CJ CORONA HAS P20 MILLION CASH IN 2010 VS P3.5 M IN HIS SALN: HOW DO YOU MAKE MULTI MILLIONS CJ?

Dodany: Feb 9, 2012

Od: PINASWATCHER6

Czas: 2:12

Testifying before the impeachmebt court, PSBank president Pascual Garcia III said that Corona, as of December 2010, had a balance of P7,148,238.83 and P12,580,316.56 deposited in bank account numbers 089121021681 and 089121019593, respectively. The total of these 2 accounts is P19,728,555,39. In his 2010 Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Networth, the Chief Justice declared that he had P3.5-millon in "cash and investments." MORE.. http://www.rappler.com/nation/special-coverage/corona-trial/1402-corona-had-p20-m-in-2010,-bank-exec-says ------------------------------------------- Honest mistakes too many Published By Willie Baun : Thursday, February 09, 2012 00:00 WAS it a senator-judge or a defense counsel in the impeachment trial of Chief Justice Renato Corona who, in what seemed a half-cooked bid to sound philosophical, said the CJ could have committed only honest mistakes in computing some amounts in his statement of assets, liabilities, and net worth? In Article 2 of the impeachment complaint, Corona's SALN has been the bone of contention at the Impeachment Court. Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile presiding sui generis over litigation of whether to remove or retain the Chief Justice as primus inter pares in the Judiciary. Stressing that impeachment is sui generis, a class of its own, in which the Constitution allowed even non-lawyers to decide impeachment cases, Inquirer columnist former Chief Justice Artemio V. Panganiban elaborated: "As I wrote on Jan. 8, an impeachment is sui generis: it is unique and is not comparable to any other proceeding. Since the Senate was granted the sole power to decide impeachments, it stands to reason that Charter also gave the senators the sole discretion to choose whatever standard they deem proper." AVP disclosed that the United States Senate, whose concept of impeachment our Senate has adopted, "does not ape judicial processes; thus, the impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton did not even undergo the tedious hearings now being conducted here." Touche. "Former Associate Justice Serafin Cuevas, lead counsel of Corona, and smokin' feisty Senator-Judge Miriam Defensor-Santiago, a former trial court judge, should cordially say hello to former Chief Justice Artemio V. Panaganiban," interjects resident kibitzer Jose in this corner. It took a lot of time to refrain from telling him that in Merriam-Webster's view, kibizer is one who looks at what's going on and gives unwanted advice. Anyway, the latest from the "tedious hearings" we've had to endure is about the impeachment prosecutors' shamefully scoring 25 out of the 45 properties that Corona allegedly failed to report or excluded or kept hidden from his SALN. So have the prosecution and defense been at loggerheads over discrepancies between the CJ's SALN and Income Tax Return figures, on top of apparent conflicts in property acquisition casts and corresponding amounts posted in his SALN from 2002 to 2010. It was at the point when the hearings dwelt on Corona's acquired properties that Revenue Commissioner Kim Henares revealed a BIR probe showing Corona "failed to include nine properties in documents since he become associate justice in 2002." Nine "honest mistakes" in as many years that, for all the apparent predilection to be imprecise tantamount to malicious inexactitude would not constitute SALN falsification? The Chief Justice "reported an P8.3-million net worth where 25 (it should have been 31.224 million in 2006). Supposed net worth was P24 million but he reported only P11 million," Henares said. Based on the BIR chief's testimony (Inquirer, Feb. 7) the CJ's unreported 2003 to 2009 net worth, incredible as it may seem, totaled roughly P122 million. Defense lead counsel Cuevas moved to strike out Henares' testimony on all those ponts" because the Chief Justice "is not being impeached for false declaration." Besides, Cuevas added that "the articles of impeachment show nothing there to predicate this kind of evidence." For her part, Ms. Karen Jimeno, one of the two defense panel spokespersons, said it would be "premature to determine supposed errors in Corona's SALNs and ITRs." Even tampered and impartial to the proverbial last two minutes of the impeachment hearings for the day, sui generis case presiding Senator-Judge Juan Ponce Enrile softly put it to closure: "You can traverse that in your evidence, anyway. Let it be." http://www.journal.com.ph/index.php/opinion/23586-honest-mistakes-too-many ------------------------------------------------------

Kanał: News

Tagi: chief justice renato corona  supreme court  philippines  pilipinas  pnoy  noynoy aquino  miriam santiago  loren legarda  alan peter cayetano  francis escudero  gregorio honasan  antonio trillanes  aquilino pimentel  lito lapid  jinggoy estrada  juan ponce enrile  pia cayetano  ferdinand marcos jr  vicente sotto  sergio osmena  joker arroyo  panfilo lacson  manuel villar  teofisto guingona  franklin drilon  francis pangilinan  impeachment trial  pinaswatcher 


   Wyświetlenia: 884    Komentarze: 3

tonyblair666666 Wypowiedź:

Mar 17, 2012 - How about all bank account of all senators, congressman and prosecutors please check it out one by one including the president p

ohmylord3809 Wypowiedź:

May 1, 2012 - Exactly! How abt yr bank acct and the senator judges! Wala silang evidence na makuha, kundi Lang magdrama. Hoping na paniwalain ang nga Tao na nagnanakaw si Corona.wala! Di Kami sold sa drama ng prosec!

Rikied J. Delrosario Wypowiedź:

May 29, 2012 - Savings daw ?gunggong!