Memorandum For The Accused
Memorandum For The Accused
Memorandum For The Accused
The accused, JUAN DELA CRUZ, though the undersigned counsel, unto this
Honorable Court most respectfully submit and present this Memorandum in the
above-titled case and aver that:
ISSUES
II. WHETHER OR NOT THE SEIZED 9 NINE SACHETS OF SHABU AND OTHER
PARAPHERNALIA ARE ADMISSIBLE IN EVIDENCE AGAINST THE
ACCUSED.
The right against unreasonable searches and seizures is secured by Section 2, Article
III of the Constitution. However, Law and jurisprudence have laid down the instances
when a warrantless search is valid. These are:
5. Customs search;
The PDEA agents had a Warrant of Arrest when they conducted their
operation. The said warrant was for a certain Felipe dela Cruz for violation of Section
5 of RA 9615 and not the accused. The first instance of a valid warrantless search
cannot be applied here because the target of the warrant is not the same person tried
in this case. It is a warrant of arrest for another person as admitted by one of the
prosecution’s witness, SP02 Diosdado Cabahug. 1
The search was illegal from the start because when they were already inside
the house of the subject of the warrant, they found out that their target was not already
there and yet they continue to search the house. 2 They should have pursued the
target of their mission first instead of continuing the illegal and unreasonable search.
Also, the PDEA committed another blunder because they had already
conducted the illegal search and upon finding drug paraphernalia on the floor of the
house that’s only the time that they frisked one the suspects they caught and found
the nine (9) sachets of ‘shabu’ in his pocket. 3 What they should have done is upon
arresting him, they should have frisked him first for illegal weapons, drugs, etc. before
conducting the search.
.
II. The evidence against the accused is inadmissible against him.
The 1987 Constitution states that a search and consequent seizure must be
carried out with a judicial warrant; otherwise, it becomes unreasonable and any
evidence obtained therefrom shall be inadmissible for any purpose in any proceeding.
The search and seizure conducted by the PDEA in this case is without a valid warrant
and the admissibility of the confiscated drugs can be question on the ground that it
was the fruit of the poisonous tree,
According to Chief Justice Narvasa in the case of People vs. Alicando, December
12, 1995, “We have not only constitutionalized the Miranda warnings in our
jurisdiction. We have also adopted the libertarian exclusionary rule known as the "fruit
of the poisonous tree," a phrase minted by Mr. Justice Felix Frankfurter in the
celebrated case of Nardone v. United States. According to this rule, once the primary
source (the "tree") is shown to have been unlawfully obtained, any secondary or
derivative evidence (the " fruit " ) derived from it is also inadmissible. Stated
otherwise, illegally seized evidence is obtained as a direct result of the illegal act,
whereas the "fruit of the poisonous tree" is the indirect result of the same illegal act.
The "fruit of the poisonous tree" is at least once removed from the illegally seized
evidence, but it is equally inadmissible. The rule is based on the principle that
evidence illegally obtained by the State should not be used to gain other evidence
because the originally illegally obtained evidence taints all evidence subsequently
obtained.”
PRAYER
Respectfully submitted.
Iligan City, August 24, 2012.