G.R. No. 198450 People vs. Fernando Ranche Havana A.K.A. Fernamdo Ranche Abana

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G.R. No.

198450

PEOPLE vs. FERNANDO RANCHE HAVANA a.k.a. FERNAMDO RANCHE ABANA

Facts:

Respondent was convicted of selling illegal drugs. He was caught by police operatives in a buy-
bust after selling 0.03 gram of shabu in exchange of a 100 peso marked money to a civilian-informant.
The respondent was taken to the police station for investigation. The marked money and the plastic pack
containing the suspected shabu were turned over to SPO2 Nuñez who marked the plastic pack with "FA"
the initials of herein appellant. The shabu was turned over to the PNP Crime Laboratory. PCI Salinas, a
forensic chemist of the PNP Crime Laboratory testified that he conducted a laboratory examination of the
recovered specimen that yielded "positive result” for shabu.

RTC and CA convicted Ranche of violating violating Section 5, Article II of Republic Act No. 9165.
Appellant now seeks the reversal of his conviction faulting the courts below for convicting him of the crime
charged. He questions in his Supplemental Brief that:

Issue:

WON (1) the lack of pre-coordination with the PDEA regarding the buy-bust operation, (2) the
non-presentation in court of the unnamed "civilian informant" as poseur-buyer, (3) the non-compliance by
the police officers with the prescribed procedure under Section 21, Article II of RA 9165 (4) the dubious
chain of custody of the subject shabu warrants his conviction

Ruling:

Partially correct.

(1) and (2) In People v. Abedin, coordination with the PDEA is not an indispensable requirement
before police authorities may carry out a buy-bust operation; the absence of coordination with the PDEA
will not invalidate a buy-bust operation. Neither is the presentation of the informant indispensable to the
success in prosecuting drug-related cases. Informers are almost always never presented in court
because of the need to preserve their invaluable service to the police. Unless their testimony is absolutely
essential to the conviction of the accused, their testimony may be dispensed with since their narrations
would be merely corroborative to the testimonies of the buy-bust team.

(3) and (4) In a prosecution for illegal sale of dangerous drugs, the following elements must be
duly established: (1) proof that the transaction or sale took place; and (2) the presentation in court of
the corpus delicti or the illicit drug as evidence." The dangerous drug itself constitutes the very corpus
delicti of the offense and the fact of its existence beyond reasonable doubt plus the fact of its delivery
and/or sale are both vital and essential to a judgment of conviction in a criminal case. And more than just
the fact of sale, is that the identity of the dangerous drug be likewise established beyond reasonable
doubt. Prosecution failed to establish convincingly the chain of custody of the alleged seized plastic pack
of shabu. In fact only PO2 Enriquez and SPO1 Cañete testified in respect to the identity of the alleged
evidence. However, from their testimonies, the prosecution was not able to account for the linkages in the
chain while the plastic pack was not or no longer in their respective possession.

While both witnesses testified that after the sale and apprehension of the appellant, the poseur-
buyer turned over the subject pack of shabu to their team leader SPO1 Espenido, there is no record as to
what happened after the turn-over. SPO1 Espenido to whom the specimen was allegedly surrendered by
the poseur-buyer was not presented in court to identify the person to whom it was given thereafter and
the condition thereof while it was in his possession and control. The prosecution did not offer any
explanation for his non-presentation as a witness. This is a significant gap in the chain of custody of the
illegal stuff. The is also confusion and uncertainty regarding the possessor of the pack of shabu when it
was brought to the police station. By PO2 Enriquez’s account, it was SPO2 Nuñez who was in
possession of the same contrary to the claim of SPO1 Cañete that he was in custody and possession
thereof and that he personally brought it to the police station. It must be observed that SPO2 Nuñez who
had supposedly taken custody of the substance following PO2 Enriquez’s account was likewise not
presented in court to testify. Moreover, the prosecution failed to show how, when and from whom SPO2
Nuñez or SPO1 Cañete received the evidence. There was no evidence on how they came into
possession of the pack of shabu. This is a clear missing link in the chain of custody of the specimen after
it left the hands of SPO1 Espenido.

Nor can the prosecution gain from the testimony of the forensic chemist PCI Salinas. She did not
at all categorically and straightforwardly assert that the alleged chemical substance that was submitted for
laboratory examination and thereafter presented in court was the very same substance allegedly
recovered from the appellant. The only substance of her testimony is that the alleged pack
of shabu submitted to her for laboratory examination showed that it was positive for shabu. Her testimony
was limited only on the result of the examination she conducted and not on the source of the substance.

While the chain of custody should ideally be perfect and unbroken, in reality it is not. As such,
what is of utmost importance "is the preservation of the integrity and the evidentiary value of the seized
items as they will be used to determine the guilt or innocence of the accused." In this case, it is
exceedingly difficult to believe that the integrity and evidentiary value of the drug have been properly
preserved by the apprehending officers. The inexplicable failure of the police officers to testify as to what
they did with the alleged drug while in their respective possession resulted in a breach or break in the
chain of custody of the drug whittles down the chances of the government to obtain a successful
prosecution in a drug-related case.

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