News (Media Awareness Project) - Philippines: Judge Drops Case Vs Shabu Lab 'Caretaker' |
Title: | Philippines: Judge Drops Case Vs Shabu Lab 'Caretaker' |
Published On: | 2004-07-17 |
Source: | Philippine Star (Philippines) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 05:16:05 |
JUDGE DROPS CASE VS SHABU LAB 'CARETAKER'
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has lost its case against the supposed
Filipino caretaker of a shabu factory in Antipolo City which yielded
466 kilograms of shabu worth almost P2 billion during a raid last year.
This, as Antipolo City Regional Trial Court Judge Mauricio Rivera
dropped the charges against Eusebio Arellano Jr., alias Yang Jianzhiu.
The court granted Arellano's appeal and set aside its earlier order
denying his motion to quash the charges against him. He was ordered
released from the Rizal provincial jail.
In a seven-page decision, Rivera of Antipolo RTC Branch 73 ruled that
the warrantless arrest of Arellano was illegal and that no drugs or
other related paraphernalia were confiscated from him or his vehicle.
It was not immediately known from the DOJ how the court's action on
Arellano 's case would affect the charges against the four Chinese
nationals -- Yan Huan Lai, Chin Tu Chen, Chuang Wen Ming and Ho Kisu
Hsing -- who were tagged as the operators of the shabu laboratory
raided in Barangay Mambugan, Antipolo City.
In his ruling, Rivera said the circumstances surrounding Arellano's
apprehension did not conform with the requirements of warrantless arrest.
While members of the police raiding team saw Arellano allegedly
blowing his horns and trying to enter the warehouse at the time of the
raid, Rivera said he was not originally among those suspected of
keeping dangerous drugs in the premises.
Rivera noted that Arellano "was not arrested after committing or while
commiting an offense."
Arellano, the judge added, was not arrested in Barangay Mambugan, but
at the Town and Country Executive Village "as borne out by the
witnesses of the accused, including the admission of the police
operatives during cross examination."
Rivera also said that while Arellano drove away upon seeing the
policemen, he did not do it fast enough as if evading arrest.
"Ordinary human experience dictates that a person eluding capture
would proceed with all dispatch to prevent his captors from closing
in," he said.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has lost its case against the supposed
Filipino caretaker of a shabu factory in Antipolo City which yielded
466 kilograms of shabu worth almost P2 billion during a raid last year.
This, as Antipolo City Regional Trial Court Judge Mauricio Rivera
dropped the charges against Eusebio Arellano Jr., alias Yang Jianzhiu.
The court granted Arellano's appeal and set aside its earlier order
denying his motion to quash the charges against him. He was ordered
released from the Rizal provincial jail.
In a seven-page decision, Rivera of Antipolo RTC Branch 73 ruled that
the warrantless arrest of Arellano was illegal and that no drugs or
other related paraphernalia were confiscated from him or his vehicle.
It was not immediately known from the DOJ how the court's action on
Arellano 's case would affect the charges against the four Chinese
nationals -- Yan Huan Lai, Chin Tu Chen, Chuang Wen Ming and Ho Kisu
Hsing -- who were tagged as the operators of the shabu laboratory
raided in Barangay Mambugan, Antipolo City.
In his ruling, Rivera said the circumstances surrounding Arellano's
apprehension did not conform with the requirements of warrantless arrest.
While members of the police raiding team saw Arellano allegedly
blowing his horns and trying to enter the warehouse at the time of the
raid, Rivera said he was not originally among those suspected of
keeping dangerous drugs in the premises.
Rivera noted that Arellano "was not arrested after committing or while
commiting an offense."
Arellano, the judge added, was not arrested in Barangay Mambugan, but
at the Town and Country Executive Village "as borne out by the
witnesses of the accused, including the admission of the police
operatives during cross examination."
Rivera also said that while Arellano drove away upon seeing the
policemen, he did not do it fast enough as if evading arrest.
"Ordinary human experience dictates that a person eluding capture
would proceed with all dispatch to prevent his captors from closing
in," he said.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...