From the Philippine Star (Mar 2): DOJ
junks murder raps vs soldiers in botanist’s death
The Department of Justice (DOJ) dismissed yesterday the murder charges filed
against Army soldiers allegedly involved in the death of noted botanist Leonard
Co and two other civilians during an operation against communist rebels in Leyte
in November 2010.
In a 19-page resolution released yesterday, the DOJ ruled that there is no
probable cause to indict nine men of the Army’s 19th Infantry Battalion led by
1Lt. Ronald Odchimar for murder, as sought in the complaint filed by Co’s widow
Glenda.
The DOJ panel though did not totally clear the respondents, as it found them
liable for a lesser offense: reckless imprudence resulting in multiple homicide
and attempted homicide.
A panel of fiscals led by Assistant State Prosecutor George Yarte Jr.
concluded after preliminary investigation that a key element of murder –
intentional felony or motive to kill – was absent in this case.
The fiscals bought the defense of the respondents that they were unaware of
the presence of Co’s team in the area where they were conducting an operation
against New People’s Army rebels.
The troops, according to the fiscals, only operated under “a mistake of
fact,” citing the “remoteness and seclusion of the forested areas where there is
little or hardly any possibility of civilian presence.”
Apart from Odchimar, also charged were Cameron Perez, Cpl. Marlon Mores, and
Pfcs. Albert Belonte, Michael Babon, Elemer Forteza, Roger Fabillar, Gil
Guimerey, Alex Apostol, and William Bulic.
They were also indicted for obstruction of justice along with 27 other
officers.
Co, 56, a specialist in plant taxonomy and ethnobotany who was serving as
biodiversity consultant of Lopez-owned EDC, was gathering specimen seedlings of
endangered trees with a five-member team of civilians when elements of the 19th
IB sprayed them with bullets on Nov. 15, 2010 in Barangay Lim-ao in Kananga,
Leyte.
Co, Sofronio Cortez, a forest guard of the Energy Development Corp.’s
Environmental Management Division; and Julius Borromeo, a member of the Tongonan
Farmers Association, were killed in the incident.
http://www.philstar.com/nation/2013/03/02/914716/doj-junks-murder-raps-vs-soldiers-botanists-death
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.