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ADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS
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ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 232 -
DISMISSING FROM THE SERVICE JOHN A. EGAÑA, THIRD ASSISTANT
PROVINCIAL PROSECUTOR OF RIZAL
This refers to the administrative complaint
filed by Wilson Bandiola against Third Assistant Provincial Prosecutor
John A. Egaña of the Provincial Prosecutor's Office of Rizal,
upon which the Secretary of Justice formally charged Mr. Egaña
for Grave Misconduct.
Records reveal that at about 9:30 o'clock in the evening of November
17, 1988, complaint's brother, Wenefredo Bandiola, while crossing Shaw
Boulevard, Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, was bumped by a speeding vehicle
owned by respondent prosecutor, tossing the victim against the front
windshield of the vehicle before the landed on the pavement
unconscious. The driver sped away towards the direction of Manila,
abandoning his victim. An on coming ambulance of the Philippine Charity
Sweepstakes Office stopped for the victim and brought him to the
Polymedic General Hospital. Wenefredo, the victim, was later confined
at UERM Memorial Medical Center, from November 18, 1988 to December 7,
1988, for treatment of cerebral concussion and contusion. A total
amount of P35,002.95 was incurred by Wenefredo representing loss of
income, medical and other expenses.
A certain Batanio Gumapi, who turned out to be a neighbor of the
victim, witnessed the hit-and-run incident. Mr. Gumapi being just about
a meter away from the spot of the incident and aided by the headlight
of the car immediately following was able to note that the car bears
plate number NET 773. Gumapi executed an affidavit on November 23, 1988
affirming his statement.
On August 1, 1989, complaint sought the assistance of the Department of
Justice if only to recover medical expenses incurred for the
hospitalization of his brother, stating that the witnesses to the said
incident have become reluctant or even timorous to testify upon
learning that the respondent is a fiscal.
When required to comment on said letter-complaint of August 1, 1989,
respondent, on October 31, 1989, denied any responsibility for the
injuries sustained by Wenefredo Bandiola and averred, among others (a)
that, on November 17, 1988, after the monthly meeting of prosecutors at
the Provincial Capitol Building of Pasig, he joined his co-prosecutors
in one of the stores located inside the Provincial Capitol Building up
to 9:00 in the evening when he left alone in his car; (b) that, while
stopping on traffic signal at the corner of Shaw Boulevard and Epifanio
de los Santos Avenue (EDSA), three (3) unidentified men held him up at
gun point, boarded and drove his car and divested him of his Seiko
wrist watch worth P15,000.00, more or less, diamond ring valued at
P10,000.00, necklace costing P3,000.00, wallet containing his driver's
license and cash of P3,000.00, and another amount of P10,000.00 from
his clutch bag; (c) that, because of his persistent pleas, he was
allowed to go by the robbers and was dropped at an unlighted spot near
the Manuela Shopping Complex on Shaw Boulevard, the trio proceeding in
his car towards the direction of Manila; (d) that, still shocked by the
experience he nervously hailed a taxicab, went home and, after relating
the incident to his wife, proceeded to the Mandaluyong Police Station
to report the incident, apprehensive that his car might be sued by the
three (3) robbers in the commission of another crime; (e) that the
following morning (November 18, 1988, he passed by the Mandaluyong
Police Station to verify the status of his complaint, and was informed
that his car was involved in a traffic accident and was held in the
impounding lot of the police station; (f) that, after obtaining
clearance for its release, he was allowed to tow his car, as the car
would not start; and (g) that, he was not drunk and had no wound on the
night of the incident, otherwise such fact would have been reflected in
the police blotter of the Mandaluyong Police Station.
After evaluation of the complaint, the Secretary of Justice, on May 29,
1990, found a prima facie case for Grave Misconduct against respondent
and placed him under preventive suspension for ninety (90) days pending
formal investigation of the charge to be conducted by State Prosecutor
Theodore M. Villanueva.
On June 13, 1990, respondent wrote State Prosecutor Villanueva
requesting that the letter-complaint of Mr. Wilson Bandiola be
subscribed to by him pursuant to the provision of Paragraph 2, Sec. 32, Article VII of the Civil Service Act, as amended.
On even date, respondent likewise sent a letter to the Secretary of
Justice seeking reconsideration of the latter's finding of prima facie
case against him for Grave Misconduct.
In said motion, respondent alleged that complainant's evidence are
plain hearsay and without evidentiary value, coming as they did from
third parties (the cigarette vendor and the police investigator) who
did not execute affidavits for the purpose.
In his Memorandum for me, dated February 5, 1991, the Secretary of
Justice, finds respondent's motion to be unimpressed with merit, upon
the following observations:
xxx
"The
complaint not being under oath is a formal defect not fatal to the
pursuit of this administrative matter. Such defect has been cured and
remedied by the supporting affidavits of the victim himself and the
witness, Batanio Gumapi, which were subscribed and sworn to
respectively before a notary public and the investigating State
Prosecutor. We stress at this point that an administrative
investigation is not bound by the rigidity of technical rules of legal
evidence. These proceedings serve as an inquiry into circumstances
surrounding a certain set of facts and upon which an order may be
issued. The quantum of evidence herein required is substantial evidence
supportive of a proposition."
After going over the records of the case, I fully agree with the conclusion of the Secretary of Justice.
The carnapping tale put up by respondent is belied by the facts on records, any one of which points at him as the one driving the car involved in the incident at the time the incident happened. Firstly, the eye witness account of Batanio Gumapi of the incident as happening at about 9:25 in the evening of Thursday, November 17, 1988, along Shaw Boulevard near the corner of EDSA, Mandaluyong, Rizal, involving a car bearing plate No. NET-773 traveling towards Manila. Secondly, the Spot Reports of the Mandaluyong Police Traffic Station No. 5 recording the same incident witnessed by Gumapi, coinciding in all material details excepting a 3-minute variance as to the time when the incident happened, and the failure of the report to record the letters on the car plate. Thirdly, the incredibility of respondent's own account that he left the Provincial Capitol Building of Pasig at about 9:00 o'clock in the evening and made it to the Mandaluyong Police Station at, as recorded in the police blotter presented as his own exhibit, 10:00 o'clock in the evening to report his version of the incident, given the myriad details of his episode that he was held up by 3 robbers at the intersection of Shaw Boulevard and EDSA while stopping on traffic signal; then forced to yield the driver's seat at gun point and divested of his watch, jewelry and cash; then dropped past Manuela Shopping Complex on Shaw Boulevard; then, even as he was shocked by the experience, he nonetheless nervously managed to hail a taxicab for home to No. 929 Samar St., Sampaloc, Manila; then asked his wife for his taxi fare; then narrated to his wife his experience; and finally, he asked for some money and went to the Mandaluyong Police Station, altogether taking up barely one hour of his time, even 30 minutes reckoned by the time recorded in the Spot Report of the police. In fine, from the time respondent left the premises of the Provincial Capitol Building of Pasig and up to that point along Shaw Boulevard in Mandaluyong past near the scene of the incident where his car stopped and ceased to function, all along he was driving his red sedan car bearing plate number NET 773, the vehicle that hit the victim, Wenefredo Bandiola, causing the latter physical injuries.
In abandoning his victim Wenefredo Bandiola, instead of coming to his immediate succor, knowing fully well the gravity of the injuries he had inflicted, respondent had evinced a low character unbefitting of a man of his official stature. For this act alone, respondent ought to be highly censured.
Respondent's predicament was compounded by his willful perversion of the truth when he concocted the carnapping scenario in his bid to exculpate himself from legal responsibility. As a prosecutor sworn to uphold the law, respondent, in the fulfillment of his duties, cannot by all means constitutes himself as an exception, for that would be making a mockery of the law, not to mention a travesty of Justice. For so acting in the manner he did, respondent has certainly become a blot on the prosecution service's escutcheon and, hence, does not deserve to be retained any further thereat.
There is, therefore, force and cogency to the Secretary of Justice's observation that:
"Respondent's
perversion of the truth, abandonment of a person whom he had injured,
and avoidance of legal responsibility makes him unfit to uphold the
faith and honesty demanded of public servants."
WHEREFORE, and as recommended by the Secretary of Justice, Third Assistant Provincial Prosecutor John A. Egaña of the Province of Rizal is hereby found guilty of Grave Misconduct and DISMISSED from the service, with forfeiture of benefits, effective upon receipt hereof.
Done in the City of Manila this 26th day of August in the year of Our Lord, nineteen hundred and ninety-one
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