People v. Aminnudin 163 SCRA 402, July 6, 1988 Facts: Idel Aminnudin Was Arrested On June 25,1984, Shortly After Disembarking From The M/V Wilcon 9

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People v.

Aminnudin
163 SCRA 402, July 6, 1988

Facts:

Idel Aminnudin was arrested on June 25,1984, shortly after disembarking from the M/V Wilcon 9
in Iloilo City. The PC officers who were in fact waiting for him simply accosted him, inspected his bag and
finding what looked liked marijuana leaves took him to their headquarters for investigation. The two
bundles of suspect articles were confiscated from him and later taken to the NBI laboratory for
examination. When they were verified as marijuana leaves, an information for violation of the
Dangerous Drugs Act was filed against him. Later, the information was amended to include Farida Ali y
Hassen, who had also been arrested with him that same evening and likewise investigated. Both were
arraigned and pleaded not guilty. Subsequently, the fiscal filed a motion to dismiss the charge against Ali
on the basis of a sworn statement of the arresting officers absolving her after a "thorough
investigation." The motion was granted, and trial proceeded only against the accused-appellant, who
was eventually convicted. According to the prosecution, the PC officers had earlier received a tip from
one of their informers that the accused appellant was on board a vessel bound for Iloilo City and was
carrying marijuana. He was identified by name. Acting on this tip, they waited for him in the evening of
June 25, 1984, and approached him as he descended from the gangplank after the informer had pointed
to him. They detained him and inspected the bag he was carrying. It was found to contain three kilos of
what were later analyzed as marijuana leaves by an NBI forensic examiner, who testified that she
condueted microscopic, cheihical and chromatographic tests on them. On the basis of this finding, the
corresponding charge was then filed against Aminnudin.

In his defense, Aminnudin disclaimed the marijuana, averring that all he had in his bag was his
clothing consisting of a jacket, two shirts and two pairs of pants. He alleged that he was arbitrarily
arrested and immediately handcuffed. His bag was confiscated without a search warrant. At the PC
headquarters, he was manhandled to force him to admit he was carrying the marijuana, the investigator
hitting him with a piece of wood in the chest and arms even as he parried the blows while he was still
handcuffed. He insisted he did not even know what marijuana looked like and that his business was
selling watches and sometimes cigarettes. He also argued that the marijuana he was alleged to have
been carrying was not properly identified and could have been any of several bundles kept in the stock
room of the PC headquarters.

The trial court was unconvinced, noting from its own examination of the accused that he claimed
to have come to Iloilo City to sell watches but carried only two watches at the time, traveling from Jolo
for that purpose and spending P107.00 for fare, not to mention his other expenses. The trial court also
rejected his allegations of maltreatment, observing that he had not sufficiently proved the injuries
sustained by him.

Issue: Whether or not the marijuana found in the bag of the accused admissible in evidence?

Held:

No. The present case presented no such urgency. The police agents had enough time to secure a
warrant to arrest and search the accused but did not do so. In addition to this, the arrest did not fall into
any of the exceptions of a valid warrantless arrest because the accused-
appellant was not, at the moment of his arrest,committing a crime nor was it shown that he was about
to do so or that he had just done so. The constitutional presumption is that the accused is presumed
innocent even if his defense is weak as long as the prosecution is not strong enough to convict him.
Without the evidence of the marijuana allegedly seized from Aminnudin, the case of the
prosecution must fall. That evidence cannot be admitted, and should never have been considered by the
trial court for the simple fact is that the marijuana was seized illegally. It is the fruit of the poisonous
tree, to use Justice Holmes' felicitous phrase. The search was not an incident of a lawful arrest because
there was no warrant of arrest and the warrantless arrest did not come under the exceptions allowed by
the Rules of Court. Hence, the warrantless search was also illegal and the evidence obtained thereby
was inadmissible.

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