and law from the University of the Philippines. He graduated salutatorian of Class1991 of UP Law and received the Dean’s Medal for Academic Excellence.

Tenefrancia served as public relations officer of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (1999) and later director of the organization’s Makati City chapter (2000). He is also a member of the IBP National Committee on Legal Aid.

Rufus B. Rodriguez

Cagayan de Oro City Representative Rufus B. Rodriguez is serving his third and last term in Congress until 2016.

A lawyer and educator, Rodriguez has had experience in executive, legislative, and local elective offices. He began his political career at the age of 27 when he was elected board member of Misamis Oriental in 1980. He served as the province’s vice governor from 1984 to 1986. He came back from hiatus in 2007, when he ran and won as representative of Cagayan de Oro City’s second district. He was re-elected to the same post in 2010 and 2013.

Rodriguez was affiliated with Estrada’s Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino (PMP) party in 2007 and 2010. In 2013, he joined and led the newly formed Centrist Democratic Party, which supported the candidacies of Senators Francis Joseph ‘Chiz’ G. Escudero and Aquilino Martin ‘Kiko’ L. Pimentel III, as well as Liberal Party member and now Senator Paolo Benigno ‘Bam’ A. Aquino.

Rodriguez was designated commissioner of the Bureau of Immigration in 1998 and served until Estrada was ousted in January 2001. He then served as chief of staff of Senator Luisa ‘Loi’ P. Estrada for three months.

Arroyo named Rodriguez as the country’s Ambassador to Germany, but the Commission on Appointments did not confirm his posting. He later withdrew from the post.

Rodriguez is an A.B. Economics graduate from De La Salle University but finished law at the University of the Philippines. He placed 17th in the 1981 bar exams. He has an M.A. in Economics from Xavier University and a Master of Laws from Columbia Law School. In 2011, he was conferred an honorary doctorate in humanities (civil law) by the Central Mindanao University and received a Certificate in Summer Courses on Public International Law from The Hague Academy of International Law in The Netherlands.

Rodriguez began teaching law in 1986. He became dean of the San Sebastian College of Law four years later. He set up the Sebastinian Office of Legal Aid in 1992. – PCIJ, February 2015

Your Honor, Your Horror? A parade of Comelec chairs

By Che de los Reyes
Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism

HE WOULD have long left his post at the Commission on Elections by the time Filipinos cast their ballots in the 2016 elections. But chances are some of Sixto S. Brillantes Jr.’s actions as Comelec chief would still be felt by voters even then.

For instance, three days before he retired last Jan. 30, Brillantes signed – despite strong opposition from various sectors – a P268-million deal with Smartmatic to repair 82,000 voting machines for the elections next year. Many had been against the deal because of problems with the Smartmatic-supplied PCOS machines used in the 2010 and 2013 polls. Critics have also alleged that the machines were prone to tampering.

Then again, controversy and public distrust are nothing new for Comelec. Many of its officials – from Commissioners to election officers in the field – have been embroiled in allegations of corruption, incompetence, and partisanship in the post-EDSA People Power revolt era.

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In fact, of the eight chairpersons appointed to the poll body since 1986, a few have even gained infamy for brokering plum deals with contractors and for wasting billions of public funds in botched election modernization projects.

Yet even those that did not gain notoriety have been hounded by perceived and actual conflicts of interests because of the ties that bind them to politicians. This is even as they have a sworn duty to safeguard the integrity of the ballot and to protect the will of the people expressed through suffrage.

ROLL OF HONOR & HORROR
Chairpersons of the Commission on Elections, 1986 – January 2015

* Hilario G. Davide Jr, Feb, 15, 1988 – Jan. 12, 1990
Appointed by President Corazon Aquino

* Christian S. Monsod, June 6, 1991- Feb. 15, 1995
Appointed by President Corazon Aquino

* Bernardo P. Pardo, Feb. 17, 1995- Oct. 7, 1998
Appointed by President Fidel V. Ramos

* Harriet O. Demetriou, Jan. 11, 1999- Feb. 15, 2001
Appointed by President Joseph Estrada

* Alfredo L. Benipayo, Feb. 15, 2001- June 5, 2002
Appointed by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo

* Benjamin S. Abalos, June 17, 2002- Feb. 2, 2007
Appointed by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo

* Jose Armando R. Melo, March 25, 2008- Jan. 15, 2011
Appointed by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo

* Sixto S. Brillantes Jr. Jan. 16, 2011- Feb. 2, 2015
Appointed by President Benigno S. Aquino III

The Commission is tasked by the Constitution to enforce and administer all laws and regulations concerning the conduct of regular and special elections. The Constitution also designed the poll body to be constitutionally independent from the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government to ensure the conduct of free, fair, and honest elections. Aside from election administration, Comelec also performs judicial, regulatory, and administrative functions.

Comelec is composed of a chairman and six commissioners, each of whom is appointed to a term of seven years without reappointment. The appointing power is the President, although the Commission on Appointments would still have to confirm each appointee.

The commissioners are supposed to act as a collegial body in election administration and policymaking. In deciding on election cases and pre-proclamation controversies, however, the Commission sits in two divisions initially. It decides en banc on motions to reconsider a division decision.

FORMER COMELEC CHAIRMAN Brillantes, center | Photo from PCOO

FORMER COMELEC CHAIRMAN Brillantes, center | Photo from PCOO

Politicized, opaque

Both Comelec insiders and observers say that the Commission will be hard put to eliminate partisanship among its highest officials if the very politicized and opaque nature of appointments to the poll body is not reformed. Yet in a 2009 paper, political scientist Cleo Calimbahin of the University of East Asia and the Pacific says that President Corazon C. Aquino may have been the only President who was serious about reforming the poll body.

Former Comelec Chairman Christian Monsod, in an interview with PCIJ in 2005, also noted that all Philippine Presidents after Corazon C. Aquino – from Fidel V. Ramos to Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo – had made politicized appointments to Comelec.

For sure, some might find that observation self-serving, as Monsod was one of two Comelec chairmen appointed by Cory Aquino. But his observation is not without basis. Appointed by Aquino as Comelec chief on June 6, 1991, Monsod enjoyed consistent satisfaction ratings in nearly four years that he was poll body chief. In fact, the Monsod Commission is hailed to this day as having ushered an era of reform in the poll body.

Under Monsod’s watch, Comelec welcomed the contributions of nongovernment organizations such as the Citizens’ Consortium on Electoral Reforms (now the Consortium on Electoral Reforms) in advocating for the introduction of amendments to the Omnibus Election Code and laws enabling the provisions of the Constitution. This later led to the passage of landmark election laws such as the Party List Act, Fair Elections Act, and the laws on continuing registration, electoral modernization, and overseas absentee voting.

With Monsod at the helm, Comelec also conducted the first synchronized national and local elections in 1992, which saw the first non-majority President elected: Fidel V. Ramos. Consequently, the first presidential protest case was also filed before the Presidential Electoral Tribunal by Ramos’s closest rival, Miriam Defensor-Santiago, due to the narrow margin of votes by the former.

Monsod’s appointment as Comelec chairman, however, was not entirely smooth-sailing. Shortly after Monsod was appointed chairman, Renato Cayetano, the late father of Senators Alan Peter and Pia Cayetano, questioned Monsod’s qualification to head the Commission. According to Cayetano, Monsod had not “engaged in the practice of law for at least 10 years,” a requirement stipulated in the 1987 Constitution. Cayetano filed a petition before the Supreme Court to declare Monsod’s appointment null and void.

A lawyer by profession, Monsod had begun his career in his father’s law firm. He later worked for the World Bank group. He also served as CEO and legal consultant for various companies, including Meralco. In addition, he was Secretary General and National Chairman of the National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections, or NAMFREL.

The Supreme Court later dismissed Cayetano’s petition, citing that the “(p)ractice of law means any activity, in or out of court, which requires the application of law, legal procedure, knowledge, training and experience.”

Rules of Procedure

Monsod, though, led Comelec for less than four years, or from June 6, 1991 to Feb. 15, 1995, because he was just serving the unexpired term of Hilario Davide Jr., the first post-EDSA Comelec chairman who was appointed by Aquino in February 1988. Prior to his appointment to the poll body, Davide had been a member of the Constitutional Commission.

Davide is widely known as the Chief Justice who presided over the impeachment trial of ousted President Joseph Ejercito Estrada. Less known is the fact that in his brief stint as Comelec head, Davide sought to restore order in election administration by introducing the Comelec’s Rules of Procedure. The detailed protocol regulated all aspects of Comelec decision-making, including the handling of candidates’ disqualification, election protests, and election-related cases filed before regional trial courts.

Davide gave up his Comelec post in January 1990, when he was designated to lead a five-person fact-finding commission – later called the Davide Commission – tasked to investigate eight military coup attempts against the Aquino administration.

The following year, Davide was appointed as associate justice of the Supreme Court. In November 1998, Davide was appointed Chief Justice by then President Joseph Ejercito Estrada.

(After Davide left Comelec, Commissioner Haydee B. Yorac served as acting Chairman for more than a year. In that short period, Yorac managed to subdue election violence and strictly enforce the gun ban, even in areas in Mindanao that were ruled by warlords.)

Inertia under Pardo

Davide was not the only Comelec chief who went on to the Supreme Court. Like Davide, the term of Monsod’s successor Bernardo Pardo as Comelec chair was cut short when President Estrada appointed him associate justice of the Supreme Court in October 1998 – less than four years after he was appointed Comelec chairman by President Fidel V. Ramos. Pardo had become head of the poll body on Feb. 17, 1995, less than three months before the 1995 mid-term elections. Before that, he had been associate justice in the Court of Appeals, where he was likewise appointed by Ramos.

The conservative Pardo’s term in Comelec had been characterized by inertia, which was made even more acute in the aftermath of the dynamism and reforms introduced by the Monsod Comelec. In fact, when Pardo took over, NGOs that used to engage with Comelec had to disengage for lack of any clear direction or reform initiatives within the body.

Dagdag-Bawas

Pardo’s impartiality was also questioned, as he was seen traveling with Ramos to Mindanao on two occasions. It is also said that during the 1998 elections, he himself went to Estrada to give the Comelec count. It was also the Pardo Comelec that started the practice of hiring applicants endorsed by politicians. Too, it was during Pardo’s term when Aquilino Pimentel popularized the term “dagdag-bawas” referring to vote-padding and vote-shaving, or the wholesale cheating during the elections.

The next two Comelec chiefs who succeeded Pardo would be embroiled in very public infighting among the Commissioners at the time.

Harriet Demetriou was appointed chair by Joseph Estrada in 1999, and served from Jan. 11, 1999 to Feb. 15, 2001. Her rise to power – from being a regional trial court judge to Comelec chairperson in a span of just a few years – was described as nothing short of meteoric.

Factions within

Demetriou gained national prominence in 1995 when, as a judge of the Regional Trial Court of Pasig, she convicted Laguna Mayor Antonio Sanchez of raping and killing UP Los Baños student Eileen Sarmenta and of murdering her companion Alan Gomez in 1993. From being RTC judge, she became an associate justice of the Sandiganbayan. In 1998, Demetriou became Presidential Legal Counsel of the Estrada administration. The following year, she was appointed Comelec chair.

At the poll body, Demetriou opposed a huge contract to modernize the elections – the P6.5-billion Voter Registration and Identification System (VRIS) deal with Photokina Marketing Corporation. The contract was being pushed hard by a faction among the commissioners even though Congress had allotted only P1.2 billion for the VRIS project in the 2000 national budget. The faction was led by co-Estrada appointee and ex-acting chair Luzviminda Tancangco, who Demetriou replaced.

Following Estrada’s impeachment and eventual ouster, Demetriou resigned from her post as Comelec chief.

Demetriou’s successor, former Supreme Court administrator Alfredo Benipayo, soon found himself in the middle of the same bitter squabbling within the Commission. Benipayo, who was President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s first appointee to the poll body’s chairmanship in February 2001, also opposed the Photokina deal on the VRIS project. This became one of the main sources of friction between Benipayo and Estrada appointees Tancangco, Ralph Lantion, Rufino Javier, and Mehol Sadain – Comelec’s so-called ‘Gang of Four.’

Benipayo introduced his own reform program to Comelec. Unfortunately, his stint as poll body chief lasted only 15 months, as he was forced to step down on June 5, 2002 after being bypassed by the Commission on Appointments several times.

Politics in charge

The apolitical Benipayo was replaced by politician Benjamin S. Abalos, who was appointed by Arroyo on June 17, 2002. Abalos would head Comelec for nearly five years – the longest period served by a Comelec head since 1986 – and leave a legacy of scandals and eroded credibility.

Abalos’s appointment was unprecedented; at the time of his appointment, he was still sitting in the national directorate of Arroyo’s party Lakas-NUCD. Prior to his stint at Comelec, Abalos was chief of the Metro Manila Development Authority and a three-term mayor of Mandaluyong City.
He has acknowledged a close friendship with First Gentleman Miguel ‘Mike’ Arroyo, as well as with the siblings of Arroyo herself, and with the owners of Photokina, the Chua family.

Under Abalos, Comelec’s credibility, integrity, and independence suffered the most, registering a sharp decline in net trust ratings. From a high of +49 in February 2004, the commission’s trust ratings plummeted to -17 in March 2006 and -10 in September 2006 in surveys done by the Social Weather Stations.

‘Hello, Garci’

The public’s distrust of Comelec could be attributed to the scandals that tainted the poll body under Abalos’s watch. A PCIJ report cited, among other mistakes, P2.3 billion of taxpayers’ money wasted in the election modernization program for the 2004 elections that the Abalos Comelec bungled. This included a P1.3-billion contract awarded to a consortium led by Mega Pacific e-Solutions, for the purchase of automated counting machines (ACMs). The Supreme Court later invalidated the contract for irregularities in the bidding process. Comelec, however, had already paid Mega Pacific P1.04 billion. Another P1 billion went into the voters validation system, which was suspended in December 2003 in the absence of any budgetary allocation.

The ‘Hello, Garci’ scandal that rocked not only the poll body, but also the Arroyo administration unfolded during the Abalos Comelec. The focus of much of the public’s ire, however, would be Arroyo herself and Virgilio ‘Garci’ Garcillano, the Comelec commissioner whose wiretapped phone conversations with the President revealed the manipulation of the 2004 election results in Mindanao.

Three years later, Abalos himself would be implicated in a controversy. Among other things, he was alleged to be the “broker” of the $329-million National Broadband Network project awarded to China’s Zhong Xing Telecommunications Equipment Limited (ZTE) project, for which he reportedly even offered millions of pesos in bribes to concerned officials.

Abalos resigned as Comelec chair and commissioner amid the NBN-ZTE scandal, an act that a PCIJ report said mimicked that of Richard Nixon in 1974. By resigning, Abalos effectively eluded an imminent impeachment trial brewing in Congress on the basis of a complaint filed at the House of Representatives.

The gargantuan task of restoring Comelec’s tattered image in the wake of Abalos fell on the shoulders of former Supreme Court Justice Jose Armando R. Melo. Prior to his appointment as Comelec chief on March 25, 2008, Melo had been tasked by Arroyo to head an independent fact-finding commission on extrajudicial and political killings.

Controversial contracts

But the poll body under Melo ran into yet another controversy, this time involving a P690-million contract for the purchase of special ballot-secrecy folders for the May 2010 elections. Comelec later scrapped the deal after admitting a “lapse” in judgment in awarding the “extravagant” contract.

Melo retired on Jan. 15, 2011 after serving as poll body chief for nearly three years. His unexpired term was taken over by Sixto S. Brillantes Jr., who was appointed by President Benigno S. Aquino III on Jan. 16, 2011.

Brillantes is the son of the late Ilocos Sur Governor and Comelec Commissioner Sixto Brillantes, who was appointed to the poll body by President Ramon Magsaysay on Dec. 20, 1956.

An election lawyer

The appointment of the younger Brillantes – an accomplished election lawyer – was met with doubts about his independence, with critics saying that he might not be able to resist political pressure from his former clients.

Indeed, in his long career, Brillantes had lawyered for some of the country’s top politicians, including presidential candidates Eduardo Cojuangco Jr. (1992), Joseph Ejercito Estrada (1998), Fernando Poe Jr. (2004), and Benigno S. Aquino III (2010).

From 2007 to 2009, he also served as legal consultant of the United Opposition (UNO), which was created by Vice President Jejomar Binay to unite all politicians against then President Arroyo. From 2001 to 2006, Brillantes was general counsel of the Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC), which Eduardo ‘Danding’ Cojuangco Jr. heads as chairman emeritus.

Brillantes’s ties with Cojuangco, however, go back several decades. From 1972 to 1982, he was assistant vice president/legal affairs officer of the Cojuangco-owned Northern Cement Corporation. He continued to be involved in the company until 1986. From 1978 to 1986, he was legal counsel of the Eduardo Cojuangco Jr. Group of Companies, as well as the group’s director and corporate secretary from 1983-1986.

For all his critics’ dire predictions, Brillantes has led a Comelec that at least has been able to strictly enforce the rules on campaign finance and political advertising. PCIJ, February 2015

Campaign finance excess: Bagsfull of coal for 400 candidates

By Che de los Reyes

THEY WERE warned to watch out, and now they are bound to cry.

According to the Commission on Elections (Comelec), nearly 400 local candidates in the 2010 and 2013 elections may soon be facing charges of campaign overspending, and that could mean more than their having Christmas stockings full of coal.

Should they be found guilty, they could be barred from running for any elective position and deprived of the right to vote. They could also face jail time of one to six years without probation under the Omnibus Election Code (Batas Pambansa Blg. 881). After all, under the law, going over campaign spending limits is an election offense, which is considered a criminal offense in this country.

As of Dec. 19, 2014, Comelec’s Campaign Finance Unit (CFU) has already filed before the Commission’s Law Department 380 cases of campaign overspending against local candidates who ran in the last two polls. Out of this total, 272 ran in 2010 and the remaining 108 in 2013.

But these cases are only “the tip of the iceberg,” says CFU prosecutor Sabino Mejarito. The CFU, he says, is not yet done sifting through the volumes of campaign-finance records of all national and local candidates in the 2010 and 2013 elections.

The Unit’s current ‘naughty list’ covers only local candidates who ran for district representative, provincial, and city and municipal positions. It has yet to submit to the Comelec Law Department campaign overspending cases against candidates who went for higher posts.

Time is not on Comelec’s side, though. According to lawyer Sonia Bea Wee-Lozada of the Office of Commissioner Christian Robert S. Lim, Comelec has only three months or so – or until the first quarter of 2015 — to prosecute campaign overspending cases related to the 2010 elections; May 10, 2015 marks the end of the five-year prescription period for 2010 election offense cases. This is why the CFU is focusing on prosecuting these 2010 cases first, Wee-Lozada explains.

Formed only in 2012, the CFU will have to examine the campaign finance records of candidates who ran in the 2010 polls simultaneously with those of the 44,326 candidates who ran for 17,911 positions in the 2013 elections (from senators to Sangguniang Bayan members, as well as ARMM governor, regional governor, and assemblymen).

The CFU’s 30 staffers will likely not be able to take a break during the upcoming holidays – and in the months beyond, for that matter. Consider these figures from May to December 2014 that indicate the CFU’s balance of work:

* 7,028 candidates who failed to file their Statements of Election Contributions and Expenditures (SOCE) in the 2010 and 2013 elections;
* 1,059 candidates to whom notices to settle late penalty and/or correct minor deficiencies were sent;
* 331 candidates who responded to the notices;
* 115 pending certificates of compliance to be issued; and
* 959 election overspending cases that are being reviewed.

Such volume of work could make even the most cheerful Christmas elf experience depression. But Commissioner Lim himself would rather highlight the upside: Comelec’s efforts to audit campaign finance in the 2013 elections, he says, have made its mark on candidates and political parties.

“There was really an effort on the part of the candidates to complete (their submission of the SOCE),” Lim says. He adds that this was especially true in the aftermath of Comelec’s publication in December 2013 of a list of 422 elected officials, political parties, and party-list groups that did not submit their SOCEs after the extended deadline for submission on June 30, 2013. The officials on the list were also ordered to vacate their posts due to non-compliance with campaign finance rules.

After the list’s publication, the CFU found itself swamped with the deluge of submissions and payment of fines for late filing – including those from candidates whose reports were not deemed by the CFU as problematic, says Lim.

“It was a shock to the system na, uy mahigpit pala dito (that, hey, they are really strict),” the commissioner recalls. In fact, from May 9 to June 30, 2014 alone, the CFU was able to collect P3.87 million in late fines from the candidates. In just six months, or in December 2014, that amount has more than doubled into P8.1 million, according to figures shared by Lim’s office to PCIJ.

Just keeping the candidates on their toes about how they raise funds and spend for the campaign is already a big feat, especially going into the 2016 presidential elections, says Lim.

“I want to continue that we’re prosecuting so that candidates will be more aware in 2016,” he says.

The process, however, is hardly over once the CFU files a case with the Comelec Law Department. Once a case is docketed, the Law Department conducts a preliminary investigation. Based on the investigation’s results, the lawyers will then come up with a resolution stating whether or not there is probable cause. This resolution is forwarded to the Comelec En Banc, which reviews it and decides whether to dismiss or affirm it.

Cases affirmed by the Comelec En Banc are then filed before the regional trial court that has jurisdiction over the congressional district, province, city, or municipality where the individual charged with campaign overspending had filed his or her candidacy.

Interestingly, the campaign overspending case involving then Laguna gubernatorial candidate E.R. Ejercito did not go this route. This was because it actually stemmed from an election protest filed before Ejercito was officially proclaimed winner of the May 2013 gubernatorial race in Laguna.

Ejercito’s political rival, former Laguna Rep. Edgar San Luis, had filed the protest. CFU then audited Ejercito’s campaign contribution and spending report, and compared this with the advertising contracts submitted by TV networks that aired Ejercito’s political ads. Based on these documents, Ejercito was found to have gone over his P4.6 million campaign spending limit by at least P19 million; his campaign ad expenses alone reached a total of more than P23 million.

In September 2013, Comelec’s First Division issued a decision to disqualify Ejercito. This was unanimously affirmed by the Comelec En Banc on May 21, 2014. Because the Comelec En Ban’c decision was deemed executory, Ejercito was asked to vacate his post immediately. A stand-off lasted several days before Ejercito finally stepped down on May 30, 2014. He was replaced by Vice Governor Ramil Hernandez.

Ejercito filed an appeal with the Supreme Court, which has the power to reverse the Comelec’s decision. Last Nov. 25, however, the Supreme Court upheld the Comelec’s decision to disqualify Ejercito for campaign overspending.

Ejercito’s disqualification case was administrative in nature. As to his criminal liability for campaign overspending, Wee-Lozada says that the CFU is currently in the process of “collating documentary evidence in relation to the criminal complaint.”

“The quantum of evidence required is higher for criminal cases,” she says. “Hence, we want to be very thorough and meticulous in the preparation of the complaint.”

Binay’s accuser, by the numbers

From the PCIJ Files: MAKATI CITY

Ex-VICE MAYOR ERNESTO S. MERCADO

IN THIS series, we will share with you PCIJ’s databases on the wealth, campaign contributions and spending, and social network of elected government officials of the Philippines.

Former Makati City Vice Mayor Ernesto S. Mercado recently came to the limelight as witness to the alleged kickbacks from public contracts that supposedly went to Vice President Jejomar “Jojo” C. Binay when he was still mayor of Makati City.

Mercado was Binay’s political ally for 15 years before he switched to the Nacionalista Party in 2010. A former businessman, Mercado began his political career as councilor of Makati City in 1992 and was re-elected in 1995. He ran for vice mayor in 1998 but lost to actor Edu Manzano. He returned to public office in 2001 as vice mayor and won his 2004 and 2007 re-election bid. In 2010, Mercado ran for mayor but lost to Jejomar Erwin “JunJun” S. Binay Jr. who ran for mayor in lieu of his father, Jojo Binay, who ran and won as vice president.

How wealthy is Mercado?

Mercado’s Statements of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) available at the PCIJ library showed that his net worth marked a minimal increase from P62.83 million in 2000 to P63.92 million in 2004.

As of 2004, his total assets stood at P114 million and his liabilities, P50 million. Mercado declared owning P54.3 million worth of properties in Makati City, Pateros, Antipolo City, Bataan, Nueva Ecija, Laguna, Batangas.

His most expensive properties were a P12-million condominium unit in Makati City and P10-million land property in Pateros. He also declared stocks and business investments worth P52.9 million.