Exculpated Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Juan Ponce Enrile; his erstwhile chief of staff Jessica Gigi Reyes and Janet Lim Napoles leave the Sandiganbayan following their acquittal of charges of misusing Enrile’s Priority Development Assistance Fund as a senator. PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANALY LABOR FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE @tribunephl_ana
HEADLINES

Enrile off the hook, beats plunder rap

The PDAF allocated to congressmen and senators is a lump-sum and discretionary fund that allows them to finance their pet projects.

Edjen Oliquino
Exculpated Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Juan Ponce Enrile; his erstwhile chief of staff Jessica Gigi Reyes and Janet Lim Napoles leave the Sandiganbayan following their acquittal of charges of misusing Enrile’s Priority Development Assistance Fund as a senator.
Exculpated Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Juan Ponce Enrile; his erstwhile chief of staff Jessica Gigi Reyes and Janet Lim Napoles leave the Sandiganbayan following their acquittal of charges of misusing Enrile’s Priority Development Assistance Fund as a senator.

After a decade-long trial, the Sandiganbayan has ruled that Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Juan Ponce Enrile is not guilty of plunder in relation to the alleged anomalous utilization of his P172.8-million pork barrel fund during his stint as a senator.

The anti-graft court’s Special Third Division handed down the ruling on Friday, citing the prosecution’s failure to prove Enrile’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Enrile’s former chief of staff, Gigi Reyes, and alleged pork barrel scam mastermind Janet Lim-Napoles were also acquitted of plunder raps.

The 100-year-old Enrile, who personally attended the promulgation, thanked the magistrates of the Sandiganbayan for his long-overdue vindication.

“I knew all along that I will be acquitted because we have not done anything in this case. And I hope the people who filed those cases against us will examine their conscience,” the seasoned lawmaker said in an interview after the promulgation.

The three were accused of pocketing P172.8 million in kickbacks from Enrile’s Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) from 2004 to 2010 by channeling the funds to ghost non-government organizations (NGOs) created by Napoles.

The Ombudsman indicted Enrile in June 2014 and the case had been pending for nearly 10 years until state prosecutors concluded their presentation of evidence against the former senator in January.

Enrile, along with Senators Bong Revilla and Jinggoy Estrada, were among the first lawmakers charged with plunder and graft when the PDAF scandal erupted in mid-2013.

Based on the Ombudsman’s findings, Revilla allegedly received the biggest kickback amounting to P224 million, followed by Estrada with P183 million and Enrile at P172 million.

The Ombudsman said Enrile received total commissions of P172,834,500 through Reyes and Ruby Tuason, who later turned whistleblower along with Benhur Luy, Napoles’s nephew who turned state’s evidence.

Revilla had already been cleared of corruption charges, while Estrada—also absolved of plunder — is still facing 11 counts of graft.

Enrile’s PDAF was supposed to fund livelihood and agricultural projects in different parts of the country.

However, the Ombudsman’s investigation revealed that no deliveries were made to the supposed beneficiaries, and mayors and municipal agriculturists also denied receiving any funds.

The prosecution had alleged that Reyes signed the letters endorsing various NGOs as implementing agencies of Enrile’s PDAF. But Reyes maintained that making endorsements was never part of her duties.

Reyes, who served nearly nine years in prison until her temporary release in January last year, had told the court that she did not take any money from Enrile’s PDAF.

Enrile, meanwhile, was put under hospital detention and has been out since mid-2015 after the Supreme Court granted his petition for bail due to his advanced age and frail health.

The verdict

In absolving Enrile, the Sandiganbayan said the prosecution witnesses — Luy and Tuason — admitted that they did not directly hand over any money to Enrile.

“Verily, the prosecution failed to prove the allegation that Enrile received a percentage of the cost of any project funded from his PDAF in consideration for the latter’s endorsement to Napoles’s NGOs,” the 84-page decision read.

Furthermore, the court said the prosecution failed to prove that Enrile either participated in the faking of the NGOs or was aware that they were bogus.

“It must be shown clearly and convincingly that in making the letter requests, Enrile intended to receive kickbacks or commissions in exchange for his endorsement of Napoles’s NGOs,” it said.

As for Reyes and Napoles, the Sandigabayan said they “do not see any basis to convict” the two of direct bribery and corruption of public officials, respectively, citing the lack of evidence establishing Napoles’s act of giving kickbacks to Enrile or Reyes.

“To prove plunder, the prosecution must weave a web out of the six ways of illegally amassing wealth and show how the various acts reveal a combination or series of means or schemes that reveal a pattern of criminality,” it said.

“The prosecution failed to establish with moral certainty that either Enrile and/or Reyes received these amounts from Tuason [acting as an agent of Napoles]. At any rate, the sum of these five DDRs (daily disbursement reports) amounted to only P46,387,500 million,” the court said, noting that the amount did not breach the plunder threshold of P50 million.

The Sandiganbayan also pointed out that they could not merely rely on the DDRs presented by Luy in 2013, which were all unsigned.

“Per Luy, the original copies of the DDRs which were all signed copies, were in the vault in the office of JLN Corporation, together with the checks corresponding thereto, which miserably the prosecution failed to present as evidence,” the court stated.

15 counts of graft

Despite being declared not guilty of plunder, Enrile and Reyes still face 15 counts of graft, which remain pending in court.

Napoles, meanwhile, will remain behind bars for her conviction on corruption charges all related to the PDAF scam.

The PDAF allocated to congressmen and senators is a lump-sum and discretionary fund that allows them to finance their pet projects.

Senators are entitled to P200 million each in PDAF annually, while members of the House of Representatives get P70 million each.

Luy exposed the embezzlement of these funds through a fraudulent scheme in an exclusive interview with a newspaper in July 2013.

A month later, a special report by the Commission on Audit found that P6.156 billion worth of PDAF was released to questionable NGOs, including those of Napoles.

Enrile, Revilla, and Estrada were among several lawmakers implicated in the multi-billion pork barrel scam, most of whom were acquitted of the corruption charges.

The scam led the Supreme Court to abolish the PDAF and declare it unconstitutional in November 2013 after it became a source of corruption.