Astorga v. People
Astorga v. People
Astorga v. People
The provisions of law punishing arbitrary or illegal detention committed by government officers
form part of our statute books even before the advent of American sovereignty in our country.
Those provisions were already in effect during the Spanish regime; they remained in effect under
American rule; continued in effect under the Commonwealth. Even under the Japanese regime
they were not repealed. The same provisions continue in the statute books of the free and
sovereign Republic of the Philippines. This notwithstanding, and the complaints often heard of
violations of said provisions, it is very seldom that prosecutions under them have been instituted
due to the fact that the erring individuals happened to belong to the same government to which
the prosecuting officers belong. It is high time that every one must do his duty, without fear or
favor, and that prosecuting officers should not answer with cold shrugging of the shoulders the
complaints of the victims of arbitrary or illegal detention.
Only by an earnest enforcement of the provisions of articles 124 and 125 of the Revised Penal
Code will it be possible to reduce to its minimum such wanton trampling of personal freedom as
depicted in this case. The responsible officials should be prosecuted, without prejudice to the
detainees right to the indemnity to which they may be entitled for the unjustified violation of their
fundamental rights