PNP Does a Nuremberg

In the aftermath of David v. Gloria Arroyo, which had condemned the specific actions of the executive department in the name of Proclamation 1017, the Philippine National Police, through its spokesman, has said that the police was just following orders. This line of defense was first employed during the Nuremberg Trials. Called the Nuremberg Defense, wherein the primary reasoning is that a soldier is just following orders and should not be held responsible for such acts.

Mr. Samuel Pagdilao, PNP spokesman, said “These were not done by the PNP to its liking. We were just following the proclamation.” Which means one thing – the PNP is now passing the buck to the Fortress by the Pasig. And that is why Mr. Eduardo Nachura and his men are studying whether to appeal David v. Ermita, since obviously, the problem will fall in the laps of Gloria Arroyo. I see Nachura’s action as looking for an escape route for Arroyo.

Also, Mr. Vidal Querol, head of NCR police, was interviewed at ANC. He was trying to advance another escape route by trying to point out that the arrests of Randolf David and Ronald Llamas on February 24, 2006, were legal and were made because of violations of Batas Pambansa 880, the subject of another SC decision Bayan v. Ermita. Let me quote the ABS-CBN News:

“Kapag binasa nating mabuti ‘yan [SC ruling] ang sinasabi ay bawal po ang pag-aresto kung hindi ang dahilan ay lawless violence, invasion, rebellion, and violation of Batas Pambansa 880 (If we read the ruling properly, it says that it is prohibited to conduct arrests unless there is lawless violence, invasion, rebellion and violation of Batas Pambansa 880),” he said.

Mr. Querol is now equating lawless violence with violations of BP880. I will leave that for lawyers to debate on. But the SC has already stated that the arrests of David and Llamas were illegal and unconstitutional. Let me quote the decision:

In the Brief Account submitted by petitioner David, certain facts are established: first, he was arrested without warrant; second, the PNP operatives arrested him on the basis of PP 1017; third, he was brought at Camp Karingal, Quezon City where he was fingerprinted, photographed and booked like a criminal suspect; fourth, he was treated brusquely by policemen who “held his head and tried to push him” inside an unmarked car; fifth, he was charged with Violation of Batas Pambansa Bilang No. 880 and Inciting to Sedition; sixth, he was detained for seven (7) hours; and seventh, he was eventually released for insufficiency of evidence.
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On the basis of the relevant and uncontested facts narrated earlier, it is also pristine clear that (1) the warrantless arrest of petitioners Randolf S. David and Ronald Llamas; (2) the dispersal of the rallies and warrantless arrest of the KMU and NAFLU-KMU members; (3) the imposition of standards on media or any prior restraint on the press; and (4) the warrantless search of the Tribune offices and the whimsical seizures of some articles for publication and other materials, are not authorized by the Constitution, the law and jurisprudence. Not even by the valid provisions of PP 1017 and G.O. No. 5.
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The warrantless arrest of Randolf S. David and Ronald Llamas; the dispersal and warrantless arrest of the KMU and NAFLU-KMU members during their rallies, in the absence of proof that these petitioners were committing acts constituting lawless violence, invasion or rebellion and violating BP 880; the imposition of standards on media or any form of prior restraint on the press, as well as the warrantless search of the Tribune offices and whimsical seizure of its articles for publication and other materials, are declared UNCONSTITUTIONAL.

Mr. Querol is effectively saying that the SC was wrong. I dare say that he was spewing those words to defend the police from prosecution and probable conviction on violations of human rights. I challenge Mr. Querol to express his opinion through the Solicitor General in an appeal to the Supreme Court, instead of going to the media trying to convince people through subterfuge.

Another defense, as advanced by Mr. Pagdilao, is that the police acted in good faith and its actions were done in “prudent and scrupulous observance” of the rule of law and human rights, as quoted in INQ7.net. Rule of law? Scrupulous observance of human rights? Didn’t the Supreme Court just said that the acts of the police during Proc. 1017 were unconstitutional? I think a thorough retraining of the entire PNP is needed.

(Personally, I am happy I was not in the shoes of Ricky Carandang when he was interviewing Querol. It’s hard to restrain oneself when hearing someone spewing lies with a straight face. BTW, Mr. Carandang has not posted in a while, thus you will not see any post on his home page.)

Should we expect heads to roll? Should we expect fall guys to be paraded? Nope. Even the Fortress by the Pasig was not sorry about the issue.


I find it lamentable that the lawyers of the petitioners in David v. Arroyo did not even contest the facts that the government specified that lead to the issuance of Proc. 1017. This made the Supreme Court uphold the proclamation. That’s what the petitioner’s lawyers should explain. Atty. Aceron lamented this fact.