From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jan 31): Conspiracy eyed in Atimonan shooting
The National Bureau of Investigation has found that the killing of 13 people
at a joint police-military checkpoint in Atimonan, Quezon province, on Jan. 6
was a “conspiracy,” and decided to bring criminal charges against the policemen
and soldiers involved.
NBI investigators have also learned from the soldiers who augmented the
police team at the checkpoint that police officials allegedly tampered with
evidence to make the killings look like the results of a shootout, a source with
knowledge of the investigation told the Philippine Daily Inquirer Wednesday.
“There was a clear conspiracy to neutralize the victims, but the charges will
be according to the degree of their participation that led to the deaths of 13
people,” an Inquirer source said.
The source, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to speak
to the media, said those directly involved in the killings and were at the
checkpoint would be charged as principals, while those who were not at the
checkpoint but were part of the conspiracy would be charged as accessories.
The source said the findings were based on examination of the evidence and
the testimonies of witnesses, including the soldiers from the Army’s First
Special Forces Battalion.
Local and provincial police in Quezon reported the incident as a shootout
between government security forces and a group of guns for hire.
Later, it turned out that it was a police operation for the arrest of Victor
“Vic” Siman, alleged operator of the numbers racket jueteng in Southern Luzon.
Siman was killed at the checkpoint along Maharlika Highway in Barangay
(village) Lumutan, Atimonan, along with 12 other men who were traveling with
him. The families of those men claimed there was no shootout and that the
victims were summarily executed, prompting President Aquino to order the NBI to
investigate.
The NBI investigation is almost over, Justice Secretary Leila de Lima told
reporters Wednesday.
De Lima said she was expecting to receive the report on the investigation
from NBI Director Nonnatus Rojas anytime.
She declined to confirm reports that the soldiers who took part in the
Atimonan operation had been offered to turn state witnesses.
De Lima herself urged the soldiers last week to disclose what they knew, and
assured them of government protection.
That must have been arranged, as the soldiers seemed to have cooperated with
the NBI investigators.
Tampered with evidence
The source said the investigators learned from the soldiers that police
officials tampered with evidence to make the incident look like a shootout.
To do that, the source said, police officials used the firearms of some of
Siman’s companions, fired them, then planted them next to the bodies of those
men.
The source said the police officials also manipulated the crime scene to show
that there was “a heavy exchange of fire.”
“They used the high-powered firearms found with the victims and fired at the
concrete [wall] of a closed resort near the crime scene,” the source said.
The source also said the soldiers maintained their claim that the first shot
came from the occupants of the first of two sports utility vehicles that carried
the victims.
From the testimony of the soldiers, the investigators learned that the
response from the government’s side was excessive, the source said.
“One of the soldiers admitted he finished a magazine of his M-14 rifle and
reloaded,” the source said.
Standing by men
The Armed Forces chief of staff, Gen. Emmanuel Bautista on Wednesday said the
soldiers just did their job and he stood by them.
“Our direction is unity of effort with all security forces to address
security issues. Our soldiers, they just do their job. As long as they did their
job, there is nothing really to worry about because they did what they thought
was right,” Bautista said in a press conference.
Bautista declined to comment on the Inquirer’s report that the Special Forces
troops had been offered to become state witnesses.
“I think the justice department or the NBI can answer that,” he said.
Bautista said the military was reviewing the procedures followed by soldiers
when police call for augmentation forces in their operations.
Bautista said the police’s notice of request for the Atimonan operation, made
by the team of Supt. Hansel Marantan, was “under a tight time frame.”
“There was no time to study the situation. We are reviewing how we can have
due diligence given time constraints. We want to be deliberate,” Bautista said.
Marantan was reportedly wounded during the operation. He has been suspended
and is facing investigation on the killings.
Only 10 soldiers
Early reports on the incident said 25 Special Forces members supported
Marantan’s police team at the checkpoint.
But clarificatory reports established the actual number of soldiers who took
part in the operation at 14, as the rest of those deployed stayed behind at the
Atimonan police station.
Of the 14 soldiers who took part in the operation, four were assigned to the
first of three checkpoints. They did not see the killings, which happened at the
second checkpoint.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/349949/quezon-shooting-probers-found-conspiracy-to-kill-tamper-with-evidence
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