EN BANC
[G.R. No. 124526. March 17, 2000]
THE PEOPLE OF
THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. JIMMY SAPAL y NASA, accused-appellant. Jjä lex
D E C I S I O N
KAPUNAN, J.:
This is an automatic review of the Decision,
dated 8 March 1996, of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 35 of Manila in
Criminal Case No. 95-142470, which sentenced accused-appellant Jimmy Sapal
("accused") to DEATH and to pay the fine of ten million pesos
(P10,000,000.00) after he was found guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime
of unlawful possession of three (3) kilograms of marijuana.[1]
The Information charged accused and his
wife, Maria Luisa Sapal, with violation of Section 8, Article II in relation to
Section 2(e) (1), Article I, Republic Act No. 6425, as amended, committed as
follows:
That on or about
April 22, 1995, in the City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused, not being
authorized by law to possess or use any prohibited drug, did then and there
wilfully, unlawfully and knowingly have in their possession and under their
custody and control 3 kg. of dried flowering top of Marijuana, which is a
prohibited drug. NewÓ miso
Contrary to law.[2]
Upon motion of the prosecution, the trial
court dismissed the charge against Maria Luisa Sapal. Only accused was thus
arraigned. At his arraignment, accused entered a plea of not guilty.
Subsequently, trial ensued.
The prosecution presented two (2) witnesses,
namely, PO3 Jesus Gomez and Renee Eric P. Checa, a forensic chemist. Gomez
testified as to the events leading to the arrest of accused.[3] According to Gomez, he is an investigator of the
Drug Enforcement Unit (DEU) of the Western Police District (WPD) Command at
U.N. Avenue in Manila. On 22 April 1995, around 3:30 in the morning, the office
of the DEU received a call from a reliable informant that accused, who had a
standing warrant of arrest, had been seen at Jocson St., Sampaloc, Manila. The
warrant of arrest was issued by then Judge Roberto A. Barrios (now Justice of
the Court of Appeals) for failure of accused to appear at the hearing of a
criminal case involving illegal possession of .3381 gram (less than 1 gram) of
"shabu" which was earlier filed against him.[4]
Acting on the said information, Senior
Inspector Ferdinand Ampil, Chief of the DEU, briefed his men about accused. Ampil
then mobilized a team composed of fourteen (14) police operatives, including
Gomez, to nab accused. To seal all possible escape routes of accused, the team
was divided into three (3) groups: one group was instructed to proceed to
Jocson Street, another group to Lepanto Street and the last group to Earnshaw
Street. Acctä
mis
Gomez was assigned to the team led by Ampil.
Their group proceeded to Jocson Street where they spotted the mica blue Toyota
Corolla with plate number TSR 619 which was reported to be frequently used by
accused. Apparently, accused sensed the presence of the law enforcers because
he tried to flee by driving the car towards Earnshaw Street. The other groups,
however, managed to block the car at the corner of Earnshaw and Lepanto streets.
Accused was with his wife.
The police operatives approached the car,
identified themselves and informed accused that he was being arrested pursuant
to the warrant issued by Judge Barrios. Accused and his wife were told to get
down from the car. Forthwith, Gomez conducted a search of the vehicle. In the
course thereof, Gomez found a light green plastic bag[5] in the back seat of the car containing three (3)
bricks of suspected marijuana. One brick was wrapped in a newspaper tied with a
string while the other two were wrapped in an aluminum foil bound with masking
tapes.[6]
Accused and his wife were brought to the
police headquarters in U.N. Avenue, Manila for investigation. The bricks of
suspected marijuana were referred to the Criminal Investigation and Laboratory
Division for examination. Checa, the chemist on duty at the time, testified
that the results of the tests he conducted confirmed that the three (3) bricks
were marijuana, a prohibited drug. Each brick weighed about one (1) kilogram
and the total gross weight of the illegal substance was placed at three (3)
kilograms.[7]
For his part, accused denied the charges
against him and claimed that he was a victim of a "frame-up". The
defense presented as witnesses accused, his wife, Maria Luisa, and their friends,
Jerry and Marlene Cayetano, The defense’ version of what transpired during the
arrest of accused is as follows:[8]Misä act
At around 1:00 in the morning of 22 April
1995, accused and his wife, who both just arrived from Hongkong, proceeded to
the house of Jerry and Marlene to deliver their "pasalubong". The
group decided to eat out thus they all boarded the mica blue Toyota Corolla
which accused borrowed from one Maria Theresa Yamamoto. Accused was driving the
car while his wife was seated beside him. Jerry and Marlene were seated at the
back. When they reached the corner of Lepanto and Earnshaw Streets, their car
was blocked by two (2) vehicles carrying armed men. These men alighted from
their vehicles, approached the car driven by accused and poked their guns at
its passengers. Accused and his companions were ordered to get out of the car.
They did as told. Two (2) policemen, Gomez and SPO2 Leoncio Donor, Jr., with
their flashlights, then conducted an on-the-spot search. Gomez was heard to
have uttered, "Negative for drugs." Turning his attention to accused,
Gomez ordered him to board the Toyota Corolla to be brought to the
headquarters. The other three (3) companions of accused were made to board one
of the vehicles used by the police operatives. Sâ djad
Accused further testified that he was
blindfolded while on board the Toyota Corolla with the police operatives. He
was not brought to the headquarters but to an undisclosed place which he later
learned to be Maples Inn in Apacible Street. There, he was made to undress and
then mauled and tortured. The police operatives took his wallet which contained
seven thousand pesos, a few Hongkong dollars and several ATM cards. They
coerced him into divulging to them the PIN numbers of his ATM cards. Accused
gave them the correct PIN number to his Far East Bank account but purposely
mixed up the other PIN numbers to his other bank accounts. As a result, the
police operatives were able to withdraw the amount of thirty thousand pesos
from his Far East Bank account. His other two (2) ATM cards were eaten up by
the machines. Accused was detained in Maples Inn for four (4) days and on 25
April 1995, he was finally brought to the police headquarters for inquest.
At the headquarters, accused initially
refused to sign the Booking Sheet and Arrest Report. Gomez, however, took out
his gun. He (Gomez) removed five bullets from the gun but left one bullet. He
then rolled the cylinder and poked the gun at the accused. He pulled the
trigger but the gun did not fire. Trembling with fear, accused hastily signed
the Booking Sheet and Arrest Report.[9]
Maria Luisa, Jerry and Marlene, in their
respective testimonies,[10] averred that they were ordered to board one of the
vehicles of the police operatives. They were brought to the headquarters of the
WPD in U.N. Avenue, Manila. According to Jerry, upon reaching the headquarters,
he was mauled and tortured. The police operatives were forcing him to admit
that "shabu" was recovered from their group. Jerry insisted that no
illegal drugs were recovered from any of them. In another room, Marlene and
Maria Luisa were also being coerced into admitting that illegal drugs were
recovered from their group. Like Jerry, Marlene and Maria Luisa refused to do
so. Sppedscâ
Jerry, Marlene and Maria Luisa were detained
at the headquarters for a day. Thereafter, they were transferred to the Maples
Inn. They learned that accused was also being kept there. Upon Maria Luisa’s
plea, she was allowed to see her husband but only for a few minutes. They were
detained in Maples Inn for three (3) days. Accused was not with them during the
entire time.
Thereafter, they were all brought back to
the headquarters. Florentino and Jovita Balgos, Marlene’s parents, came to
visit them. Florentino, a retired policeman, talked to Ampil and after their
conversation, Jerry and Marlene were released. Ampil warned the couple against
testifying for accused. Maria Luisa was released on 14 September 1995 when the
trial court dismissed the case as against her.[11]
In the course of the trial, Joel N. Go filed
a motion,[12] dated 16 October 1995, seeking the release of the
Toyota Corolla driven by accused at the time of his arrest. Go claimed that he
is the owner of said car having bought the same from Maria Theresa Yamamoto.
However, on 20 April 1995, Yamamoto borrowed the car from Go as she had to
fetch a friend (a businessman), who was arriving from Hongkong, from the
airport. In his motion, Go stated that he did not know the accused and that he
was not involved in the crime for which accused was being tried. CÓ alrsc
After trial, the trial court rendered its
Decision the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE,
judgment is rendered pronouncing accused JIMMY SAPAL y NASA guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of illegal possession of dried flowering tops of marijuana
weighing three (3) kilograms or 3,000 grams, penalized under Section 8, Article
II of Republic Act No. 6425, as amended, and further amended by Section 13 in
relation to Section 17 of Republic Act No. 7659, and sentencing said accused to
DEATH by means of execution provided by law, and to pay a fine of
P10,000,000.00, and the costs.
The three bricks
of dried flowering tops of marijuana (Exhibits B-1, B-2 and B-3) involved in
this case are confiscated and forfeited to the Government to be disposed of in
accordance with law. Within ten (10) days following the promulgation of this
judgment, the Branch Clerk of this Court is ordered to turn over, under proper
receipt, the prohibited drug involved in this case to the Dangerous Drugs
Custodian, National Bureau of Investigation, as appointed by the Dangerous
Drugs Board, for appropriate disposition.
The Toyota Corolla
vehicle with plate No. TSR 619, in the custody of the Drugs Enforcement Unit,
WPDC, U.N. Avenue, Ermita, Manila, is also confiscated and forfeited to the
Government, unless it can be conclusively shown that said motor vehicle is the
property of a third person not liable for the offense.
Serve a copy of
this Decision on the Executive Director, Dangerous Drugs Board, for his
information and guidance. Sccalä r
SO ORDERED.[13]
Accused seasonably filed his notice of
appeal. In his appeal brief, he made the following assignment of errors:
I
THE TRIAL COURT
ERRED IN GIVING CREDENCE TO THE TESTIMONY OF THE PROSECUTION WITNESSES. Calrspä ped
II
THE TRIAL COURT
ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED GUILTY BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT OF THE CRIME OF
ILLEGAL POSSESSION OF 3 KILOGRAMS OF MARIJUANA.[14]
These contentions shall be discussed jointly
considering that the issues they raise are interrelated and deal with the
question of whether or not the guilt of accused was proven beyond reasonable
doubt to warrant the supreme penalty of death.
The Court finds for the accused.
In convicting the accused, the trial court
accorded full faith and credence to the testimony of Gomez who, as a police
officer, was presumed to have performed his duty in a regular manner. The
testimonies of the defense witnesses, upon the other hand, were given scant
consideration on account of their affinity to the accused.
While the Court is mindful that law
enforcers enjoy the presumption of regularity in the performance of their
duties, this presumption cannot prevail over the constitutional right of the
accused to be presumed innocent[15] and it cannot, by itself, constitute proof of guilt
beyond reasonable doubt.[16] In this case, there are attendant circumstances
that, to the Court’s mind, negate the presumption accorded to the prosecution
witness. In fact, there is sufficient evidence to show that the manner by which
the law enforcers effected the arrest of accused was highly irregular and
suspect. Sceä
dp
Gomez claimed that they arrested accused
pursuant to the warrant issued by Judge Barrios in Criminal Case No. 94-133847.
The Alias Order of Arrest against accused stated:
TO ANY LAWFUL
OFFICER:
You are hereby
commanded to arrest Jimmy Sapal y Nasa @ "Tisoy" for failure to
appear for arraignment who is said to be at 1301 Torres Bugallon St., Tondo,
Manila and who stands charged before me of violation of Sec. 16 RA 6425 and to
bring him before me as soon as possible to be dealt with as the law and Rules
of Court direct.
Manila,
Philippines, December 13, 1994.[17]
Contrary to the clear directive of the
warrant, however, the law enforcers never brought him before Judge Barrios.
Gomez himself admitted the same and did not offer any convincing explanation
for this omission: Edpä sc
Q: My question is: Did you comply with the
mandate of the warrant of arrest to bring the arrestee to the Judge who issue
[sic] the warrant of arrest, Judge Barrios?
A: I did not, sir.
Q: Why did you not bring him before Judge
Barrios?
A: We have different assignments, Your
Honor.[18]
It must be pointed out that the alias
warrant of arrest against accused was issued by Judge Barrios only because
accused failed to appear during his arraignment in Criminal Case No. 94-133847.
The information in said criminal case charged accused of possession of .3381
gram of "shabu". Without meaning to make light of the said offense,
the amount of illegal substance allegedly recovered from accused therein, i.e.,
less than one (1) gram, hardly made him a "notorious drug dealer" as
what the prosecution tried to present.
Moreover, there is no dispute that accused
was arrested with Maria Luisa on 22 April 1995. In his testimony, Gomez claimed
that they brought accused and his wife to the headquarters and he (Gomez)
immediately prepared the necessary documents.[19] The records, however, reveal that the documents
relating to the arrest of accused and his wife, e.g., Booking Sheet and Arrest
Report[20] and Affidavit of Apprehension,[21] were prepared three (3) days after the arrest. The
length of time that it took the police officers to prepare these documents,
which otherwise involved routine paper work, seriously casts doubt on their
credibility.
Edâ p
Further, the case was submitted to the
inquest prosecutor only on 25 April 1995. The Information against accused and
his wife was subsequently filed on 26 April 1995. Gomez never offered any
explanation for said delay in delivering accused and his wife to the proper
authorities.
It was not likewise shown that accused was
fully apprised of his rights under custodial arrest. Specifically, accused was
not assisted by counsel when he was under custodial investigation in violation
of Republic Act No. 7438. Section 2(a) of said law provides that "[a]ny
person arrested, detained or under custodial investigation shall at all times
be assisted by counsel." Gomez offered a flimsy excuse for the absence of
counsel to assist accused, thus:
Q: You investigated also Jimmy? Miä sedp
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Was he represented by counsel when you
investigated him?
A: Its [sic] only the husband and wife was
[sic] there, sir.
Q: As an investigator, Mr. [W]itness, do you
know of any rights of the accused under custody?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Will you tell us what was that [sic]?
A: Right to remain silent, right to counsel,
those are his rights, sir.
Q: Now, you said that you are aware of the
basic rights of the accused, specifically [as] the right to counsel. Why did
you not ask [the] or why did you not provide the accused the necessary counsel
to assist him during the custody [sic] investigation?
A: Our intention is regarding Robert Yu and
that's the one we wanted him to confirm, sir.
Atty. Icaonapo: Misoedpâ
Your Honor, may I request the witness
to answer the question.
Q: The question is very simple. Why did you
not provide the accused the assistance of a counsel?
A: I informed him that because that is SOP
before any question will be asked on him, sir.
Q: And what was the answer of the accused?
A: Because of his willingness to cooperate
he mentioned something about their group, sir.[22]
Admittedly, accused is deemed to have waived
his right to question the irregularities attending his arrest for his failure
to raise the same at the opportune time, i.e., before he entered his plea.[23] Nonetheless, the peculiar factual circumstances
surrounding the case, e.g., the police authorities’ failure to comply with the
clear directive of the warrant of arrest issued by Judge Barrios, the undue
delay in preparing the documents relating to the arrest of accused and his wife
and in delivering them to the proper authorities for inquest, and the failure
of the law enforcers to provide accused with a counsel during the custodial
investigation, effectively destroy the presumption of regularity in the
performance by Gomez and his colleagues of their duties. Such being the case,
the presumption of regularity cannot be made the sole basis of the conviction
of accused. Edpâ
mis
If anything, these irregularities give
credence to the allegations of accused that the law enforcers extorted money
from him. As narrated by accused, his ATM cards were confiscated from him
during his arrest and he was made to divulge to them the corresponding PIN
numbers. He only gave them the correct PIN number to his Far East Bank account.
A certification obtained from the branch manager of Far East Bank, Adriatico,
Manila, shows that on 22 April 1995, the day accused and his wife were
arrested, there were six (6) ATM withdrawals in the amount of five thousand
pesos per transaction or a total of thirty thousand pesos from the Far East Bank
account of accused. The certification[24] reads:
December 18, 1997
CERTIFICATION
To whom it may
concern:
This is to certify
that there are six (6) withdrawals on the account of MR. JIMMY SAPAL, a
depositor of Far East Bank & Trust – Adriatico Branch with number
0113-23053-2.
LEX
The no book
withdrawals were made on April 22, 1995 at Five Thousand pesos (P5,000.00) per
transaction.
Mr. Sapal is also
an atm card holder for the said account.
This certification
is being issued for whatever legal purpose it may serve.
(SGD.) ENCARNITA
D. ARANDA
Senior Manager
EBTC-ADRIATICO
BRANCH
The certification was not presented during
trial and was submitted only as an attachment to the appeal brief of accused.
This procedural lapse cannot be imputed to the accused. The lawyer of the
Public Attorney’s Office who represented accused on appeal gave this
explanation for the non-availability of the evidence during the trial, thus: Jjä sc
One may ask, why
was this piece of evidence not presented at the trial court? Well, the one who
recommended Atty. Icaonapo as the trial counsel of the accused was somebody
from the staff of Judge Makasiar. He bears some responsibility for the omission
to present the said evidence for he recommended as counsel someone who was not
up to the job. Secondly, Atty. Icaonapo is probably not familiar with how an
ATM works, that withdrawals via ATM will be reflected in the bank book or
monthly statement later on. The bank book was all the time in the possession of
his brother, Eddie Sapal, and he exhibited it upon demand by the undersigned to
examine it.[25]
The Court cannot completely disregard this
piece of evidence as it strongly corroborates the testimony of accused that the
law enforcers were able to withdraw money from his Far East Bank account
through the ATM. Accused testified, thus:
ATTY. ICAONAPO:
Q And you said that you were being asked by
the said police officers the amount contained in your ATM cards, is that
correct? ScÓ
jj
A Yes, sir.
Q Did you give the amount, Mr. Witness, to
the police officers?
A Yes, I have told them the contents of my
ATM cards, sir.
Q What happened next?
A After I have told them the amount, they
forcibly asked and threatened to kill me if I will not give them my PIN or the
number of the ATM, sir.
Q And you were still blindfolded at the
time?
WITNESS
A Yes, sir.
ATTY. ICAONAPO
Q Did you give your PIN Number of your
three (3) ATM cards?
A For fear of life, yes, sir, and I have
suffered so much, sir.
Q After giving your PIN number of the three
(3) ATM cards of yours, what happened next?
A They went away, sir.
Q What else happened when they went away? Sjä cj
A Then they returned back and again asked
me of the PIN numbers of the other ATM cards. For fear of withdrawing my money,
all my money, I inverted the PIN numbers of my other ATM cards, sir.
Q When they went back were you still
blindfolded?
A Yes, sir. Supremeä
Q Did you give the correct PIN number of
your ATM when they returned?
A Yes, sir. But at the time my ATM card
was already destroyed because the first number was correct and the succeeding
numbers were incorrect, so the two (2) ATM cards were eaten by the machine,
sir.
Q Do you have any evidence to show that you
are a holder of the ATM card? Can you produce any document to show that you are
indeed a holder of an ATM card?
WITNESS:
A It is not with me, sir.
xxx
ATTY. ICAONAPO:
Q Will you tell us how much were they able
to get from your ATM card? Courtä
A From my Far East Bank card they were
able to get P20,000.00, from my wallet, they were able to get cash, sir.[26]
It appears that there is a discrepancy
between the testimony of accused and the certification as to the amount
actually withdrawn from the Far East Bank account. In his testimony, accused
averred that the amount withdrawn was P20,000.00 while the certification stated
that the total amount withdrawn on 22 April 1995 was P30,000.00. This
inconsistency, however, is inconsequential. What is relevant is that it has
been sufficiently established that several withdrawals were made from the Far
East Bank account of accused through the ATM on 22 April 1995 and that these
withdrawals could not have been made by accused and his wife because they were
then already under arrest. This fact strongly bolsters the assertion of accused
that his arrest was impelled by illegitimate motive on the part of the law
enforcers. Indeed, Jä lexj
[T]he Court is
also cognizant of the fact that the practice of planting evidence for
extortion, as a means to compel one to divulge information or merely to harass
witnesses is not uncommon. By the very nature of anti-narcotics operations,
with the need for entrapment procedures, the use of shady characters as
informants, the ease with which sticks of marijuana or grams of heroin can be
planted in pockets or hands of unsuspecting provincial hicks and the secrecy
that inevitably shrouds all drug deals, the possibility of abuse is great.
Hence, courts must be extra vigilant in trying drug charges lest an innocent
person be made to suffer the unusually severe penalties for drug offenses.[27]
Moreover, the Court finds no sufficient
reason to disbelieve the testimonies of defense witnesses, particularly Jerry
and Marlene. The fact that they are friends of the accused and his wife does
not make their testimonies unworthy of credence. If they were not really with accused
and his wife on 22 April 1995, it would be against human nature for them to
risk incriminating themselves by testifying that they were with accused and his
wife at the time the marijuana was purportedly found in their car.
Likewise, the criminal complaint[28] for arbitrary detention filed by Jerry and Marlene
against Ampil, Gomez and Donor, among others, enhances the plausibility of the
defense’ version of the events on 22 April 1995. The same cannot be lightly
brushed aside absent any showing of any dubious or improper motive on the part
of the Cayetanos in making such a serious charge against said law enforcers. LexjÓ uris
The Court is convinced that, as testified to
by the defense witnesses, there were four (4) of them in the car at the time
when the law enforcers swooped down on accused. The marijuana, assuming that
there was indeed marijuana found in the car, was not attributed to the other
three (3) passengers of the car simply because as to them the same would be
inadmissible in evidence. Accused was singled out because there was a standing
warrant against him. The marijuana could be used as evidence against him. The
fact, however, that he has a pending criminal case for illegal possession of
"shabu" does not ipso facto make him the owner of the marijuana
"discovered" in the car. It must be noted that the marijuana was not
found in the person of the accused but in the car with three other passengers.
The marijuana could have belonged to any one of them.
It is well-settled that "where the
circumstances shown to exist yield two (2) or more inferences, one of which is
consistent with the presumption of innocence while the other or others may be
compatible with the finding of guilt, the court must acquit the accused: for
the evidence does not fulfill the test of moral certainty and is insufficient
to support a judgment of conviction."[29] In this case, the prosecution failed to present
evidence to overcome the presumption of innocence accorded by the Constitution
to the accused. To paraphrase an admonition expressed by the Court in an
earlier case,[30] much as we share the abhorrence of the disenchanted
public in regard to the proliferation of drug pushers, the Court cannot allow
an individual to suffer the supreme penalty of death based on insufficient
factual nexus of that person’s participation in the commission of the offense.[31]JuriÓ smis
WHEREFORE, the Decision of 8 March 1996 is REVERSED and SET
ASIDE and accused-appellant Jimmy Sapal y Nasa is ACQUITTED of the crime
charged, based on reasonable doubt. The Director of the Bureau of Corrections
is ORDERED to cause the immediate release of accused unless he is, otherwise,
detained for some other lawful cause. Further, the Drugs Enforcement Unit of
the Western Police District is, likewise, ORDERED to release the Toyota Corolla
with plate number TSR 619 to movant-appellant Joel N. Go. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Bellosillo, Melo,
Puno, Vitug, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Purisima, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes,
Ynares-Santiago, and De Leon,
Jr., JJ., concur.
Pardo, J., on official business abroad. Jjjä uris
[1] Penned by Judge Ramon P. Makasiar.
[2] Information, p. 1; Rollo, p. 6.
[3] TSN, Testimony of Jesus Gomez, 17 October 1995, pp. 5-16.
[4] Exhibit "E."
[5] Exhibit "B."
[6] Exhibits "B-1," "B-1-a" to "B-1-c;" "B-2," "B-2-a" to "B-2-c," and; "B-3," "B-3-a" to "B-3-c."
[7] Exhibits "C" and "D;" TSN, Testimony of Renee Eric Checa, 3 October 1995, pp. 6-14.
[8] TSN, Testimony of Jimmy Sapal, 6 November 1995, pp. 5-20; TSN, Testimony of Jerry Cayetano, 18 January 1996, pp. 4-10; TSN, Testimony of Maria Luisa Sapal, 23 January 1996, pp. 4-11; TSN, Testimony of Marlene Cayetano, 24 January 1996, pp. 4-8.
[9] TSN, Testimony of Jimmy Sapal, 6 November 1995, pp. 19-30.
[10] TSN, Testimony of Jerry Cayetano, 18 January 1996, pp. 10-20; TSN, Testimony of Maria Luisa Sapal, 23 January 1996, pp. 11-27; TSN, Testimony of Marlene Cayetano, 24 January 1996, pp. 8-12.
[11] Records, Criminal Case No. 95-142470, p. 77.
[12] Id., at 129.
[13] Decision, 8 March 1996, p. 11; Rollo, p. 24.
[14] Appellant’s Brief, p. 24; Rollo, p. 127.
[15] People vs. Pagaura, 267 SCRA 17 (1997); People vs. Wong Chuen Ming, 256 SCRA 182 (1996); People vs. Melosantos, 245 SCRA 569 (1995); People vs. Cruz, 231 SCRA 759 (1994).
[16] People vs. Pagaura, ibid.; People vs. Vivar, 235 SCRA 257 (1994).
[17] Exhibit "E-1." Emphasis supplied.
[18] TSN, Testimony of Jesus Gomez, 17 October 1995, p. 29.
[19] Id., at 47.
[20] Exhibit "5;" Records, p. 6.
[21] Records, pp. 13-17.
[22] TSN, Testimony of Jesus Gomez, 17 October 1995, pp. 48-49.
[23] People vs.Cabiles, 284 SCRA 199 (1998).
[24] Rollo, p. 162.
[25] Appellant’s Brief, p. 29; Rollo, p. 132.
[26] TSN, Testimony of Jimmy Sapal, 6 November 1995, pp. 24-36.
[27] People vs. Cruz, 231 SCRA 759 (1994); People vs. Salcedo, 195 SCRA 345 (1991).
[28] Exhibit "10;" Information, I.S. No. 95F-19731, 18 September 1995. Original Records, p. 203.
[29] People vs. De Los Santos, G.R. No. 126998, 14 September 1999; People vs. Fider, 223 SCRA 117 (117).
[30] People vs. Melosantos, 245 SCRA 569 (1995).
[31] Id., at 587.