THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No. 132069. May 31, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. JOSE T. OBOSA, accused-appellant. Sc
D E C I S I O N
GONZAGA-REYES, J.:
On December 4, 1987 two Informations for
murder were filed before the Regional Trial Court of Makati regarding the
shooting incident wherein then Secretary of Local Government Jaime N. Ferrer
and his chauffeur, Jesus D. Calderon, sustained multiple gunshot wounds. The
Informations state as follows:
CRIMINAL CASE NO.
011
"The
undersigned Senior State Prosecutor of the Department of Justice hereby accuses
NIEVES CONSTANCIO, JR. Y BACUNGAY, RUEL VILLAHERMOSA Y FERNANDEZ alias
"Dong", JOSE OBOSA Y TUTANA, several JOHN DOES as principals
and VICTORIANO TOTAAN, as accessory to the crime of "MURDER",
committed as follows: Misspped
That on or about
the 2nd day of August, 1987, in the Municipality of Paranaque, Metro Manila,
Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the
above-named accused, conspiring, confederating and mutually helping one
another, with intent to kill and with the attendance of the following
qualifying/aggravating circumstances, to wit: treachery, evident premeditation,
abuse of superior strength, nighttime purposely sought, and by a band did then
and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously shoot by means of high powered
firearms JAIME N. FERRER, then Secretary of Local Government, hitting him in
different vital parts of his body, thereby causing his instantaneous death and
thereafter accused Victoriano Totaan taking advantage of his public function as
Superintendent of the Bureau of Prison, conceals accused Jose Obosa as one of
the principals of the crime of Murder, to the damage and prejudice of the
victim's heirs in such amount as may be awarded to them under the provisions
of the Civil Code of the Philippines.
CONTRARY TO
LAW."[1]
CRIMINAL CASE NO.
012
"The
undersigned Senior State Prosecutor of the Department of Justice hereby accuses
NIEVES CONSTANCIO, JR. Y BACUNGAY, RUEL VILLAHERMOSA Y FERNANDEZ
alias"Dong", JOSE OBOSA Y TUTANA, several JOHN DOES as
principals and VICTORIANO TOTAAN, as accessory of the crime of
"MURDER", committed as follows: Ncm
That on or about
the 2nd day of August ,1987, in the Municipality of Paranaque, Metro Manila, Philippines
and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused,
conspiring, confederating and mutually helping one another, with intent to kill
and with the attendance of the following qualifying/aggravating circumstances,
to wit: treachery, evident premeditation, abuse of superior strength, nighttime
purposely sought, and by a band, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously shoot by means of high powered firearms JESUS CALDERON, hitting him
in different vital parts of his body, thereby causing his instantaneous death
and thereafter accused Victoriano Totaan taking advantage of his public
function as Superintendent of the Bureau of Prison, conceals accused Jose Obosa
as one of the principals of the crime of Murder, to the damage and prejudice of
the victim's heirs in such amount as may be awarded to them under the
provisions of the Civil Code of the Philippines.
CONTRARY TO
LAW."[2]
The Autopsy Report revealed that Secretary
Ferrer sustained eight gunshot wounds and the cause of death is five gunshot
wounds on the head and neck[3] while his driver Jesus Calderon sustained
five gunshot wounds.[4] The Ballistics Report[5] based on the specimen submitted, i.e., one (1)
deformed copper jacket from the body of Secretary Ferrer and three (3) jacketed
bullets from the body of Jesus Calderon showed that the deformed copper jacket
recovered from the body of Secretary Ferrer was fired from a .38 cal. pistol.
Two (2) of the bullets recovered from the body of Jesus Calderon were fired
from a .45 cal. pistol while the third bullet was fired from the same .38 cal.
pistol that fired the bullet recovered from the body of Secretary
Ferrer.
From the evidence presented by both parties
the trial court made the following findings of fact: Ncmmis
"1. Between
5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. on August 2, 1987 while Sonia Alata, a police aid, was
on board a mobile patrol car with Pats. Ferrer, Saura and Reyes to respond to a
call for police assistance at Dongalo Paranaque, Metro Manila she saw accused
Jose Obosa holding a gun in a brown envelope and standing with another person
in front of Sun Gin (Sunbeam) Restaurant located at the corner of Quirinio
Avenue and Victor Medina St., Dongalo, Paranaque, Metro Manila. When they
returned to the Headquarters at past 6:30 p.m., she again spotted Jose Obosa
standing beside the Minute Burger also located at Victor Medina St. near
Quirino Avenue. Upon arrival at the Headquarters, they heard successive shots.
2. Victor Gomez
who was playing basketball at the plaza near the church heard successive shots
coming from the direction of Victor Medina St. at about 6:30 p.m. on that same
day. When he peeped through the holes of the fence of the church compound
shortly after he heard the shots, he saw accused Jose Obosa coming out of Victor
Medina St. and holding a caliber .45 gun which he tucked on his waist. Jose
Obosa proceeded towards Dongalo. Victor Gomez went to the place at Victor
Medina St. where the car of Secretary Ferrer was and he saw bullet holes in it.
He saw Secretary Ferrer bloody all over his body and his driver was already
dead.
3. George Montabon
who came from the St. Andrew Church and was in front of the Union Bank along
Quirino Avenue near Victor Medina St., at about 6:30 on the same day, when he
heard successive shots. He saw three (3) men firing at a car situated near the
canteen at the corner of Victor Medina St. and Quirino Avenue. Two of the
gunmen ran towards Quirino Avenue and fled on a jeep. The other man who was
holding a caliber .45 gun whom he identified in Court as accused Jose Obosa ran
towards Quirino Avenue and seemed to be looking for his companions. Jose
Obosa passed in front of him about five meters away and he got scared.
4. Sometime in
August or September, 1987, accused Jose Obosa confided to Ricardo Palquera, a
detainee at the Maximum Security Camp at the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa,
that he killed Sec. Ferrer with the help of two civilian companions. Palquera
revealed this matter in writing to Sec. Ileto. Scsdaad
Upon scrutiny and
evaluation, this Court finds to be credible and convincing as true the
testimonies of the aforementioned witnesses. Sonia Alata, Victor Gomez and
George Montabon who positively and unhesitatingly identified Jose Obosa as the
same person they saw minutes before and shortly after the shooting of Sec.
Ferrer and Jesus Calderon. The actuations of Obosa as described by them are
sufficient circumstances as to lead to the conclusion that he was one of those
who shot the two victims. Aside from that circumstancial evidence, more weight
is added to the prosecution's proof by the voluntary confession of Jose Obosa
to Ricardo Palquera that he killed Secretary Ferrer with the help of two other
persons, which confession is an evidence of guilt of a high quality (People vs.
Zea, 138 SCRA 77). Testimony against one's own interest is of immense value as
evidence. (People vs. Caparas, 102 SCRA 791)."[6]
On May 25, 1990 the trial court rendered
judgment finding herein appellant Obosa and his co-accused Nieves Constancio
guilty of two counts of homicide while accused Victoriano Totaan was acquitted.
The judgment reads:
"WHEREFORE,
finding accused Jose Obosa guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the commission of
the offense of homicide in two counts, as defined and penalized in Art. 249 of
the Revised Penal Code, there being no aggravating or mitigating circumstance
that attended the commission of the offense, he is hereby sentenced in each
case to suffer an indeterminate penalty of imprisonment from eight (8) years
and one (1) day of prision mayor medium as minimum to seventeen (17) years and
four (4) months of reclusion temporal medium as maximum, to pay the heirs of
Secretary Jaime Ferrer the sum of P30,000.00 for the lost of his life
and another sum of P30,000 for moral damages and also to the heirs of
Jesus Calderon the sum of P30,000 for the lost of his life and another P30,000.00
for moral damages, and to pay the costs of suit.
The preventive
imprisonment accused Jose Obosa may have undertaken shall be deducted from the
term of imprisonment imposed herein to its full extent if he signed an
agreement to abide by the same rules upon convicted prisoners while in
confinement or only four-fifths (4/5) there of if he has not signed said
agreement, pursuant to Art. 29 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by
Republic Act No. 6127. Scjuris
Considering that
accused Nieves Constancio was at the time of the commission of the offense only
seventeen years of age and classified as a youthful offender, pursuant to Art.
192 of Presidential Decree No. 603, otherwise known as the Child and Youth
Welfare Code, the imposition and promulgation of the sentence on him is hereby
suspended and he is committed to the custody and care of the Rehabilitation
Center of the Department of Social Services and Development at the Boy's Town
Vicente Madrigal, Tanay, Rizal, until he reaches the age of twenty-one (21) or
a shorter period depending on the report and recommendation of the Department
of Social Services and Development.
The Officer
concerned at the said Rehabilitation Center is ordered to submit to this Court
every four (4) months a written report on the conduct of the accused as well as
his intellectual, physical, moral, social and emotional progress.
Depending on the
report and recommendation of the Department of Social Services and Development,
the accused shall, when the proper time comes, be dealt with under Art. 195 or
Art. 196 of P.D. 603.
For lack of proof
beyond reasonable doubt as against accused Victoriano Totaan, he is hereby
acquitted of the offense charged against him in the information. The bail bond
posted by him is hereby cancelled.
SO ORDERED."[7]
Jose Obosa appealed. The Court of Appeals
upon review of the case found that the crime committed was qualified by
treachery and that Obosa should be held guilty of two counts of murder. In view
of the appropriate penalty imposable which is reclusion perpetua, the
Court of Appeals refrained from entering judgment and referred the case to this
Court.
Jurissc
The appellant's main line of defense rests
on the alleged disparate testimonies of the prosecution witnesses and their
inherent implausibility. Victor Gomez testified that after he heard the shots
he saw a man holding a gun, presumably a .45 cal. because it looks like the gun
used by Fernando Poe, Jr., in the movies, and tucked the gun in his waist, and
that the lone gunman came out of Victor Medina street, where the shooting
incident took place, and went towards Dongalo. On the other hand witness George
Montabon stated in court that he saw three men shoot at a car along Victor
Medina street. Sonia Alata, for her part, stated that she saw two men standing
in front of the Sunbeam restaurant along La Huerta st. immediately before the
shooting, one of whom she later identified as the appellant. The defense stands
firm that if there were indeed more than one gunman it is beyond belief why
these witnesses remembered only the appellant Obosa and failed to identify the
others. Appellant posits that witnesses Gomez and Montabon being minors at the
time were unduly pressured by the police to identify appellant Obosa while
witness Alata, a police aid, who testified about three months after the
incident that she saw Obosa at the scene of the crime did so only to aid the
much publicized investigation. The defense claims that the trial and appellate
courts erred in upholding the theory of the prosecution that the
appellant, a prison inmate serving time and who based on prison records was
inside the prison premises at the time of the incident, would be allowed to
roam outside the prison premises to participate in the killing of a cabinet
official. The testimony of Ricardo Palquerra, cell mate of appellant Obosa,
that the latter confided to him during several drinking sprees inside their
prison cell that Obosa shot Secretary Ferrer and was paid millions of pesos for
the "hit" should not have been given credence by the trial and
appellate courts. Possession of alcoholic drinks is prohibited in prison and
Obosa could not have confided to Palquerra about the killing since Palquerra
himself admitted that he did not know Obosa very well. If indeed such
statements were made the court should have dismissed them as plain braggadocio
during drinking sprees. The appellant seeks an acquittal on the ground that the
appellant was tagged as the fall guy to satisfy the public clamor for the
arrest of the killer of Secretary Ferrer.
The Solicitor-General filed appellee's brief
praying for the affirmance of the findings of the appellate court. The argued
contradictions in the testimonies of the prosecution witnesses were explained
by the trial court when it stated that the three witnesses observed the
incident at different stages of execution or from different vantage points. The
minor differences in their testimonies signify their candor and regardless of
such minor differences the witnesses attest to a common fact that the appellant
Obosa was at the scene of the crime. Appellee argues that witness Alata's delay
in coming forth to testify cannot be taken as a sign of fabrication; such delay
may have come from a person's natural reticence to get involved in a criminal
proceeding. The testimony of Ricardo Palquerra, a convict serving time, cannot
be disregarded by the court on that ground alone as a convicted felon is not
disqualified to testify under the Rules on evidence. It is alleged that the
appellant's attack on the credibility of the prosecution witnesses fails to
overcome the long-standing rule that the findings of the trial court with
respect to the credibility of witnesses are respected on appeal. The
Solicitor-General stresses that the contention that accused-appellant could not
have been at the scene of the crime because he was in jail does not establish
the physical impossibility of his presence at the scene of the crime. The
appellate court aptly observed that the entry in the logbook of the South gate
of the Bilibid Prisons that the appellant returned to prison at 2:15 p.m. of
August 2, 1987 is doubtful as the entry could have been easily intercalated and
in view of the privileges which Obosa himself admitted he enjoyed such as,
spending a few days outside the prison, further convinced the court that there
is no physical impossibility that the appellant was at the scene of the crime. Misjuris
The accused-appellant filed Reply brief
highlighting the inconsistencies in the testimonies of Gomez and Montabon, as
well as Alata's delay in informing the police that she saw the appellant at the
scene of the crime, seriously weakened their credibility and showed that they
were coaxed by the police to implicate the appellant in the case. The
accused-appellant alleges that the trial court connived with the police to
convict the appellant when the trial court misstated in its decision that Alata
saw Obosa holding a gun when a casual examination of Alata's testimony would
show that she made no such statement; she testified that she saw Obosa holding
a brown envelope. The accused-appellant claims that his alleged presence at the
scene of the crime is quite absurd as he was escorted by prison guards in all
his trips out of prison and if indeed he was able to flee it is unbelievable
for an escaped convict to commit a crime then return to prison when he could
have simply walked his way to freedom.
The appeal is without merit.
The apparent discrepancies in the
testimonies of the three prosecution witnesses, Gomez, Montabon and Alata as to
the number of gunmen who participated in the killing of Secretary Ferrer and
Jesus Calderon do not undermine their evidentiary value. The appellate court
aptly held that the prosecution witnesses observed the incident from different
stages of execution, or from different vantage points and their testimonies
when taken together reveal a coherent narration of the incident. Witness Alata
admitted she did not see the actual shooting but she remembered seeing a man
holding a brown envelope standing with another man in a leather jacket in front
of the Sunbeam restaurant along Medina street when she left the precinct to
respond to a call for police assistance. On her way back to the precinct she
saw the same man holding the brown envelope, this time, standing near the
Minute Burger kiosk also along Medina street. A few minutes after passing by
this man she heard successive gunshots.[8] Witness Montabon testified that he actually saw the
shooting.[9] After hearing mass at the St. Andrew's Church and
while walking in front of Union Bank he heard gunshots coming from the
direction of the corner of Victor Medina street and Quirino Avenue and saw
three men firing at a car in front of the canteen at the corner. Then two of
the gunmen headed for Quirino Avenue and rode a jeepney while the third gunman
holding a .45 cal pistol passed him by from a distance of five meters headed
towards Dongalo. Witness Gomez admitted that he did not see the actual shooting
but when the shooting subsided he saw from a distance of about six arms length
alone gunman coming out of Medina street headed for Dongalo holding a .45 cal.
pistol and tucking the gun into his waist.[10]
Variance in some detail in the narration of
the incident by three witnesses do not debunk the testimonies as false but are
an indication of spontaneity and candor and show that the witnesses were not
coached.[11] Alata saw two gunmen, Montabon saw three, while
Gomez saw only one, because Alata passed by the scene of the crime before it
happened whereas Montabon saw three gunmen during the actual shooting and Gomez
saw a lone gunman after the shooting. Gomez' agreement with the defense
counsel's suggestion that the shooting took about five minutes while Montabon's
estimate that the shooting happened "in a matter of seconds"[12] do not necessarily impair the essence of the
testimonies in question. The discrepancies do not detract from the material
fact that they all recognized the appellant Obosa as the man they saw at the
scene of the crime, and in Montabon's case, that Obosa actually shot at the car
of Secretary Ferrer. The minor variations in the testimonies of the three
witnesses do not discredit but enhance their credibility as unrehearsed
statements. It suffices that all three witnesses positively identified Obosa in
court. Jjlex
With respect to the alleged misstatement
made by the trial court that Alata testified that she saw Obosa standing in
front of the Sunbeam Restaurant holding a gun whereas the transcript of
stenographic notes shows that Alata testified that she saw Obosa holding a
brown envelope, the inaccuracy does not negate her testimony that Obosa was at
the scene of the crime. Alata's delay in coming forth to testify cannot be
taken as an indication of fabrication. It has been the consistent ruling of
this court that a witness' delay in testifying does not affect his credibility.[13] Alata explained in court that she told the
investigators that she saw Obosa near the scene of the crime but she was told
to wait and she might be taken as a witness. Her written statement was taken
almost a month later.[14]
The appellant's theory that the fact that
the three witnesses identified Obosa but failed to identify the other
co-accused indicated that they were coaxed by the police investigators to
pinpoint Obosa is untenable. All three witnesses recognized Obosa because they
encountered him on the day in question and their testimonies of the encounter
were not discredited by the defense. The appellant's theory that the police
zeroed in on Obosa is not supported by the evidence. There were other witnesses
who encountered the other gunmen when the latter transferred to another vehicle
near the Maranao Restaurant, and who were presented by the prosecution to
identify the other co-accused. Witness Edwin Gipaya, a
"watch-your-car" boy at the parking lot of Maranao restaurant
identified Nieves Constancio as one of the four gunmen who was left behind and
rode a jeepney.[15] Constancio was found guilty as a co-conspirator but
his appeal from the decision of the trial court was dismissed by the appellate
court for failure to file brief. The testimonies of the witnesses[16] who identified the other co-accused were not touched
upon by the appellate court because they do not pertain to the guilt or
innocence of appellant Obosa. Needless to state, the findings of the trial
court as to the credibility of witnesses are accorded the highest respect as
the trial judge had the direct opportunity to observe the demeanor of the
witnesses on the stand. Appellant failed to establish before this Court that
the findings are tainted with arbitrariness or palpable error.[17] Juris
The appellant's defense is that as a prison
inmate who based on prison records was inside the compound of the National
Bilibid Prisons on the date and time of the incident, he could not have
participated in the ambush; and if indeed he was able to leave the prison
premises it is unbelievable that an escaped convict would return to prison. The
appellant's line of defense fails to persuade. This Court agrees with the
appellate court that the cited circumstances do not present a physical
impossibility for the appellant to have participated in the commission of the
crime. First, the log book presented in court to show that Obosa left the
premises on July 28, 1987 at 4:25 a.m. to attend a court hearing in Sariaya
Quezon and returned to prison on August 2, 1987 at 2:10 p.m. refers only to the
south gate of the Bilibid prison. The Director of the Bureau of Prisons,
General Meliton B. Goyena,testified that he investigated the activities of
inmate Obosa and found that he was given preferential treatment in prison.
Goyena found that Obosa's vehicle was allowed to park inside the prison
compound despite the prohibition against this practice. Goyena further stated:
Q:......When you said he was indeed given VIP
treatment, does it consist of getting out of Muntinlupa compound and returning
back without being reported?
A:......It consist of private accommodations that was
given to him, not bringing Obosa direct back to Prison from court allowing him
to stay in his private residence.[18] SupremaX
Appellant Obosa himself admitted that he was
allowed to stay a few days outside prison in the house of one of the prison
guards without being reported to the prison authorities.[19] Thus, the positive identification made by three
witnesses that they saw the appellant Obosa at the scene of the crime is not
improbable. The same holds true with the appellant's contention that the
appellant could not have returned to prison after the ambush. It appears that
the appellant although officially committed to the National Bilibid Prisons was
granted special privileges and was allowed to leave the prison premises from
time to time.
The appellant's objection to the
admissibility and weight accorded by the court to the testimony of Ricardo
Palquerra is similarly without merit. A convicted felon is not disqualified by
the Rules of Evidence from testifying in Court.[20] At any rate, the judgment of conviction did not rest
on the alleged confession made by Obosa to his prison cell mate, Ricardo
Palquerra, that someone contracted him and two others to kill Secretary Ferrer
for a few million pesos. The eyewitness account of George Montabon that he saw
Obosa shoot at the car of Secretary Ferrer and that of Victor Gomez to the
effect that he saw Obosa coming out of the scene of the crime holding a gun,
not to mention Alata's declaration which corroborated the cited testimonies
with respect to Obosa's presence at the scene of the crime during the incident
in question, clinched the case against the accused-appellant.
Finally, the conclusion of the appellate
court that the crimes committed were qualified by treachery and that the
appellant should be held guilty of two counts of murder instead of homicide is
well-founded. The appellate court correctly observed:
"It is not
disputed that Secretary Ferrer and his driver Jesus Calderon were waylaid while
they were in the Secretary's car passing through Victor Medina street (RTC
Decision, p. 737, Vol II Records). The ambush was carried out precisely while
the Secretary's car was slowing down as they were approaching the corner of
Victor Medina street and Quirino Avenue ensuring the accomplishment of the
attack and at the same time eliminating any risk from possible defenses that
the victim may put up. The victims who were then seated inside the car were in
no position to escape nor offer any form of defense. They were, at that point,
helpless prey. Hence, accused-appellant Obosa should be found guilty not only
of two counts of homicide but of two counts of murder defined and penalized in
Art. 248 of the Revised Penal Code. There being no other aggravating nor
mitigating circumstances, the penalty should be imposed in its medium period,
which is the indivisible penalty of reclusion perpetua. Newmiso
The evidence on record also bears out the
fact that the car of Secretary Ferrer was riddled with bullets and shot at
close range by at least three men, sum of whom carried long fire arms while the
others carried pistols,[21] and that immediately after the shooting the gunmen
dispersed; Obosa left the scene on foot while Constancio forcibly took a
jeepney which he later parked in the middle of the road presumably to block
police authorities who may follow him and again stole another vehicle and
headed for MIA road, while the others had a vehicle waiting for them in front
of the Maranao Restaurant.[22] The synchronized execution of the ambush lead us to
the conclusion that the perpetrators are professional hit men who acted in
conspiracy with each other to insure the death of their hapless victims.
The crime was committed after the
effectivity of the 1987 Constitution and during the suspension of the
imposition of the death penalty. Under Art. 248 of the Revised Penal Code the
penalty for murder is reclusion temporal maximum to death. Conformably
with People vs. Munoz[23] and subsequent cases,[24] the penalty should be imposed in its medium period
which is reclusion perpetua.
Wherefore, the decision of the appellate court is affirmed in
toto. The appellant Jose Obosa y Tutana is hereby found guilty of two
counts of murder for the death of Secretary Jaime N. Ferrer and Jesus Calderon
and is sentenced to reclusion perpetua and to indemnify the heirs
of the victims the sum of fifty thousand pesos each and to pay the cost of the
suit.
Acctmis
SO ORDERED.
Melo, (Chairman), Vitug, and Purisima, JJ., concur.
Panganiban, J., on leave.
[1] pp. 135-136, OR.
[2] pp. 139-140, OR.
[3] Autopsy Report Exh. F, pp. 17-18, Folder of Exhibits; Dr. Victor Garcia, tsn., October 17, 1998, p. 25.
[4] Autopsy Report Exh. J, p. 25, Folder of Exhibits; Garcia, ibid.
[5] Ballistics Report, Exh. S, pp. 41-42, Folder of Exhibits.
[6] RTC Decision, pp. 36-38. OR pp. 738-740.
[7] pp. 45-46, RTC Decision, OR, pp. 747-748.
[8] Alata, tsn., March 8, 1989, pp. 7-8, 10; Alata, Sworn statement, pp. 43-47, folder of exhibits.
[9] Montabon, tsn., April 4, 1989, p. 5.
[10] Gomez, tsn., November 3, 1988, pp. 9-14; Exh. O, pp. 33-35, folder of Exhibits.
[11] People vs. Acob, 246 SCRA 715; People vs. Obello, 284 SCRA 79.
[12] Montabon, ibid.
[13] People vs. Teehankee, Jr., 249 SCRA 54.
[14] Alata, tsn., March 10, 1989, pp. 22-23.
[15] Gipaya, tsn., November 9, 1988, pp. 11-19, 23.
[16] Gipaya, tsn., November 28, 1988; Lauron, tsn., November 11, 1988.
[17] People vs. Molina, 292 SCRA 742; Pag-ibig Village Association vs. Angon, 294 SCRA 554.
[18] Goyena, tsn., August 14, 1989, pp. 2-3; 11-12.
[19] Obosa, tsn., July 4, 1989, pp. 13-19.
[20] Section 20, Rule 130, Rules on Evidence.
[21] Gomez, tsn. November 3, 1988, p. 15; Sworn Statement Exh O, p. 33 Folder of Exhibits; Gipaya, tsn., November 9, 1988, pp. 13-23; Lauron, tsn., November 11, 1988, pp. 10-16.
[22] Montabon, tsn., April 4, 1989, pp. 5-6; Alata, tsn., March 10, 1989, pp. 10-13; Sworn Statement, p. 47, Folder of Exhibits; Gipaya, ibid.,; Lauron, ibid.
[23] 170 SCRA 107.
[24] People vs. Quiboyen, G.R. No. 130636, July 14, 1999; People vs. Parojinog, 203 SCRA 273; People vs. Dela Cruz, 216 SCRA 476; People vs. Artiaga, 274 SCRA 685.