The Philippine Star

Aguirre: DOJ won’t be unfair to De Lima

- By EDU PUNAY

The tide may be turning against Sen. Leila de Lima, but the Department of Justice (DOJ) will not be unfair to her.

This is what Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II said as he defended recent actions of the DOJ on De Lima, who is being linked to the proliferat­ion of the illegal drug trade in the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) and benefittin­g from drug money.

“I keep on saying that I am not using my office or abusing my power to persecute her,” Aguirre said in an interview yesterday.

Aguirre said the fact- finding investigat­ion on De Lima, the conduct of preliminar­y investigat­ion on drug charges against her and other personalit­ies

implicated by witnesses in the congressio­nal inquiry, and the issuance of immigratio­n lookout bulletin order (LBO) against her and other respondent­s were all procedural matters required of his office.

Aguirre stressed that De Lima should be very aware of such powers that she herself applied during her tenure as justice secretary of the previous administra­tion.

He also believes that De Lima is only experienci­ng what she had done to other politician­s during her stint in the DOJ.

“Hindi naman bago ang mga ito. Bumabalik lang lahat

sa kanya (These are not new. It’s all just turn of the tide on her),” he said.

Aguirre cited the issuance of LBO on De Lima and DOJ’s acceptance of the charges against her despite the primary jurisdicti­on of the Office of the Ombudsman on cases against incumbent government officials. He recalled that it was De Lima herself who formulated the rule on LBO when she was the justice secretary in lieu of the department’s power to issue watchlist and hold departure orders on persons facing fact-finding or preliminar­y investigat­ion on criminal charges, which was stopped by the Supreme Court in 2011 in the case of former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

When the DOJ was under De Lima, it also conducted investigat­ions on the Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office anomaly and Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund cases against incumbent lawmakers and forwarded its findings to the Ombudsman.

“She knows this very well. In 2014, she said that selective justice was not a valid defense and that the DOJ has concurrent power with the Ombudsman. Now that it’s happening to her, why is she questionin­g the DOJ’s concurrent power?” Aguirre argued.

Aguirre advised De Lima to respect the legal processes and disprove the charges against her in the upcoming preliminar­y investigat­ion instead of coming up with “general denials” before the media and “personal attacks” on him.

“That’s not the way you defend yourself. You should be proving you’re not a protector of drug lords, that you did this and that during your term to cleanse Bilibid,” he added.

The DOJ on Friday created a highlevel panel of prosecutor­s to conduct the preliminar­y investigat­ions on the separate complaints filed against De Lima and eight others by Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) founding chair Dante Jimenez and former National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) deputy directors Reynaldo Esmeralda and Ruel Lasala last week.

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