People VS Del Rosario
People VS Del Rosario
People VS Del Rosario
FACTS:
Accused Joselito del Rosario was found guilty as co-principal in the crime of Robbery with
Homicide, sentencing him to death.
Del Rosario was charged with this special complex crime together with Ernesto Marquez alias
"Jun," Virgilio Santos alias "Boy Santos" and John Doe alias "Dodong" for having robbed
Virginia Bernas, a 66-year old businesswoman, of P200,000.00 in cash and jewelry and on the
occasion thereof shot and killed her.
While accused Joselito del Rosario pleaded not guilty, Virgilio "Boy" Santos and John Doe alias
"Dodong" remained at large. Ernesto "Jun" Marquez was killed in a police encounter. Only
Joselito del Rosario was tried.
Accused Joselito del Rosario was hired by a certain "Boy" Santos. Their original agreement
was that he would drive him to a cockpit at the Bias Edward Coliseum.
However despite their earlier arrangement, Boy Santos directed him to proceed to the market
place to fetch "Jun" Marquez and "Dodong" Bisaya.
He (del Rosario) acceded.
Marquez and Bisaya boarded in front of the parking lot of Merced Drugstore at the public
market.
Subsequently, he was asked to proceed and stop at the corner of Burgos and General Luna
Sts. where Bisaya alighted on the pretext of buying a cigarette. The latter then accosted the
victim Virginia Bernas and grappled with her for the possession of her bag. Jun Marquez
alighted from the tricycle to help "Dodong" Bisaya.
Accused del Rosario tried to leave and seek help but "Boy Santos" who stayed inside the
tricycle prevented him from leaving and threatened in fact to shoot him.
Meanwhile, "Dodong" Bisaya succeeded in taking the victim's bag, but before boarding the
tricycle "Jun" Marquez mercilessly shot the victim on the head while she was lying prone on the
ground. After the shooting, "Dodong" Bisaya boarded the sidecar of the tricycle while "Jun"
Marquez rode behind del Rosario and ordered him to start the engine and drive towards
Dicarma.
The three (3) men alighted and warned del Rosario not to inform the police authorities about
the incident otherwise he and his family would be harmed.
Del Rosario then went home. Because of the threat, however, he did not report the matter to
the owner of the tricycle nor to the barangay captain and the police.
The day after the commission of the crime, accused Del Rosario was arrested by the police.
del Rosario was handcuffed by the police because allegedly they had already gathered enough
evidence against him and they were afraid that he might attempt to escape.
Del Rosario contends that there was violation of his right to remain silent, right to have
competent and independent counsel preferably of his own choice, and right to be informed of
these rights as enshrined and guaranteed in the Bill of Rights.
ISSUE: Whether the constitutional rights of Del Rosario during custodial investigation violated?
RULING:
YES. Custodial investigation is the stage where the police investigation is no longer a general inquiry
into an unsolved crime but has begun to focus on a particular suspect taken into custody by the police
who carry out a process of interrogation that lends itself to elicit incriminating statements. It is well-
settled that it encompasses any question initiated by law enforces after a person has been taken into
custody or otherwise deprive of his freedom of action in any significant way. 41 This concept of
custodial investigation has been broadened by RA 7438 42 to include "the practice of issuing an
"invitation" to a person who is investigated in connection with an offense he is suspected to have
committed." Section 2 of the same Act further provides that —
. . . . Any public officer or employee, or anyone acting under his order or in his place, who
arrests, detains or investigates any person for the commission of an offense shall inform the
latter, in a language known and understood by him, of his right to remain silent and to have
competent and independent counsel, preferably of his own choice, who shall at all times be
allowed to confer privately with the person arrested, detained or under custodial investigation. If
such person cannot afford the services of his own counsel, he must be provided with a
competent and independent counsel by the investigating officer.
From the foregoing, it is clear that del Rosario was deprived of his rights during custodial investigation.
From the time he was "invited" for questioning at the house of the baranggay captain, he was already
under effective custodial investigation, but he was not apprised nor made aware thereof by the
investigating officers. The police already knew the name of the tricycle driver and the latter was already
a suspect in the robbing and senseless slaying of Virginia Bernas. Since the prosecution failed to
establish that del Rosario had waived his right to remain silent, his verbal admissions on his
participation in the crime even before his actual arrest were inadmissible against him, as the same
transgressed the safeguards provided by law and the Bill of Rights.