Crimes Relative To Opium & Other Prohibited Drugs
Crimes Relative To Opium & Other Prohibited Drugs
Crimes Relative To Opium & Other Prohibited Drugs
PABLITO ANDAYA y
REANO, Accused-Appellant.
FACTS :
Antecedents
Upon arraignment, Andaya pleaded not guilty to the charge. Thereafter, trial
on the merits ensued.
police station and detained. After three (3) days he was released. He
received a subpoena from the Public Prosecutor afterwards.
WON the Prosecution's nonpresentation of the confidential informant was
adverse to the Prosecution, indicating that his guilt was not proved beyond
reasonable doubt.
His wife Crisanta, corroborated appellants' testimony. She added having told
her husband about the loss of their cellphone and the money in his wallet.
She was asked to produce P5,000.00 which she was unable to do. She was
able to raise only P2,000.00.
RULING
To secure the conviction of the accused who is charged with the illegal sale
of dangerous drugs as defined and punished by Section 5, Article II of
Republic Act No. 9165 (Comprehensive Drugs Act of 2002), the State must
establish the concurrence of the following elements, namely: (a) that the
transaction or sale took place between the accused and the poseur buyer;
and ( b) that the dangerous drugs subject of the transaction or sale is
presented in court as evidence of the corpus delicti.
On February 21, 2006, the Regional Trial Court, Branch 4, in Batangas City
(R TC) rendered its judgment convicting Andaya as charged, and meted him
the penalty of life imprisonment.
Decision of the CA
ISSUES
WON the search of his house and his person and his arrest by the police
officers violated his constitutional right against unreasonable searches and
seizures;
In People vs Lopez (214 SCRA 323), it was held that there was no need for
the prosecution to present the confidential informer as the poseur buyer
himself positively identified the accused as the one who sold to him one deck
of methamphetamine hydrochloride or "shabu." The trial court then properly
relied on the testimonies of the police officers despite the decision of the
prosecution not to present the informer.15
Here, the confidential informant was not a police officer. He was designated
to be the poseur buyer himself. It is notable that the members of the buy-bust
team arrested Andaya on the basis of the pre-arranged signal from the
poseur buyer. The pre-arranged signal signified to the members of the buybust team that the transaction had been consummated between the poseur
buyer and Andaya. However, the State did not present the confidential
informant/poseur buyer during the trial to describe how exactly the
transaction between him and Andaya had taken place. There would have
been no issue against that, except that none of the members of the buy-bust
team had directly witnessed the transaction, if any, between Andaya and the
poseur buyer due to their being positioned at a distance from the poseur
buyer and Andaya at the moment of the supposed transaction.
The foregoing justification by the CA was off-tangent and does not help the
State's cause any. It is obvious that the rulings cited to supp01i the need to
conceal the confidential infonnants' identities related to the confidential
informants who gave information against suspected drug dealers. The
presentation of the confidential informants as witnesses for the Prosecution
in those instances could be excused because there were poseur buyers who
directly incriminated the accused. In this case, however, it was different,
because the poseur buyer and the confidential informant were one and the
same. Without the poseur buyer's testimony, the State did not credibly
incriminate Andaya.
The CA did not find anything wrong or odd in the non-presentation of the
poseur buyer as a witness against the accused. In fact, it justified the nonpresentation as follows:
Indeed, Section 5 of Republic Act No. 9165 punishes "any person, who,
unless authorized by law, shall sell, trade, administer, dispense, deliver, give
away to another, distribute, dispatch in transit or transport any dangerous
drug, including any and all species of opium poppy regardless of the quantity
and purity involved, or shall act as a broker in any of such transactions."
Under the law, selling was any act "of giving away any dangerous drug
and/or controlled precursor and essential chemical whether for money or any
other consideration;"16 while delivering was any act "of knowingly passing a
dangerous drug to another, personally or otherwise, and by any means, with
or without consideration."17 Given the legal characterizations of the acts
constituting the offense charged, the members of the buy-bust team could
not incriminate Andaya by simply declaring that they had seen from their
positions the poseur buyer handing something to Andaya who, in turn, gave
something to the poseur buyer. If the transaction was a sale, it was
Nor should we shirk from our responsibility of protecting the liberties of our
citizenry just because the lawmen are shielded by the presumption of the
regularity of their performance of duty. The presumed regularity is nothing but
a purely evidentiary tool intended to avoid the impossible and timeconsuming task of establishing every detail of the performance by officials
and functionaries of the Government. Conversion by no means defeat the
much stronger and much firmer presumption of innocence in favor of every
person whose life, property and liberty comes under the risk of forfeiture on
the strength of a false accusation of committing some crime. 20 The criminal
accusation against a person must be substantiated by proof beyond
reasonable doubt. The Court should steadfastly safeguard his right to be
presumed innocent. Although his innocence could be doubted, for his
reputation in his community might not be lily-white or lustrous, he should not
fear a conviction for any crime, least of all one as grave as drug pushing,
unless the evidence against him was clear, competent and beyond
reasonable doubt. Otherwise, the presumption of innocence in his favor
would be rendered empty.
In affirming the RTC's conviction of the accused, the CA observed that the
defense of frame-up put up by the accused was discredited by the absence
of proof of "any intent on the paii of the police authorities to falsely impute
Reano for failure to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt; and ORDERS
his immediate release from confinement at the National Penitentiary in
Muntinlupa City.
p.m. However, that Crime laboratory indorsed the request with the
specimens on June 4, 2004 at 2:30 p.m. to the Regional Crime Laboratory in
Calamba
City.
Police Inspector and Forensic Chemist Donna Villa P. Huelgas found the
specimens positive for the presence of methamphetamine hydrochloride, a
dangerous drug, as shown by Chemistry Report No. D-566-04, the
authenticity and genuineness of which were admitted by accused during the
pre-trial.
The trial court found appellant guilty of the offense charged guilty beyond
reasonable doubt as principal by direct participation of the crime of drug
pushing as defined and penalized under Section 5, Article II of Republic Act
[No.] 9165 otherwise known as the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of
2002 and hereby impose on him the penalty of life imprisonment and to pay a
fine of P500,000.00.
SO ORDERED.
FACTS
ISSUE
About a deal in shabu between the asset of PO3 Edwalberto Villas and a
certain Gerry of San Pablo City, a buy-bust operation was conducted by the
elements of the Batangas City Police Station with the assistance of Police
Inspector Danilo Balmes of the CIDG Batangas Province on May 27, 2004 at
11:30 oclock in the morning at the Petron Gasoline Station along B. Morada
Ave.,
Lipa
City.
Using two (2) pieces of marked P500.00 bills and boodle money to make the
appearance of about P24,000.00, the police asset who posed as a buyer
transacted with the alias Gerry upon his arrival at the gas station. After the
exchange of the marked money and the three (3) plastic sachets of shabu
placed in a black plastic box, alias Gerry was placed under arrest. He was
later identified as Gerardo Enumerable y de Villa. The marked money was
recovered from his possession by PO3 Villas who also took custody of the
specimen shabu which he marked EMV 1 to EMV 3. The three (3) sachets
of shabu were turned over to the Batangas Provincial Crime Laboratory,
pursuant to the request for laboratory examination of P/Supt. Fausto
Manzanilla, Jr., Chief of Police, Batangas City PNP on May 27, 2004 at 5:25
Necessarily, the prosecution must establish that the substance seized from
the accused is the same substance offered in court as exhibit. In this regard,
the prosecution must sufficiently prove the unbroken chain of custody of the
confiscated illegal drug. In People v. Watamama,11 the Court held:
The prosecution attempted to fill the gap in the chain of custody. However,
such effort proved futile. On re-direct examination, PO3 Villas, who earlier
testified that he had no knowledge on who had custody of the illegal drugs
prior and during their delivery to the crime laboratories, merely restated the
contents of the 3 June 2004 Memorandum from the Chief of the Batangas
Police addressed to the Regional Chief, corresponding to the questions of
the prosecutor. In other words, PO3 Villas testified on a piece of document
he had no participation in the preparation or execution thereof. PO3 Villas
testified as follows:
Clearly, PO3 Villas had no personal knowledge on (1) how the illegal drugs
were delivered and who delivered the drugs from the Batangas Provincial
Crime Laboratory to the Regional Crime Laboratory; (2) who received the
drugs in the Regional Crime Laboratory; and (3) who had custody of the
drugs from 27 May 2004 to 3 June 2004 until their presentation before the
trial court. The testimony of PO3 Villas merely attests to the existence of the
Memorandum from the Chief of the Batangas Provincial Crime Laboratory to
the Regional Crime Laboratory.
While appellant admitted during the pre-trial the authenticity and due
execution of the Chemistry Report, prepared by Police Inspector and
Forensic Chemist Donna Villa P. Huelgas, this admission merely affirms the
existence of the specimen and the request for laboratory examination and
the results thereof. Appellants admission does not relate to the issue of
chain of custody. In fact, appellant qualified his admission that the
specimens were not taken or bought from him.16 In People v. Gutierrez, the
Court stated:
x x x That the defense stipulated on these matters,viz: that the specimen
exists, that a request has been made by the arresting officers for examination
thereof, that a forensic chemist examined it, and that it tested positive for
methylamphetamine hydrochloride has no bearing on the question of chain of
custody. These stipulations, which merely affirm the existence of the
specimen, and the request for laboratory examination and the results thereof,
In this case, there was a glaring gap in the custody of the illegal drug since
the prosecution failed to sufficiently establish who had custody of the illegal
drug from the moment it was allegedly transmitted to the Batangas Provincial
were entered into during pre-trial only in order to dispense with the testimony
of the forensic chemist and abbreviate the proceedings. x x x. 17
of the urine test despite its dubiousness having been admitted in spite of the
lack of legal basis for its admission. First, he alleges that the forensic
laboratory examination was conducted despite the fact that he was not
assisted by counsel, in clear violation of his constitutional right. Secondly, he
was allegedly held guilty beyond reasonable doubt notwithstanding the lack
of sufficient basis to convict him.
Since the failure of the prosecution to establish every link in the chain of
custody of the illegal drug gravely compromised its identity and integrity,
which illegal drug is the corpus delicti of the offense charged against
appellant, his acquittal is therefore in order.
THE ISSUE
FACTS
Whether or not the drug test conducted upon the petitioner is legal.
Petitioner Jaime D. dela Cruz was charged with violation of Section 15,
Article II of Republic Act No. (R.A.) 9165, or The Comprehensive Dangerous
Drugs Act of 2002, by the Graft Investigation and Prosecution Officer of the
Office of the Ombudsman Visayas.
OUR RULING
We declare that the drug test conducted upon petitioner is not grounded
upon any existing law or jurisprudence.
On or about the 31st day of January 2006, at Cebu City, Philippines, and
within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named
accused, JAIME D. DE LA CRUZ, a public officer, having been duly
appointed and qualified to such public position as Police Officer 2 of
the Philippine National Police (PNP) assigned in the Security Service
Group of the Cebu City Police Office, after having been arrested by agents of
the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) in an entrapment operation, was
found positive for use of METHAMPHETAMINE
HYDROCHLORIDE commonly known as Shabu, the dangerous drug after
a confirmatory test conducted on said accused.
The RTC subsequently convicted petitioner, ruling that the following elements
of Section 15 were established: (1) the accused was arrested; (2) the
accused was subjected to drug test; and (3) the confirmatory test shows that
Petitioner filed an appeal assigning as error the RTCs validation of the result
We find the ruling and reasoning of the trial court, as well as the subsequent
affirmation by the CA, erroneous on three counts.
The drug test in Section 15 does not cover
persons apprehended or arrested for any
unlawful act, but only for unlawful acts
listed under Article II of R.A. 9165.
First, [a] person apprehended or arrested cannot literally mean any
person apprehended or arrested for any crime. The phrase must be read
in context and understood in consonance with R.A. 9165. Section 15
comprehends persons arrested or apprehended for unlawful acts listed
under Article II of the law.
Hence, a drug test can be made upon persons who are apprehended or
arrested for, among others, the importation,9 sale, trading, administration,
dispensation, delivery, distribution and transportation, 10manufacture11 and
possession12 of dangerous drugs and/or controlled precursors and essential
chemicals; possession thereof during parties, social gatherings or
meetings13; being employees and visitors of a den, dive or
resort;14 maintenance of a den, dive or resort;15 illegal chemical diversion
of controlled precursors and essential chemicals16; manufacture or
delivery17 or possession18 of equipment, instrument, apparatus, and other
paraphernalia for dangerous drugs and/or controlled precursors and
essential chemicals; possession of dangerous drugs during parties, social
gatherings or meetings19; unnecessary20 or unlawful21 prescription
thereof; cultivation or culture of plants classified as dangerous drugs or are
sources thereof;22and maintenance and keeping of original records of
transactions on dangerous drugs and/or controlled precursors and essential
chemicals.23To make the provision applicable to all persons arrested or
apprehended for any crime not listed under Article II is tantamount to unduly
expanding its meaning. Note that accused appellant here was arrested in the
alleged act of extortion.
In the case at bench, the presence of dangerous drugs was only in the form
of residue on the drug paraphernalia, and the accused were found positive
for use of dangerous drugs. Granting that the arrest was legal, the evidence
obtained admissible, and the chain of custody intact, the law enforcers
should have filed charges under Sec. 15, R.A. No. 9165 or for use of
dangerous drugs and, if there was no residue at all, they should have been
charged under Sec. 14 (Possession of Equipment, Instrument, Apparatus
and Other Paraphernalia for Dangerous Drugs During Parties, Social
Gatherings or Meetings). Sec. 14 provides that the maximum penalty under
Sec. 12(Possession of Equipment, Instrument, Apparatus and Other
Paraphernalia for Dangerous Drugs) shall be imposed on any person who
shall possess any equipment, instrument, apparatus and other paraphernalia
for dangerous drugs. Under Sec. 12, the maximum penalty is imprisonment
of four years and a fine of P50,000.00. In fact, under the same section, the
possession of such equipment, apparatus or other paraphernalia is prima
facie evidence that the possessor has used a dangerous drug and shall be
presumed to have violated Sec. 15.
In order to effectively fulfill the intent of the law to rehabilitate drug
users, this Court thus calls on law enforcers and prosecutors in
dangerous drugs cases to exercise proper discretion in filing charges
when the presence of dangerous drugs is only and solely in the form of
residue and the confirmatory test required under Sec. 15 is positive for
use of dangerous drugs. In such cases, to afford the accused a chance to
be rehabilitated, the filing of charges for or involving possession of
dangerous drugs should only be done when another separate quantity of
dangerous drugs, other than mere residue, is found in the possession of the
accused as provided for in Sec. 15. (Emphasis supplied)
In the instant case, we fail to see how a urine sample could be material to the
charge of extortion. The RTC and the CA, therefore, both erred when they
held that the extraction of petitioners urine for purposes of drug testing was
merely a mechanical act, hence, falling outside the concept of a custodial
investigation.
We find that petitioner never raised the alleged irregularity of his arrest
before his arraignment and raises the issue only now before this tribunal;
hence, he is deemed to have waived his right to question the validity of his
arrest curing whatever defect may have attended his arrest. 26 However, a
waiver of an illegal warrantless arrest does not mean a waiver of the
inadmissibility of evidence seized during an illegal warrantless arrest. 27
We are aware of the prohibition against testimonial compulsion and the
In the Gutang et al. case, the Court clarified that what the Constitution
prohibits is the use of physical or moral compulsion to extort communication
from the accused, but not an inclusion of his body in evidence, when it may
be material. The situation in Gutang was categorized as falling among the
exemptions under the freedom from testimonial compulsion since what was
sought to be examined came from the body of the accused. The Court said:
This was a mechanical act the accused was made to undergo which was not
meant to unearth undisclosed facts but to ascertain physical attributes
determinable by simple observation. In fact, the record shows that petitioner
and his co-accused were not compelled to give samples of their urine but
they in fact voluntarily gave the same when they were requested to undergo
a drug test.
Assuming arguendo that the urine samples taken from the petitioner are
inadmissible in evidence, we agree with the trial court that the record is
replete with other pieces of credible evidence including the testimonial
evidence of the prosecution which point to the culpability of the petitioner for
the crimes charged.
We emphasize that the circumstances in Gutang are clearly different from the
circumstances of petitioner in the instant case. First, Gutang was arrested in
relation to a drug case. Second, he volunteered to give his urine. Third, there
were other pieces of evidence that point to his culpability for the crimes
charged. In the present case, though, petitioner was arrested for extortion; he
resisted having his urine sample taken; and finally, his urine sample was the
only available evidence that was used as basis for his conviction for the use
of illegal drugs.
SO ORDERED.
10
The Facts
In
its
Decision
dated
16
September
2008,
the
RTC
found Laylo and Ritwal guilty beyond reasonable doubt of violations of RA
9165. The RTC gave credence to the testimonies of the police officers, who
were presumed to have performed their duties in a regular manner.
In the afternoon of 17 December 2005, PO1 Reyes and PO1 Pastor, both
wearing civilian clothes, were conducting anti-drug surveillance operations
at Lozana Street, Calumpang, Binangonan,Rizal. While the police officers
were in front of a sari-sari store at around 5:40 p.m., appellant Laylo and his
live-in
partner, Ritwal,
approached
them
and
asked, Gusto mong umiskor ng shabu?
PO1
Reyes
replied, Bakit mayroon ka ba? Laylo then brought out two plastic bags
containing shabu and told the police officers, Dos (P200.00) ang isa. Upon
hearing this, the police officers introduced themselves as cops. PO1 Reyes
immediately arrested Laylo. Ritwal, on the other, tried to get away but PO1
Pastor caught up with her. PO1 Pastor then frisked Ritwal and found another
sachet of shabu in a SIM card case which Ritwal was carrying.
Laylo filed an appeal with the CA. In a Decision dated 28 January 2010, the
CA affirmed the decision of the RTC.
Hence, this appeal.
PO1 Reyes and PO1 Pastor marked the three plastic sachets
of shabu recovered from Laylo and Ritwal and forwarded them to the
Philippine National Police Crime Laboratory for forensic testing. Forensic
Chemist Police Inspector Yehla C.Manaog conducted the laboratory
examination on the specimens submitted and found the recovered items
positive for methylamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu, a dangerous drug.
The elements necessary for the prosecution of illegal sale of drugs are: (1)
the identity of the buyer and seller, the object, and the consideration; and (2)
the delivery of the thing sold and the payment.9
The police officers charged Laylo for attempted sale of illegal drugs and used
the two plastic sachets containing shabu as basis while Ritwal was charged
for possession of illegal drugs using as basis the third sachet containing 0.02
grams of shabu.
From the testimonies given, PO1 Reyes and PO1 Pastor testified that they
were the poseur-buyers in the sale. Both positively identified appellant as the
seller of the substance contained in plastic sachets which were found to be
positive for shabu. The same plastic sachets were likewise identified by the
prosecution witnesses when presented in court. Even the consideration
of P200.00 for each sachet had been made known by appellant to the police
officers. However, the sale was interrupted when the police officers
introduced themselves as cops and immediately arrested appellant and his
11
live-in partner Ritwal. Thus, the sale was not consummated but merely
attempted. Thus, appellant was charged with attempted sale of dangerous
drugs. Section 26(b), Article II of RA 9165 provides:
xxx
(b) Sale, trading, administration, dispensation, delivery,
distribution and transportation of any dangerous drug and/or
controlled precursor and essential chemical;
xxx
Here, appellant intended to sell shabu and commenced by overt acts the
commission of the intended crime by showing the substance to PO1 Reyes
and PO1 Pastor.12 The sale was aborted when the police officers identified
themselves and placed appellant and Ritwal under arrest. From the
testimonies of the witnesses, the prosecution was able to establish that there
was an attempt to sell shabu. In addition, the plastic sachets were presented
in court as evidence of corpus delicti. Thus, the elements of the crime
charged were sufficiently established by evidence.
Further, appellant did not attribute any ill-motive on the part of the police
officers. The presumption of regularity in the performance of the police
officers official duties should prevail over the self-serving denial of
appellant.15
In sum, we see no reason to disturb the findings of the RTC and CA.
Appellant was correctly found to be guilty beyond reasonable doubt of
violating Section 26(b), Article II of RA 9165.
12