From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Dec 20): Suspects in Anikow slay plead not guilty as US consul watches
With the US Embassy keeping a close watch, the four suspects in the Nov. 24
killing of George Anikow, a US Marine major and husband of an American diplomat,
pleaded not guilty to the murder charges in a Makati City court on Wednesday.
The trial appears to be proceeding with remarkable speed less than a month
after the killing, with the prosecution expected to present its first witness
and its first set of evidence in a bail hearing on Thursday. Suspects Juan Alfonzo Abastillas, Crispin de la Paz, Osric Cabrera and
Galicano Datu III—whose attack on Anikow was caught on security camera—entered a
plea of not guilty during their arraignment before Judge Winlove Dumayas of
Makati Regional Trial Court Branch 59. Also on Wednesday, the court granted De la Paz’s request to undergo medical
examination for his back pain at Philippine Orthopedic Center in Quezon City.
Last week, Abastillas’ lawyer asked the court to downgrade the charge to
homicide, a bailable offense, arguing that his client could not have possibly
used “superior strength” against the victim, a trained military man whose past
tours of duty included strife-torn Afghanistan.
Present at Wednesday’s hearing was US Consul General Michael Schimmel, who
said his embassy continued to have “a very active interest on the case” and
remained in communication with Laura Anikow, the widow who is now in the US.
“We are observers of the judicial process. The embassy will continue the
representation of the husband of the US diplomat, also an American citizen. We
are grateful to the Filipinos for the prompt arrest and prosecution of the
suspects. We are confident that justice will be served,” Schimmel told the
Inquirer.
Assistant Prosecutor Hannah Arriola said Thursday’s hearing would cover the
defense panel’s petition for bail. The prosecution is also presenting Anikow’s medico legal report and death
certificate, photos of the knife used in the killing and of the Volvo SUV used
by the suspects, and the sworn statements of Dominador Royo and Randy Lecta of
Southland Security and Investigative Services. Also expected to take the stand is Jose Romel Saavedra, the security guard
manning the checkpoint where Anikow was attacked by the suspects in the early
morning of Nov. 24 near the upscale Bel-Air subdivision. The guard earlier told investigators that the suspects were about to pass
through the checkpoint in their SUV when he asked them for identification. The
American, who appeared to be drunk, later approached and also asked the four to
produce IDs.
The suspects reportedly lost their cool when Anikow gave their vehicle a hard
tap. They got off the vehicle and ganged up on the American, with one of them
stabbing him dead. Jay de Castro, defense counsel for Datu III, said he would focus on
Saavedra’s sworn statement, particularly the portions saying that Anikow was
unsteady on his feet (pasuray-suray) when he approached the suspects, that it
was the American who supposedly threw the punch that started the fight, and that
Saavedra did not see who exactly stabbed the victim.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/59933/suspects-in-anikow-slay-plead-not-guilty-as-us-consul-watches
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