LEC 2016 - Review Notes in Cor Ad 1 & 2
LEC 2016 - Review Notes in Cor Ad 1 & 2
LEC 2016 - Review Notes in Cor Ad 1 & 2
CORRECTION
it undertakes the reformation and rehabilitation of offenders for their eventual absorption into the social and
economic streams of the community, through institutional and non-institutional or community-based
treatment programs.
a branch of the Criminal Justice System concerned with the custody, supervision and rehabilitation of criminal
offenders.
CORRECTIONAL ADMINISTRATION
the study and practice of a systematic management of jails or prisons and other institutions concerned with the
custody, treatment, and rehabilitation of criminal offenders
also synonymous with Penal/Jail Management, which defined as the manner or practice of managing or
controlling places of confinement as in jails or prisons
PENOLOGY
from the Latin “poena”; Greek “poine” means "punishment" and the Greek suffix - logia, "study of“.
A division of criminology that deals with prison management and the treatment of offenders and with the
philosophy and practice of various societies in their attempts to repress criminal activities, and satisfy public
opinion via an appropriate treatment regime for persons convicted of criminal offences.
It is also known as Penal Science
It is the study of punishment for crime or of criminal.
PUNISHMENT
the authoritative imposition of an undesirable or unpleasant outcome upon a group or individual, in response to
a particular action or behavior that is deemed unacceptable or threatening to some norm.
the redress (reparation) that the state takes against an offending member of society that usually involves pain
and suffering.
the penalty imposed on an offender for a crime or wrongdoing.
1. Death Penalty
effected by burning, beheading, hanging, breaking on the wheels and other forms of medieval executions.
a) Instant Death – hanging, beheading, and garroting were the most common means of merciful death.
b) Lingering Death – a slow death, often preceded by torture. Offenders who were to be hanged
sometimes had their arms and legs broken first; others were whipped or burned.
2. Physical Torture
effected by maiming/ mutilation, flogging/whipping and other inhumane or barbaric forms of inflicting pain.
a) Iron Maiden was a hollow form shaped like a human and made of an iron braced with iron strips used
in torturing suspect to admit the crime he committed. In this process, the more he denied, the more he
will sacrifice to death;
3. Public Humiliation
putting the offender into shame.
a) Stocks held a prisoner in a sitting position, with feet and hands locked in a frame.
b) Pillory was made to stand with his or her head and hands locked in place, prisoners were frequently
pelted with eggs and rotten fruit.
c) Furca, a V-shaped yolk worn around the neck and where the outstretched arms of the convict were
tied.
4. Banishment or Exile
the sending or putting away of an offender which was carried out either by prohibition against coming into a
specified territory such as an island to where the offender has been removed.
Act of compelling a person to leave the country in which he resides and of which, usually, he is a citizen.
5. Branding
Criminals were branded with a mark or letter signifying their crimes.
Brands, which were often placed on the forehead or another part of the face, served to warn others of an
offender’s criminal history.
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6. Transportation
relocation of criminals to one of the colonies.
7. Slavery
The denial of the natural right of a person to do as he pleases and it consisted in the subjection of an individual
to the ownership of another
8. Imprisonment
Early used of prison was also observed, like –
a) Underground Cistern, used to detain offenders undergoing trial in some cases and to hold sentenced
offenders where they were starved to death;
b) Ergastulum, used to confine slaves where they were attached to workbenches and forced to do hard
labor in the period of their imprisonment.
c) Gaols, are poorly constructed, unsanitary dump, airless, gloomy dungeons, foul smelling places of
detention in England in the early eighteenth century. In this place, the inmates are poorly clothed,
without privacy, and the conditions so deplorable that diseases thrive
d) Prison Hulks, a prison hulk was a hulk used as a floating prison. This was known as “floating hells.”;
Old sailing ships (usually warship) that are no longer used for sea voyages or naval operations, but are
anchored in some English port, where they were used as a prisons or places of confinement of
convicted criminals.
e) Galleys, are long, low, narrow, single decked ships propelled by sails, usually rowed by criminals
when they are meted a sentence of transportation and sent to other territories and continents; a type of
ship used for transportation of criminals in the 16th century; Also known as “floating hells”
f) Sing Sing Prisons, it was build by ELAN LYRD in 1825. It the real prison model where strict silence
was enforced among the inmates that even the movement of their lips would result them to being
beaten and flogged; Became famous in the world because of the Sing Sing bath which was inflicted
aside from the floggings, denial of reading materials and solitary confinement. The shower bath was a
gadget so constructed as to drop a volume of water on the head of a locked naked offender. The force
of icy cold water hitting the head of the offender caused so much pain and extreme shock that
prisoners immediately sank into coma due to the shock and hypothermia or sudden drop in body
temperature.
g) First House of Correction – Bridewell (1552), England obtain its first house of corrections about the
year 1552, when the authorities of London, England, selected what had began a place in St. Bridget’s
Well (later called Bridewell) for locking up, employing, and whipping beggars, prostitutes and night
walkers of all sorts.
Shot drill
a form of punishment inflicted to prisoners by carrying heavy loads from one place to another and then
returned to the same place over and over again every day.
Treadmill
a form of punishment where the prisoner was continually made to constantly climb the stairs;
American Siberia
prisoners were subjected to a sweat box, in which prisoners were put in a steel box under the heat of the sun.
Justification of Punishment
1. Retribution
Sometime termed as Retaliation.
The offender should “pay back” society for the harm he /she has done
“Let the punishment fit the crime”, which is the principle that the severity of penalty for a misdeed or
wrongdoing should be reasonable and proportionate to the severity of the infraction.
2. Expiation or Atonement
Punishment in the form of group vengeance where the purpose is to appease the offended public or group.
3. Deterrence
punishment gives lesson to the offender by showing to others what would happen to them if they violate the
law.
This is based on the idea that punishment of an individual offender will deter him from committing the same
or other offenses in the future (specific deterrence) and will convince others that “crime does not pay” (general
deterrence).
4. Incapacitation and Protection
punishment is effected by placing offenders in prison so that society will be secured from their further criminal
activities.
5. Reformation or Rehabilitation
the establishment of the usefulness and responsibility of the offender to renew him as a law – abiding citizen
and productive member of the society upon his release
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Theories in Justification of Penalties
1. Prevention
the state must punish the criminal to prevent or suppress the danger to the state arising from the criminal acts
of the offender.
2. Self Defense
the state has the right to punish the criminal as a measure of self – defense so as to protect society from the
threat and wrong inflicted by the criminal.
3. Reformation
the object of punishment in criminal cases is to correct and reform the offender
4. Exemplarity
the criminal is punished to serve as an example to deter others from committing crimes.
5. Justice
the criminals must be punished by the state as an act of retributive, a vindication of absolute right and moral
law violated by the criminal.
Display of Punishment:
In the Bible:
1st – when the Godhead discovered the plan of Satan (doubter) to snatch the thrown of heaven from Him, He thrown
Satan and other angels out from heaven (extra – biblical sources)
2nd – when Adam and Eve broke the law of God, they were also thrown out from Garden of Eden
3rd – when Cain murdered his brother Abel, God punished him by placing mark on his brow. It was a cursed of God
upon him
4th – God punished groups of people for gross violating God’s Law. These were great flood which covered the Biblical
World, wherein it rained for forty (40) days and nights, and only Noah, his family as well as the animals that were
in the Ark survived
5th – the destruction of fire and brimstone at Sodom and Gomorrah
Pioneers of Reformation:
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in this book, he wrote about corrective justice, stating that punishment is a means of restoring the balance
between pleasure and pain.
he also explained the concept of restitution when he postulated that corrective justice is a means whereby the
suffering of the victim is compensated
William Penn (1614 – 1718)
the Quaker leader of Pennsylvania passed in 1682, the “Great Law”, embodying the comparatively humane
Quaker criminal code.
Brought the concept of humanitarian treatment of offenders
Forbid torture and the capricious use of mutilation and physical punishment
Charles Montesquieu (1689 – 1755)
A founder of political science
he is a French historian and philosopher who analyzed law as an expression of justice.
His philosophy centered on the social contract whereby free independent individuals agree to form a
community and to give a portion of their individual freedom to benefit the security of the group.
He also criticized inhumane punishment and argued that punishment should fit the crime
Voltaire (1694 – 1778)
also known Francois Marie Arouet
he was the most versatile of all philosophers during the period.
he believes that fear of shame was a deterrent to crime.
he fought the legality-sanctioned practice of torture.
John Howard (1725 – 1790), England
he was sheriff of Bedfordshire in 1773 who devoted his life and fortune to prison reform
“father of prison reform”
he was the person responsible in presenting the terrible and harsh conditions of English Gaols to the authorities
he was the first who advocated the establishment of a penitentiary
Coined the term “penitentiary”
after his findings on English Prisons, he recommended the following:
a) single cells for sleeping,
b) segregation of women,
c) segregation of youth,
d) provision of sanitation facilities,
e) abolition of fee system by which jailers obtained money from prisoners
he was the greatest penal reformer
Sir William Blackstone
he authored the Penitentiary Act of 1779, based on the published work of John Howard with respect to prison
reforms. This was the first law for the creation of penitentiary houses
Jeremy Bentham (1748 – 1832)
the greatest leader in the reform of English Criminal Law.
he believes that whatever punishment designed to negate whatever pleasure or gain the criminal derives from
crime, the crime rate would go down.
the one who designed the “PANOPTICON Model”, a prison that consists a large circular building containing
multi – cells around the periphery.
Panopticon - Or inspection prison house
A building plan made by “Jeremy Bentham”
A tank like structure, covered by a glass roof. The cells were to be arranged around a central
apartment from which the custodians could keep all cells under close observation
Adopted by Jacques Villain in 1771 and applied it to the Prison of Ghent in Belgium
Cesare Beccaria (1738 – 1794)
In his book, “On Crimes and Punishment”, gave one of the first breakthrough in the laying of the foundations
of criminal science.
He believed that the only justification of legal punishment was the protection of the society by prevention of
crime and that the principle of uniform maximum severity, particularly by capital punishment, was wrong and
ineffective.
Concluded that in order that “punishment may never be an act of violence committed by one or many against a
private citizen, it is essential that it be public, speedy and necessary, as little as the circumstances will allow,
proportionate to the crime and established by law”.
Jacques Vilain
He established the Prison of Ghent in the city of Ghent , Belgium in 1771.
In this house of correction, the prisoners were more systematically classified; women and children were kept
in separate cells and the inmates were taught useful trades.
He is considered the FATHER OF PENITENTIARY SCIENCE.
Manuel Montesinos
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The Director of Prisons in Valencia Spain (1835) who divided the number of prisoners into companies and
appointed certain prisoners as petty officers in charge, which allowed good behavior to prepare the convict for
gradual release.
Alexander Maconochie
he is the Superintendent of the penal colony at Norfolk Island in Australia (1840)
who introduced the “Mark System”.
Maconochie’s Mark System
Introduced by Capt. Alexander Maconochie of the English Royal Navy after being appointed to the
Norfolk Island Penal Colony in 1840
A system in which a prisoner is required to earn a number of marks based on proper deportment, labor
and study in order to entitle him for a ticket for leave or conditional release which is similar to parole.
Fundamental principle of this system was based on the substitution of a specific task for the customary
time sentence. So instead of requiring the convicts to serve a fixed term, Maconochie gave them an
opportunity to reduce their sentences. Each prisoner upon arrival at the Norfolk Island was debited
with a number of marks proportional to the seriousness of his offense.
Walter Crofton
He is the Director of the Irish Prison in 1854
who introduced the Irish System that was modified from the Maconochie’s Mark system, which later called
the “progressive human system”
The Irish System
The stages:
a) First, the prisoner must serve twelve months of solitary confinement
b) Second, work in association with other convicts, chiefly on outdoor or public works
c) Third, conditional release for a period of remission earned by hard work and good conducts
which was always liable for revocation
d) Crofton added a FOURTH, which was known as INTERMEDIATE PRISON, in this stage,
which was never less than six months, the prisoners lived in comparative freedom under the
supervision of a few armed guards. They worked together and were housed in unlocked
portable house/huts
Zebulon Brockway
Believed that the reformation of prison inmates could be more successful through education and retraining
than through punishment and repression
The first Director of Elmira Reformatory in New York (1876)
Developed education as the institution’s keystone
Elmira Reformatory
Built in 1876 in Elmira, New York, was considered as based on the idea of Brockway’s new concept of
a correctional institution.
The Elmira Reformatory is considered forerunner of modern penology because it had all the elements
of a modern system with certain innovational programs like the following: training school type,
compulsory education of prisoners, social casework, and extensive use of parole.
Elmira Correctional Facility, also known as "The Hill“
By 1930, it was referred to generally as a “Junior Prison” wherein it became the prototype institution
conceived as a remedy for youthful offenders.
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due to the effort and revelations of the terrible conditions of English gaols crusader, John Howard and the new
theories, the construction of the Milbank Penitentiary was started in 1812, and was finished in 1821 as the
first English Prison.
Was a huge, gloomy and many towered prison, which looked like a thick – spoke wheel, containing three miles
of corridors and hundreds of cells
The Two Rival Prison Systems in the History of Correction
1. Auburn Prison
Enforced a system called “congregate system”, wherein the prisoners are confined in their own cells during the
night and congregate work in shops during the day
Complete silent was enforced.
2. Pennsylvania Prison
Enforced a system called “solitary system”, wherein prisoners are confined in single cells day and night where
they lived, slept, ate and receive religious instructions.
complete silence was also enforced
they are required to read the Bible
Corrections
The fourth pillar of the Philippine Criminal Justice System composed of two major and equally significant
components:
a) Institution – Based Corrections (Institutional Corrections)
b) Community – Based Corrections (Non – Institutional Corrections)
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Bureau of Corrections (BuCor)
The principal task is the rehabilitation of national prisoners.
Board of Pardon and Parole
recommends to the President the prisoners who are qualified for the grant of executive clemency and also
grant parole to qualified prisoners.
Parole and Probation Administration
It conducts post – sentence investigation of petitioners for probation as referred by the courts, as well as pre –
parole or pre – executive clemency investigation to determine the suitability of the offender to be reintegrated
in the community instead of serving their sentence inside an institution or prison.
exercises general supervision over all parolees and probationers and promotes the correction and rehabilitation
of offenders outside the prison institutions.
INSTITUTIONAL CORRECTION
Prisoner
An inmate who is convicted by final judgment.
Detainee
An offender who is accused before a court of law or competent authority who is under preventive
imprisonment or temporarily confined in jail or prison while undergoing investigation or trial or awaiting final
judgment;
Types of Detainees:
1. Undergoing investigation 3. Awaiting final judgment/sentencing
2. Undergoing trial
Insular/National prisoners
those whose sentence is more than three years and are sent to the BUCOR. (3 years and one day to life
imprisonment/death)
Provincial prisoners
those sentenced to six months and one day up to three years of imprisonment and sent to serve in the
Provincial jails having jurisdiction of their sentence.
Municipal prisoners
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those sentenced up to six months (1 day to 6 months) of imprisonment and will serve time at the jail of the
municipality where the offender is convicted.
City prisoners
those who were convicted in city courts and sentenced to a maximum of three years will be sent to serve their
time in City jails and District jails in some clustered areas. (in effect, city jails are the same as a municipal and
provincial jail combined)
Different Penal Facilities that Operates Nationwide
“Prison”
Any correction facility managed by the BUCOR to safekeep and rehabilitate the prisoner convicted by the
final judgment, whose sentence exceeds three (3) years, or who is sentenced to serve two (2) or more prison
terms and who aggregated sentences exceed three (3) years;
“Jail”
A detention or correctional facility managed by the BJMP or the local government unit mandated by law to
safekeep and rehabilitate a prisoner who is under preventive of imprisonment or who is sentenced to not more
than three (3) years of imprisonment by order of a court of a law or competent authority;
Provincial Jails
The Provincial Jail System was first established in 1910 under the American regime.
Each of the country’s provinces has a Provincial Jail to serve as penal facility for prisoners who are
categorized under the law as provincial prisoners and all types of detainees.
For provinces whose jails are overcrowded, a sub – provincial jail was created
Provincial Jails are under the supervision and control of Provincial Governments and headed by a Provincial
Jail Warden.
Although the Local Government Units, which include the Provincial Government, are under the supervision of
the Department of Interior and Local Government, the Provincial Jails operate independently and
autonomously from the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology.
The Memorandum-Circular dated March 7, 1994 issued by the Secretary of Peace and Order of the
Department of Interior and Local Government regarding the Manual of Operations for Provincial Jails are
basically similar to the correctional procedures and practices of the BJMP.
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The only RRCY for girls is the National Training School for Girls located at Marillac Hills, Alabang, Metro
Manila.
The National Training School for Boys (NTSB)
located in Barangay Sampaloc, Tanay Rizal
a rehabilitation center for youth offenders, or Children in Conflict with the Law (CICL) , that
provides them with therapy, counseling, non-formal education and vocational skills training.
The vocational skills training program includes welding, automotive repair, practical
electronics, computer literacy, and agro-farming, which are conducted in the productivity
center.
National Training School for Girls
Located in Marillac Hills, Alabang, Muntinlupa City, Metro Manila.
is a rehabilitation center for girls aged 7 to 17 years old who are victims of abuse, exploitation,
human trafficking and in conflict with the law and have been turned over by the courts to the
Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD).
Through the partnership of the different government agencies, private sector and generous
individuals, the temporary shelter provides quality formal elementary and secondary education
and proper counselling for the residents.
The eight (8) other RRCYs are located in Barangay Urayong, Bauang, La Union for those coming from
Region I, II and the Cordilleras;
Barangay Ayala, Magalang, Pampanga for Region III;
Nueva Valencia in the Island Province of Guimaras for Region VI;
Barangay Candabong, Argao, Cebu for Region VII;
Barangay Sto. Nino, Leyte for Region VIII;
Barangay Anastacio Polanco, Dipolog, Zamboanga del Norte for Region IX;
Gingoog City for Region X; and
Barangay Bago Oshiro, Davao City for Region XI.
Youth offenders from Caraga Region are sent either to Dipolog, Gingoog or Davao depending on which is
most accessible.
Mission
Corrections service compliant to international standards helping enhance public safety in the Philippines.
Vision
Protect the public and prevent crimes in partnership with stakeholders by providing persons under custody
opportunities for reformation, decent environment and secure settings.
Mandates
The BuCor shall be in charge of safekeeping and instituting reformation programs to national inmates
sentenced to more than three (3) years.
BUCOR ORGANIZATION
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The Iuhit Penal Settlement now known as Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm, the largest operating institution
under the BuCor, was established on November 16, 1904 in Puerto Princesa City, province of Palawan in a
28,072 hectares of land on the order of Governor Forbes.
The establishment of this penal facility was made on the suggestion of Governor Luke E. Wright, who felt
the need for an institution designed for incorrigible offenders and made as depository for the prisoners who
could not be accommodated at the Bilibid Prison.
The institution had for its first Superintendent Lt. George Wolfe, a member of the U.S. expeditionary force,
who later became the first Prisons Director.
The settlement was at first beset by outbreaks and attempted escapes on the part of the prisoners.
But under the supervision of Col. John White of the Philippine Constabulary who became superintendent in
1906, the colony became a successful settlement.
Through the Department’s efforts, the Philippine Commission passed Act No. 1723 in 1907 which defined the
status of the settlement as a penal institution.
The land areas expanded to 40,000 hectares in the late 1950’s and expanded again to 41,007 hectares by virtue
of Executive Order No. 67 issued by Governor Newton Gilbert on October 15, 1912.
Iwahig is subdivided into four zones or districts: Central sub-colony, where the headquarters and main
buildings of the colony are located and which has an area of 14,700 hectares; Sta. Lucia with 9,685 hectares;
Montible with 8,000 hectares and Inagawan sub-colony with 13,000 hectares.
In 1955, Administrative Order No. 20 was promulgated by the President and implemented by the Secretary of
Justice and the Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources. This order allowed the distribution of colony
lands for cultivation by deserving colonists. Lots granted did not exceed six hectares.
This penal institution is the shinning symbol of the prison system in the Philippines for it acquired for itself an
international recognition as the first and most successful open penal institution in the world.
It was from this facility that the term “prison without walls” had its beginnings.
COMMITMENT OF INMATES
Commitment
means the entrusting of inmates for confinement to a Jail or Prison authorities by a competent court and
entities for investigation, trial and/or service of sentence.
1) Supreme Court
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2) Court of Appeals
3) Sandiganbayan
4) Regional Trial Court
5) Metropolitan/Municipal Trial Court
6) Municipal Circuit Trial Court
7) Congress of the Philippines
8) All administrative bodies or persons authorized by the law
Commitment order
A written order of a court of law or any other competent authority committing a person to jail or prison for
confinement;
Mittimus
A warrant issued by a court bearing its seal and signature of the judge, directing the jail or prison authorities to
receive inmates for custody or service of sentence imposed therein.
a) Convicts committed to the BUCOR for confinement are brought for admission at the Reception and
Diagnostic Center (RDC).
b) The RDC at the New Bilibid Reservation in Muntinlupa will receive prisoners coming from all over the
country except those sentenced by courts having jurisdiction for the provinces of Zamboanga del Norte,
Zamboanga del Sur, Basilan, Sulu, and Tawi-Tawi who will be brought to the San Ramon Prison and Penal
Farm which also has an RDC facility inside the colony.
c) Inmates accepted by the RDC will be studied and classified, the purpose of which, is the formulation of an
individualized treatment programs designed to achieve the most successful rehabilitation.
d) Sentenced prisoners slapped with the death penalty are not eligible for admission and classification at the
RDC. The Supreme Court rings them directly to the Death Row where they will wait automatic review of their
case.
e) Female inmates for incarceration as national prisoners or those with more than three years maximum sentence
will be brought directly to the Correctional Institute for Women, Mandaluyong City, Metro Manila, and will
also undergo classification at the RDC facility there.
Admission of inmates:
An inmate shall be admitted in the RDC of a prison upon presentation of the following documents:
1) Mittimus/Commitment Order of the court;
2) Information and Court decision in the case;
3) Certification of detention, if any; and
4) Certification that the case of the inmate is not on appeal.
A female inmate shall be received only at the CIW
Procedures:
Upon admission in the RDC, an inmate shall be placed in quarantine for at least five (5) days during which he
shall be:
1) given physical examination to determine any physical illness or handicap or mental ailment and to
segregate those suspected of having an infectious or contagious disease. If found sick, the inmate shall
be immediately confined in the prison hospital;
2) oriented with prison rules; and
3) interviewed by counselor, social worker or other program staff officers. The interview shall be
conducted in private.
After the quarantine period, the inmate shall remain in the RDC for a period not exceeding fifty five (55) days
where he shall undergo psychiatric, psychological, sociological, vocational, educational, religious and other
examinations.
The result of said examinations shall be basis for the inmate’s individualized treatment program.
Thereafter, he shall be assigned to a prison facility as may be recommended by the Chief of the RDC.
These are the:
1) New Bilibid Prison
For those sentenced to death regardless of place of conviction.
Also, for those from the New Capital Region, Regions I,II,III,IV, and V.
2) Sablayan Prison and Penal Farm (SPPF)
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From the Mindoro Province
3) Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm (IPPF)
From the province of Palawan and Region IV-A
4) San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm (SRPPF)
From ARMM and Region XII
5) Davao Prison and Penal Farm (DPPF)
From CARAGA, Region IX,X and XI
6) Leyte Regional Prison (LRP)
From Regions VI,VII,VIII
Upon admission, the inmate will be issued two regulation uniform, two t – shirts, one pair of slippers, a
blanket, mat, pillow with case, mosquito net, and one set mess kit, but this depends on supply availability
The inmate may bring his own clothes and other personal items essential for his well-being inside the facility
provided that the volume of his possessions he will bringing-in will not compromise safety and the situation of
his fellow inmates.
Electrical equipment like television set, radio, cassette, video players, electric fans and the like may be allowed
to be brought in by the Chief of RDC as long as this will not be exclusively used by the owning inmate but
will be shared with others
Unauthorized items brought by the inmate will be placed to the custody of the guard in – charge thereof
properly receipted to be returned upon release or disposed later at the inmates request or ordered condemned
by the Superintendent after two years.
A Classification Board is tasked to classify inmate as to security status and for privilege entitlement.
CLASSIFICATION OF INMATES
Classification
refers to assigning or grouping of inmates according to their sentence, gender, age, nationality, health, criminal
records, etc.
a method by which diagnosis, treatment planning and execution of the treatment programs are coordinated in
the individual case study.
It is a process of determining the needs and requirement of prisoners for assigning them to programs according
to their needs and existing resources.
The Classification Process is adopted to determine the work assignment, type of supervision and custody which will be
applied to the prisoners.
Diagnosis
– Prisoner’s case history is taken and his personality is being studied through examination and observations
Treatment Planning
– The Center’s Staff will formulate a tentative treatment program which is best suited to the needs and interest
of the prisoner as based on its findings.
Execution of the Treatment Program
– It consists in the application of the treatment program or policies of the Classification Committee.
Re-Classification
– The treatment program is kept current with the changing needs and with new analysis on the prisoner based on
any information not available at the time of the initial classification Committee Meeting about the prisoner’s
case and will continue from the time of First Classification up to his release.
The Classification Board will classify inmate as to security status, and as to entitlement to prison privileges:
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1) Maximum security
2) Medium security
3) Minimum security
INMATES COUNT
It is imperative that at specified times during each 24 – hour period, all inmates are physically counted.
The counting must be accurate and if the total jail count does not tally, a recount should be made
At least four (4) times within a 24 – hours period
Before an inmate is released, he shall be properly identified to ensure that he is the same person received and
will be released.
His marks and fingerprints shall be verified with those taken when he was received.
Any changes or differences in his distinguishing marks and scars shall be investigated to ascertain his real
identity in order to prevent the mistaken release of another person.
No inmate shall be release on a mere verbal order or an order relayed by telephone. The release of an inmate
by reason of acquittal, dismissal of case, payment of fines and or indemnity, or filing of bond shall be effected
only upon receipt of the Release Order served by the Court Process server.
The Court Order shall bear the full name of the inmate, the crime he was charged with, the criminal case
number and such other details that will enable the Jail Officer to properly identify the inmate to be released.
These were continuously implemented to eliminate the offenders' pattern of criminal behaviour and to reform
them to become law-abiding and productive citizens.
On January 2, 1991, the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology was created thru Republic Act 6975 as a
line Bureau under the Department of Interior and Local Government.
The Jail Bureau is the upgraded version of its forerunner, the Office of Jail Management and Penology of the
defunct PC/INP last headed by Brig. Gen. Arsenio E. Concepcion.
As mandated by law, the BJMP shall operate under the reorganized Department of the Interior and Local
Government.
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Starting from scratch with 500 personnel in 1991 the BJMP weaned from its mother PC/INP as a mere
component, to become a full-fledge bureau.
Director Charles S. Mondejar took his oath of office on July 1 of 1991 as the first Chief of the Bureau.
Mission
The Bureau aims to enhance public safety by providing humane safekeeping and development of inmates in all
district, city and municipal jails.
Vision
The BJMP envisions itself as a dynamic institution highly regarded for its sustained humane safekeeping and
development of inmates.
provides that the Bureau shall be headed by a Chief who is assisted by two (2) Deputy Chiefs, one (1) for
Administration and another for Operations, and one (1) Chief of Directorial Staff, all of whom are appointed
by the President upon the recommendation of the DILG Secretary from among the qualified officers with the
rank of at least Senior Superintendent in the BJMP.
Organization and Key Positions
The Chief of the BJMP carries the rank of Director and serves a tour of duty that must not exceed four (4)
years, unless extended by the President in times of war and other national emergencies.
Officers who have retired or are within six (6) months from their compulsory retirement age are not qualified
to be appointed as Jail Director or designated as BJMP Chief.
Organization and Key Positions
National Headquarters
It is the Command and Staff Office of the BJMP, and is composed of the Command Group, Directorates and
Management Support Staff.
Regional Office
The BJMP operates and maintains Regional Offices in each of the administrative regions of the country,
headed by a Regional Director for Jail Management and Penology, with the rank of at least Senior
Superintendent.
The Regional Director is assisted by an Assistant Regional Director for Administration, Assistant Regional
Director for Operations, and Regional Chief of Directorial Staff, who are all officers with the rank of at least
Superintendent.
District Jail
Within large cities or a group of clustered municipalities, a District Jail headed by a District Warden may be
established.
“Warden”
The head of the district, municipal and city jails under the BJMP or of the provincial and sub-provincial jails
under the office of the Provincial Governor.
CORE VALUES:
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1) Commitment 3) Efficiency/Competence
2) Respect for Human Rights 4) Teamwork
CORE COMPETENCIES:
1) Continuous skills enhancement of personnel 4) Timely decision-making
2) Ability to establish linkages and Partnerships 5) Expedient implementation
3) Responsive Planning
Reception Procedures:
A decent and humane program of confinement starts with a systematic reception of inmates for commitment to
the BJMP’s jail facilities.
The following procedures should therefore be observed:
1) The jail Desk Officer checks the credentials of the person(s) bringing in the inmate to determine his/her/their
identity and authority. The Officer also ascertains from the person(s) that all law enforcement procedures,
including the verification for standing warrant/criminal record of the arrested person before physical presentation
in court, must have been undertaken prior to the inmate’s transfer/commitment to the jail. It is understood therefore
that other standing warrants must have been served when a person is admitted for jail custody.
2) The jail Desk Officer carefully examines the arrest report and the authenticity of the commitment order or
mittimus in due form to determine whether the inmate has been committed under legal authority.
3) Person arrested by virtue of a Warrant of Arrest must secure a Commitment Order from the court where the
Warrant of Arrest is issued before he can be committed to jail.
4) The admitting jail officer takes all cash and other personal property from the inmate, lists them down on a receipt
form in duplicate, duly signed by him/her and countersigned by the inmate. The original receipt should be kept for
the record and the duplicate copy should be given to the inmate.
5) All cash and other valuables of the inmate must be turned over to the Property Custodian for safekeeping and
covered by official receipts.
6) The inmate is then fingerprinted and photographed.
7) The admitting jail officer accomplishes a jail booking report attaching thereto the inmate’s photograph for
reference.
8) The newly admitted inmate shall be thoroughly strip searched. His/her clothing shall also be carefully examined
for contraband. He/she is then checked for body vermin, cuts, bruises and other injuries, and for needle marks to
determine if he/she is a drug dependent.
9) The jail Medical personnel or the Local Health Officer immediately conducts a thorough medical examination of
the inmate.
10) When it is not possible for the Jail Medical Personnel to be in attendance during the inmate’s admission, the
receiving officers shall observe the mental alertness, overall appearance, physical abnormalities, rashes, scratches
or other identifying marks of the individual and note them down in the inmate’s jail booking report. The offender
observed to be suffering from any contagious disease is immediately isolated.
11) A medical record is accomplished by the Jail Medical Personnel or Local Health Officer, showing the condition of
the inmate at the time of admission and to include, if possible, his/her medical history.
12) Upon commitment, the inmate should be briefed or oriented on the jail rules and regulations by the Chief Custodial
Officer or the Officer of the Day prior to classification and segregation.
13) The sentenced inmates shall be provided with jail clothing. His/her personal clothing should be properly received,
cleaned and stored safely until his/her release. The detainee, for his/her own safety, may be allowed to wear
civilian clothes.
14) The warden establishes and maintains a record of all inmates, consisting of information on the inmate’s name and
alias(es), if any; weight, height and body marks or tattoos, if any; nationality and, if a naturalized Filipino, his/her
previous nationality; previous occupation/profession; prior criminal convictions; and previous place of residence.
In the case of a prisoner, the record shall also indicate the crime of which he/she was convicted; the sentencing
court, his/her sentence and the commencement date thereof; institutional behavior and conduct, and the date he/she
was received for confinement.
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a) In the case of a detainee, the record shall indicate the Criminal case number in the trial court where the
case is pending, or the Case number in the Appellate Court if the case is on appeal and the status of the
appeal; or the reason for his/her detention.
15) Upon completion of the reception procedures, the detainee is assigned to his/her quarters.
16) The detainee should be issued all the materials that he/she will be using during his/her confinement, if such
materials are available.
17) Upon receipt of a detainee, he/she shall be apprised, preferably in the dialect which he/she understands, that under
Article 29 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by the Republic Act No. 6127 and further amended by R.A. No.
10592 regarding his/her preventive imprisonment.
“Preventive Imprisonment”
is a temporary confinement in jail or prison while undergoing investigation or trial or awaiting final judgment;
Duty to Inform Detainees of the Credit for Preventive Imprisonment.
It shall be the duty of the chief of the BJMP, Jail Warden or the Director of the BUCOR having custody the
detention prisoner to inform that the period of his preventive imprisonment shall be deducted from the
term of his imprisonment in accordance with Article 29 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended.
“Recidivist”
A person who, at the time his trial for one crime, shall have been previously convicted by final
judgment of other crime embraced and the same title of the Revised Penal Code, as amended;
18) If the inmate agrees to abide by the same disciplinary rules imposed upon convicted inmates, he/she shall be asked
to sign a Detainee’s Manifestation.
“Detainee’s Manifestation”
A written declaration of a detained prisoner, with the assistant of a counsel, stating his voluntary
agreement to abide by the same disciplinary rules imposed upon a convicted prisoner for the purpose
of availing the full credit of the period of his preventive imprisonment;
19) If the inmate refuse to abide by the same disciplinary rules imposed upon convicted inmates, the Warden issues a
Certification under oath to the effect that the detainee was apprised of the provisions of Article 29 of the Revised
Penal Code, as amended.
“Detainee’s Waiver”
A written declaration of a detained prisoner, with the assistant of a counsel, stating his refusal to abide
by the same disciplinary rules imposed upon a prisoner convicted by final judgment and thus be
entitled to a credit of four-fifths (4/5) of the time during preventive imprisonment;
Deduction for Credit for Preventive Imprisonment when Impossible Penalty is Reclusion Perpetua.
Credit for preventive imprisonment for the penalty of reclusion perpetua shall be deducted from thirty
(30) years.
20) The Warden submits the Detainee’s Manifestation or Certification as the case may be, to the proper court before
the date set for the arraignment of the inmate and the same shall form part of the records of the case.
a) The same procedure shall be followed with respect to all accused persons who have been convicted but
whose cases are pending appeal before a higher court. The Detainees Manifestation or Certification as the
case may be, shall form part of the records of the case.
CLASSIFICATION PROCEDURES
Classification Board:
a) Chairman – Deputy Warden
b) Member – Chief, Custodial/Security Officer
Member – Medical Officer/Public Health Officer
Member – Jail Chaplain
Member – Inmates Welfare and Development Officer
DISCIPLINARY BOARD
A Disciplinary Board shall be organized and maintained by jails for the purpose of hearing disciplinary cases
involving any inmate who violate jail rules and regulations.
It shall be composed of the following:
a) Chairman – Deputy Warden
b) Member – Chief, Custodial/Security Officer
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Member – Medical Officer/Public Health Officer
Member – Jail Chaplain
Member – Inmates Welfare and Development Officer
Member – Inmate’s Representative
If the above composition is not feasible because of personnel limitations, the Warden shall perform the Board’s
functions as a Summary Disciplinary Officer.
Punishable Acts
A. Minor Offenses
1) Selling or bartering with fellow inmate(s) those items not classified as contraband;
2) Rendering personal service to fellow inmate(s);
3) Untidy or dirty personal appearance;
4) Littering or failing to maintain cleanliness and orderliness in his/her quarters and/or surroundings;
5) Making frivolous or groundless complaints;
6) Taking the cudgels for or reporting complaints on behalf of other inmates;
7) Late in formation during inmate headcount without justifiable reasons; and
8) Willful waste of food
C. Grave Offenses
1) Making untruthful statements or lies in any official communication, transaction, or investigation;
2) Keeping or concealing keys or locks of places in the jail which are off-limits to inmates;
3) Giving gifts, selling, or bartering with jail personnel;
4) Keeping in his/her possession money, jewelry, cellular phones or other communication devices, and other
items classified as contraband under the rules;
5) Tattooing others or allowing him/her to be tattooed on any part of the body, or keeping any paraphernalia to be
used in tattooing;
6) Forcibly taking or extorting money from fellow inmates and visitors;
7) Punishing or inflicting injury or any harm upon himself/herself or other inmates;
8) Receiving, keeping, taking or drinking liquor and prohibited drugs;
9) Making, improvising, or keeping any kind of deadly weapon;
10) Concealing or withholding information on plans of attempted escapes;
11) Unruly conduct and flagrant disregard of discipline and instructions;
12) Escaping, attempting, or planning to escape from the institution or from any guard;
13) Helping, aiding, or abetting others to escape;
14) Fighting, causing any disturbance or participating therein and/or agitating to cause such disturbance or riot;
15) Indecent, immoral, or lascivious acts by himself/herself or others and/or allowing himself/herself to be the
subject of such indecent, immoral, or lascivious acts;
16) Willful disobedience to a lawful order issued by any BJMP personnel;
17) Assaulting any BJMP personnel;
18) Damaging any government property or equipment;
19) Participating in kangaroo court, an unauthorized or irregular court conducted with disregard for or perversion
of legal procedures as a mock court by the inmates in a jail/prison;
20) Affiliating with any gang or fraction whose main purpose is to foment regionalism or to segregate themselves
from others;
21) Failing to inform the authorities concerned when afflicted with any communicable disease, such as
tuberculosis, sexually – transmitted diseases, etc.;
22) Engaging in gambling or any game of chance;
23) Committing any act which is in violation of any law or ordinance, in which case, he/she shall be prosecuted
criminally in accordance with law; and
24) Committing any act prejudicial to good order and discipline
DIVERSIFICATION in prison:
Diversification
is an administrative device of correctional institutions of providing varied and flexible types of physical plants
for more effective custody, security and control of the treatment programs of its diversified population.
It also refers to the principle of separating homogenous type of prisoners that requires special treatment and
custody. Separation can be done through proper classification of inmates. It can be done either building special
institution for different classes of prisoners through proper segregation of inmates that is big institution can be
broken into smaller units.
This aims to prevent prisoners from moral and physical contamination of one group by another, more effective
execution of treatment programs and prevent unnecessary custodial risks.
Female
The female quarters should be fully separated from the male quarters;
In larger jails, a female personnel may be designated to keep the keys to the female quarters and make the
same available at any time;
No male inmate shall be allowed to enter the female quarters; and,
Only work suitable to their age and physical condition should be assigned to female inmates.
Drug Users/Dependents/Addicts
Inmates found to be drug users/dependents/addicts should be segregated from other inmates, especially during
the withdrawal period;
Maintain close supervision of inmates to prevent attempts to commit suicide and self-mutilation;
Only a qualified physician shall prescribe sedatives/stimulants deemed necessary for the inmate’s treatment;
Appropriate measures should be taken to enable inmates to follow strictly the jail physician’s advice regarding
diet and other medical interventions/treatments during the withdrawal period; and,
Conduct a regular search of the inmate’s quarters and maintain constant alertness to prevent the smuggling of
narcotics and other dangerous drugs.
Alcoholics
Place alcoholics in quarters separate from other inmates and maintain close supervision to guard against
suicide attempts;
Any symptoms of abnormal behavior among inmates should be reported immediately to the jail physician; and
Exercise close supervision to guard against the smuggling of liquor and other intoxicating drinks or products
containing alcohol.
Mentally-ill
The mentally-ill should be under the close supervision of a jail medical personnel;
Place the mentally-ill in separate cells and special restraint rooms provided for violent cases;
Exercise close supervision to guard against suicide attempts or violent attacks on others; and
The mentally-ill should be transferred as soon as feasible to mental institutions for proper psychiatric
treatment.
Sex Deviates
Homosexuals should be segregated immediately to prevent them from influencing other inmates or being
maltreated or abused by other inmates; and’
Other sex deviates should be separated from other inmates for close supervision and control.
Suicidal Inmates
The suicidal inmate should be given close and constant supervision;
Search their quarters and premises for tools/materials that can be used for suicide; and
They should be subjected to frequent strip searches.
The Handicapped, Aged and Infirmed
These inmates should be housed separately and closely supervised to protect them from maltreatment or abuse
by other inmates; and
Special treatment should be given to these inmates who shall be required to work in accordance with their
physical capabilities for their own upkeep and to maintain the sanitation of their quarters and surroundings.
Non-Philippine Citizen Inmates
The Warden shall report to the Bureau of Immigration and the respective embassies of the detained foreigners
the following:
a) Name of Jail e) Offense Charged
b) Name of Foreigner f) Case Number
c) Nationality and the number of his/her g) Court/Branch
Alien Certificate h) Status of Case
d) Age/Sex
1) Conduct regular briefing for every shift, especially before any member of the custodial force assumes his/her duty
and before the escort personnel leave with inmates for court hearing and other authorized/lawful destination.
2) Maintain strict control of firearms. Never permit any firearm inside the jail except in some areas where firearms
are authorized.
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3) Maintain 24-hour supervision of inmates;
4) Maintain a system of key control. Never permit the inmates to handle keys.
5) Secure firearms and anti-riot equipment in the armory wherein they can be within easy reach of jail officer yet
afford maximum security against access by inmates.
6) Supervise the proper use of tools and other potentially dangerous articles such as bottles, acids, kitchen knives,
etc., and keep them out of any inmates reach when not in use;
7) conduct regular inmates count, at least four (4) times within a 24-hours period. Establish procedures, which will
insure beyond doubt, that every inmate is physically present or accounted for, at every count.
8) Conduct frequent surprise searches of inmates and their quarter to detect contraband.
9) Conduct frequent inspections of security facilities to detect tampering or defects;
10) guard against escapes, assault on jail personnel and inmates disturbances;
11) Develop plans dealing with emergencies like escapes, fires, assaults and riots. Make these plans known and
understood by jail personnel;
12) Never allow gay and lesbian jail officer to perform search and custodial functions.
13) Never allow a jail officer to render successive shift of duty except in cases of emergencies;
14) Designate a gate supervisor for every shift who will be made administratively responsible and accountable for the
daily activities at the entrance gate of jail;
15) Never allow a jail officer to open the inmates’ quarter alone. At lease one (1) other jail officer should be present;
and,
16) Select carefully the inmates to be assign as jail aide and maintain rigid control over their activities. No inmate
should be allowed to assumes any authority which belongs to jail personnel or to exercise authority, supervision
and control over other inmate.
COUNTING PROCEDURES
It is imperative that at specified times during each 24-hour period, all inmates are physically counted. For this type of
count, the general procedures are as follows:
Inmates Count:
1) Formal Count – is a regular, required count of all residents in the institution. It is normally done five to six times
each 24-hour period.
2) Census /Informal Count – is a frequent but irregular check to verify that all residents under the supervision of an
officer are present. This count is often done on work details or programs.
3) Emergency Count – is taken due to unusual circumstances, such as escapes, riots, or disturbances.
MEAL SERVICE
1) Security must be considered in the serving of food inside the cells/ quarters.
2) A jail officer should not enter the inmates’ quarter to distribute food unless another officer is available to handle
the keys and control the entrance door.
3) If only one officer is on duty, it is essential that the door be locked to preempt being overpowered by the inmates.
MAIL CENSORSHIP
To ease the strain of detention, inmates shall be encouraged to maintain wholesome contact with friends and
relatives through correspondence.
However, the privilege of sending and receiving mail that is extended to inmates shall be properly supervised and
handled to obviate the possibility of smuggling contraband and to use this medium as a means of illicit
communication.
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The following procedures shall be strictly observed when censoring mail:
1) Mail shall not be distributed to the inmates until an authorized jail personnel have examined it in the presence of
other inmates as witness;
2) Letters containing currency, checks or money shall be marked with the amount enclosed and deposited with the
Jail Property Custodian. The receiving officer shall list down the amount received on a receipt form in duplicate.
The original receipt signed by the receiving officer shall be kept for the record and the duplicate copy shall be
given to the inmate for his/her information;
3) Bring to the Warden’s attention any correspondence that does not conform to regulations or are detrimental to
security, order and discipline of the jail;
4) In the censoring of mail, jail slang, unusual nicknames and sentences with double meanings should be carefully
studied and analyzed to determine the real meanings;
5) All letters passed by censors should bear the censor’s stamp at the top of each page and on the envelope. The letter
should be placed back in the same envelop and resealed;
6) A listing of mail for inmates should be properly posted in a conspicuous place. A copy of such listing will also
form part of the records of the jail;
7) If the inmate fails to claim his/her letter within twenty four (24) hours after it has been posted, the mail shall be
delivered to them;
8) Do not discuss the contents of inmates’ mail with other jail personnel, except for official purposes; and,
9) All outgoing mails shall pass through the normal mail facility of the jail subject to the usual censorship.
EMERGENCY PLANS
Emergency plans for both natural and man-made calamities and other forms of jail disturbances shall be
formulated to suit the physical structure and other factors peculiar to every jail, such as:
MOVEMENT/TRANSFER OF INMATES
Inmates may be moved or transferred under the following circumstances:
1) Subject to the conditions set forth by the succeeding Sections, an inmate may be brought out from jail in any of the
following instances:
a) To appear, as witness or as accused, before any court of justice during preliminary investigation,
arraignment or hearing of a criminal case;
b) To appear, as witness with leave of court in any investigation or formal inquiry being conducted by a
government agency;
c) To view with leave of court the remains of a deceased relative within the second degree of affinity or
consanguinity; and,
d) To undergo with leave of court medical examination or treatment in an outside hospital or clinic.
2) An inmate maybe transferred to another institution only upon specific order of the court having jurisdiction over
him/her, except in cases of serious illness where hospitalization is necessary, and the detainee has to be
immediately taken to the nearest hospital, with the Court subsequently notified.
3) In any emergency or other compelling situations / necessities when the transfer to other jails of inmates involved is
necessary to ensure the safety and security of the inmates and personnel, the Warden can recommend to the
Regional Director verbally or in writing, their immediate transfer to another jail within the region provided that, on
the first hour of the following working day, the Court concerned must be informed of the said transfer.
4) For those inmates who wish to view the remains of the deceased relative, leave of court shall be first obtained.
a) However, the Warden may request reconsideration from the court to recall and disapprove said order under
any of the following grounds:
i. The deceased relative is lying-in-state in a place beyond thirty (30) kilometer radius from the place
of confinement of the inmate or, in any case, where the inmate cannot return to said place during
daylight hours;
ii. The detainee has a record of escape; and,
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iii. The detainee is classified as high risk / high profile and the jail has inadequate resources to ensure
his / her safety and security.
5) Before leaving the jail for the authorized destination, the inmate shall turn-over to the Warden such amount that
may be necessary to pay for his transportation and meal expenses and those of the jail officers escorting him.
1) Jail Wardens must agree on the use of facilities for the temporary detention or imprisonment of an inmate from
other localities before, during and after trial.
2) Wardens effecting the movement / transfer of an inmate shall shoulder all expenses for transportation and other
incidental expenses of the same while confined in other jails.
RIGHTS of inmates:
Although the purpose for committing a person on jail is to deprive him of liberty in order to protect society against
crime, such person is still entitled to certain rights even while in detention.
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2) Before an inmate is released, he shall be properly identified to ensure that he is the same person received and will
be released. His marks and fingerprints shall be verified with those taken when he was received. Any changes or
differences in his distinguishing marks and scars shall be investigated to ascertain his real identity in order to
prevent the mistaken release of another person.
3) No inmate shall be released on a mere verbal order or an order relayed by telephone. The release of an inmate by
reason of acquittal, dismissal of case, payment of fines and or indemnity, or filing of bond shall be effected only
upon receipt of the Release Order served by the Court Process server. The Court Order shall bear the full name of
the inmate, the crime he was charged with, the criminal case number and such other details that will enable the Jail
Officer to properly identify the inmate to be released.
4) Upon proper verification from the court of the authenticity of the Order, an inmate shall be released promptly and
without reasonable delay.
5) Upon proper receipt, all money and other valuables held in trust when first admitted shall be returned to the inmate
upon release.
6) The released inmate shall be issued a Certification of Discharge from jail by the Warden/ Wardress or his/her
authorized representative.
SEARCHES:
Purpose: Protect staff and residents and reduce the potential for escape by:
a) Controlling what the resident has in their possession.
b) Reducing Contraband
c) Controlling what enters the facility
Categories:
a) STRATEGIC – A planned search scheduled at specific times & locations.
b) TACTICAL – Searches conducted as a result of emergency or crises.
c) RANDOM – Searches conducted for no apparent reason, at any time.
Search Levels:
a) CURSORY – Ongoing “visual“ search of a resident, person, place or thing.
b) INSPECTION – A “conditional standard” check of a resident, & place.
c) AMPLIFIED – A personal search of resident, place or thing.
Personal Searches:
Three Types of Body Searches
a) The Pat-frisk or Pat-down search c) The Cavity Search
b) The Strip Search
Note: Pat-down searches are used to control movement of contraband within the facility.
Strip searches are used to control the entry of contraband in the facility.
The typical areas in a correctional facility which will need search in a regular basis is the housing unit or cell.
CELL SEARCH
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(Prior to the search, make sure you have the appropriate equipment and adequate staff to control any resident/s that
may have to be removed from the housing unit and /or contained while search is in progress)
GREYHOUND OPERATIONS
Definition:
– Search and seizure operations to rid jail facilities of contraband
Purpose:
– Systematically eliminate contraband and such other materials in all BJMP-manned facilities that could have
adverse implications on its overall administration to ultimately put order in all jails, promote operational
efficiency and encourage adherence to prescribed operating policies.
1) Control Model
a prison management, which emphasizes prisoner obedience, work and education
2) Responsibility Model
a prison management that stresses prisoners’ responsibility for their own action, not administrative control to
assure prescribed behavior.
Proper classification of inmates, according to this model, permits placing prisoners in the least restrictive
prison consistent with security, safety, and humane confinement.
Prisoners should be given a significant degree of freedom and be held to account for their actions
3) Custodial Model
based on the assumption that prisoners have been incarcerated for the protection of society and for the purpose
of incapacitation, deterrence and retribution.
It emphasizes maintenance, security and order through the subordination of the prisoner to the authority of the
warden.
Discipline is strictly applied and most aspect of behavior is regulated
4) Rehabilitation Model
security and housekeeping activities are viewed primarily as a framework for rehabilitative efforts.
Professional treatment specialist enjoys a higher status than other employees, in accordance with the idea that
all aspect of prison management should be directed towards rehabilitation with the rethinking of the goal of
rehabilitation.
5) Reintegration Model
although an offender is confined in prison, that experience is pointed toward reintegration into society
this kind of treatment gradually gives inmates greater freedom and responsibility during their confinement and
move them into a halfway house, work release programs, or community correctional center before releasing
them to supervision.
this model is based on the assumption that it is important for the offender to maintain or develop ties with free
society
the entire focus of this approach is on the resumption of a normal life
1) Null Strategy
says that “nothing should be done”, that prisoners should be allowed to become increasingly congested and
staff should remain to maintain them with the assumption that the problem is temporary and will disappear in
time.
2) Selective Incapacitation Strategy
urge that expensive and limited prison space with the necessary number of staff to maintain them should be
used more effectively by targeting the individuals whose incarceration will do the most to reduce crime.
It shows that the incarceration of some career criminals has a pay off in the prevention of multiple serious
offenses.
3) Population-Reduction Strategy
incorporates front door and back door strategies.
front door strategies divert offenders to non-incarcerative sanctions, among them are; community service,
restitution, fines, and probation.
while the back-door strategies such as detention, parole, work release and good behavior are devised to get
offenders out of the prison before the end of their terms in order to free space for new comers.
4) Construction Strategy
building of new facilities to meet the demand for prison space for an advantageous prison management.
the approach comes to mind when legislators and correctional officials confront the problem on prison
crowding, sanitation and prison violence to expand the size, number of facilities and personnel.
5) Population-Sensitive Flow Control Strategy
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urges the sentencing be linked to the availability of prison space and management staff; that policies be
developed allowing the release of the prisoners when prison facilities become crowded and staff are greatly
outnumbered to manage prisoners.
each court be allotted a certain amount of prison space and staff members so that the judges and prosecutors
make certain decisions accordingly
this strategy depends on the political will to release prisoners even in the face of public protest.
Total Institution
“the prison, like other total institution, is a place of residence and work where a large number of like-situated
individuals, cut off from wider society for an appreciable period of time, together lead an enclosed, formally
administered round of life”.
a prison must be such an institution in the sense that whatever prisoners do or not do begins and ends there;
completely encapsulates the lives of the people who work and live there
every minute behind bars must be lived in accordance with the rules as enforced by the staff
-------END-------
NON – INSTITUTIONAL BASED Correctional Practices
Roselyn T. Lopez, M.S.Crim
PROBATION
“Probation”
a disposition under which a defendant, after conviction and sentence, is released to the supervision of
a probation officer subject to conditions imposed by the court.
another form of non-institutional corrections practices that gives a sentenced convict the chance to
reform and rehabilitate himself without having to spend time in jails.
does not confine to prison a sentenced prisoner but rather he will released and undergo personalized
community - based treatment
“Petitioner”
a convicted defendant who files an application for probation.
“Probationer”
a person placed on probation.
“Probation Officer”
who investigates for the court a referral for probation or supervises a probationer or does both
functions and performs other necessary and related duties and functions as directed.
“Probation Order”
order of the Trial Court granting probation.
HISTORY OF PROBATION
John Augustus
Appreciated with this theory, was John Augustus, a shoemaker who serve as a responsible person for
the release of a confirmed drunkard from the Police Court of Boston. This offender in his custody
turned “sober, and industrious citizen and this resulted to the passage of first Probation Law in April
26, 1878 which was signed by Governor Alexander B. Rice in Massachusetts.
John Augustus was interceding with the courts to suspend the sentence of youthful offenders and
alcoholics and place them in his charge and help them find employment. If the prisoner did well,
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Augustus would recommend a sentence other than incarceration to the court, which usually accepted
his recommendations.
John Augustus, the "Father of Probation," is recognized as the first true probation officer.
PROBATION - A term coined by John Augustus, from the Latin verb “probare" - to prove; to test.
In 1887, the City of Boston appointed the first government probation officer in the name of Edward
H. Savage, the former chief of police of Boston City.
August 7, 1935
Probation was first introduced in the Philippines during the American colonial period (1898–1945)
with the enactment of Commonwealth Act No. 4221 of the Philippine Legislature.
This law created a Probation Office under the Department of Justice.
1972
House Bill No. 393 was filed in Congress, which would establish a probation system in the
Philippines. This bill avoided the objectionable features of Act 4221 that struck down the 1935 law as
unconstitutional. The bill was passed by the House of Representatives, but was pending in the Senate
when Martial Law was declared and Congress was abolished.
Aware of the needs of the Criminal Justice System of the country, then Congressman Teodulo C.
Natividad, the first Probation Administrator, introduced in Congress House Bill 393 entitled “An Act
Establishing Probation in the Philippines”; Providing Probation Officers therefore and for Other
Purposes”.
1975
the National Police Commission Interdisciplinary drafted a Probation Law. After 18 technical
hearings over a period of six months, the draft decree was presented to a selected group of 369 jurists,
penologists, civic leaders and social and behavioral scientists and practitioners. The group
overwhelmingly endorsed the establishment of an Adult Probation System in the country.
Teodulo C. Natividad
Father of Probation in the Philippines.
Grant of Probation
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the trial court may, after it shall have convicted and sentenced a defendant, and upon application by
said defendant within the period for perfecting an appeal, suspend the execution of the sentence and
place the defendant on probation for such period and upon such terms and conditions as it may deem
best; Provided, That no application for probation shall be entertained or granted if the defendant has
perfected the appeal from the judgment of conviction.
"Probation may be granted whether the sentence imposes a term of imprisonment or a fine only. An
application for probation shall be filed with the trial court. The filing of the application shall be
deemed a waiver of the right to appeal.
"An order granting or denying probation shall not be appealable."
Conditions of Probation
Every probation order issued by the court shall contain conditions requiring that the probationer shall;
a) Present himself to the probation officer designated to undertake his supervision at such place
as may be specified in the order within seventy two (72) hours from receipt of said order;
b) Report to the probation officer at least once a month at such time and place as specified by
said officer.
The court may also require the probationer to:
a) cooperate with a program of supervision;
b) meet his family responsibilities;
c) devote himself to specific employment and not to change said employment without the prior
written approval of the probation officer;
d) undergo medical, psychological psychiatric examination and treatment and enter and remain
in a specified institution, when required for that purpose;
e) pursue a prescribed secular study or vocational training;
f) attend or reside in a facility established for instruction, recreation or residence of persons on
probation;
g) refrain from visiting houses of ill-repute;
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h) abstain from drinking intoxicating beverages to excess;
i) permit the probation officer or an authorized social worker to visit his home and place of
work;
j) reside at premises approved by it and not to change his residence without its prior written
approval; or
k) satisfy any other conditions related to the rehabilitation of the defendant
Period of Probation
The period of probation of a defendant sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not more than one
year shall not exceed two years, and in all other cases, said period shall not exceed six years.
When the sentence imposes a fine only and the offender is made to serve subsidiary imprisonment in
case of insolvency, the period of probation shall not be less than nor be more than twice the total
number of days of subsidiary imprisonment as computed at the rate established in Article thirty-nine
of the Revised Penal Code, as amended.
Republic Act No. 10159, April 10, 2012
An Act amending Article 39 of Act No. 3815, as amended, otherwise known as the Revised
Penal Code
Subsidiary Penalty. Instead of P8.00, it is now P426.00. (at the rate of one day for each
amount equivalent to the highest minimum wage rate prevailing in the Philippines at the time
of the rendition of judgment of conviction by the trial court)
Termination of Probation
After the period of probation and upon consideration of the report and recommendation of the
probation officer, the court may order the final discharge of the probationer upon finding that he has
fulfilled terms and conditions of his probation and thereupon, the case is deemed terminated.
The final discharge of the probationer shall operate to restore to him all civil rights lost or suspended
as a result of his conviction and to fully discharge his liability for any fine imposed as to the offense
for which probation was granted.
The probationer and the probation officer shall each be furnished with a copy of such order.
Confidentiality of Records
The investigation reports and the supervision history of a probationer obtained shall be privileged and
shall not be disclosed directly and indirectly to anyone other than the Probation Administration or the
court concerned, except that the court, in its discretion, may permit the probationer or his attorney to
inspect the aforementioned documents or parts thereof whenever the best interest of the probationer
makes such disclosure desirable or helpful.
Provided, further, that, any government office or agency engaged in the correction or rehabilitation of
offenders may, if necessary, obtain copies of said documents for its official use from the proper court
or the Administration.
Probation Administration
created under the Department of Justice
referred to as the Administration, which shall exercise general supervision over all probationers.
The Administration shall have such staff, operating units and personnel as may be necessary for the
proper execution of its functions.
Probation Administrator
The administration shall be headed by the Probation Administrator, hereinafter referred to as the
Administrator, who shall be appointed by the President of the Philippines
He shall hold office having good behavior and shall not removed except for cause.
Probation Aides
citizens of good repute and probity to act as probation aides appointed by Probation Administrator
to assist the Provincial or City Probation Officers in the supervision of probationers.
Outside Travel
A Probation Officer may authorize a probationer to travel outside his area of operational/territorial
jurisdiction for a period of more than (10) days but not to exceed thirty (30) days.
A Probationer who seeks to travel up to thirty (30) days outside the operational/territorial jurisdiction
of the Probation Office shall file at least five (5) days before the intended travel schedule, a Request
for Outside Travel with said office properly recommended by the Supervising Probation Officer on
case and approved by CPPO.
If the requested outside travel is for more than thirty (30) days, said request shall be recommended by
the CPPO and submitted to the Trial Court for approval.
Early Termination
The following probationers may be recommended for the early termination of their probation period:
a) Those who are suffering from serious physical and/or mental disability such as deaf-mute, the
lepers, the crippled, the bed-ridden, and the like;
b) Those who do not need further supervision, like consistent and religious compliance with all
the conditions imposed in the order granting probation; positive response to the programs of
the supervision designed to their rehabilitation, etc.
c) Those who have to travel abroad or render public office.
“Parole”
refers to the conditional release of an offender from a correctional institution after he has served the
minimum of his prison sentence;
“Executive Clemency”
refers to Reprieve, Absolute Pardon, Conditional Pardon with or without Parole Conditions and
Commutation of Sentence as may be granted by the President of the Philippines;
“Reprieve”
refers to the deferment of the implementation of the sentence for an interval of time; it does not annul
the sentence but merely postpones or suspends its execution;
temporary stay of the execution of a sentence
“Commutation of Sentence”
refers to the reduction of the duration of a prison sentence of a prisoner;
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a heavier or longer sentence is reduced to a lighter or shorter term
“Pardon”
A form of executive clemency granted by the President of the Philippines as a privilege extended to a
convict as a discretionary act of grace
“Conditional Pardon”
refers to the exemption of an individual, within certain limits or conditions, from the punishment
which the law inflicts for the offense he had committed resulting in the partial extinction of his
criminal liability;
“Absolute Pardon”
refers to the total extinction of the criminal liability of the individual to whom it is granted without
any condition.
It restores to the individual his civil and political rights and remits the penalty imposed for the
particular offense of which he was convicted;
“Amnesty”
A special form of pardon exercised by the President
A general pardon extended to a certain class of people who are usually political offenders
“Board”
refers to the Board of Pardons and Parole;
“Executive Director”
refers to the Executive Director/Secretary of the Board;
“Director”
refers to the Director of the Bureau of Corrections;
“Penal Superintendent”
refers to the Officer-In-Charge of the New Bilibid Prison, the Correctional Institution for Women and
the Prison and Penal farms of the Bureau of Corrections;
“Prison Record”
refers to information concerning an inmate’s personal circumstances, the offense he committed, the
sentence imposed, the criminal case number in the trial and appellate courts, the date he commenced
serving his sentence, the date he was received for confinement, the place of confinement, the date of
expiration of the sentence, the number of previous convictions, if any, and his behavior or conduct
while in prison;
“Carpeta”
refers to the institutional record of an inmate which consists of his mittimus or commitment order
issued by the Court after conviction, the prosecutor’s information and the decisions of the trial court
and the appellate court, if any; certificate of non-appeal, certificate of detention and other pertinent
documents of the case;
“Petitioner”
refers to the prisoner who applies for the grant of executive clemency or parole;
“Parolee”
refers to a prisoner who is released on parole;
“Pardonee”
refers to a prisoner who is released on conditional pardon;
“Client”
refers to a parolee/pardonee who is placed under supervision of a Probation and Parole Officer;
“Release Document”
refers to the Conditional Pardon/Absolute Pardon issued by the President of the Philippines to a
prisoner or to the “Discharge on Parole” issued by the Board;
“Summary Report”
refers to the final report submitted by the Probation and Parole Officer on his supervision of a
parolee/pardonee as basis for the latter’s final release and discharge;
The BPP may grant parole under special considerations for the following considerations:
1) Old age, provided the inmate is below sixty (60) years of age when crime was committed;
2) Physical disability such as when the petitioner is bed-ridden, deaf-mute, a leper, cripple or blind,
provided such physical disability is not present when the crime was committed;
3) Serious illness duly certified by a government physician; and
4) Similar circumstances which show that continued imprisonment will be inhuman or will pose grave
danger to the life of the petitioner.
5) Aliens granted parole by the BPP shall be turned over to the Bureau of Immigration and Deportation
for disposition, documentation and appropriate order.
A national inmate, for purposes of these rules, is one who is sentenced to a maximum term of
imprisonment of more than three (3) years or to a fine of more than five thousand pesos; or regardless
of the length of sentence imposed by the Court, to one sentenced for violation of the customs law or
other laws within the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Customs or enforceable by it, or to one sentenced
to serve two (2) or more prison sentences in the aggregate exceeding the period of three (3) years."
Grant of Parole
A prisoner may be granted parole whenever the Board finds that there is a reasonable probability that
if released, he will be law-abiding and that his release will not be incompatible with the interest and
welfare of society.
Disqualifications for Parole – parole shall not be granted to the following inmates:
1) Those convicted of offenses punished with death penalty, reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment;
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2) Those convicted of treason, conspiracy or proposal to commit treason or espionage;
3) Those convicted of misprision of treason, rebellion, sedition or coup d' etat;
4) Those convicted of piracy or mutiny on the high seas or Philippine waters;
5) Those who are habitual delinquents, i.e., those who, within a period of ten (10) years from the date of
release from prison or last conviction of the crimes of serious or less serious physical injuries,
robbery, theft, estafa, and falsification, are found guilty of any of said crimes a third time or oftener;
6) Those who escaped from confinement or evaded sentence;
7) Those who having been granted conditional pardon by the President of the Philippines and violated
any of the terms thereof;
8) Those whose maximum term of imprisonment does not exceed one (1) year or those with definite
sentence;
9) Those suffering from any mental disorder as certified by a government psychiatrist/psychologist
10) Those whose conviction is on appeal
11) Those who have pending criminal case/s
Transmittal of Carpeta and Prison Record
The Director or Warden concerned shall send a prisoner’s prison record and carpeta to the Board at
least one (1) month prior to the date when his case shall be eligible for review.
Parole Supervision
The period of parole supervision shall extend up to the expiration of the maximum sentence which
should appear in the Release Document.
Initial Report
Within the period prescribed in his Release Document, the parolee shall present himself to the Parole
Officer specified in the Release Document for supervision.
If the parolee fails to report within forty five (45) days from the date of his release from prison or jail,
the Parole Officer shall inform the Board of such failure for appropriate action.
Arrival Report
Within fifteen (15) working days from the date when the parolee reported for supervision, the Parole
Officer concerned shall inform the Board, through the Technical Service of the Parole and Probation
Administration, the date the client reported for supervision.
Transfer of Residence
A client may not transfer from the place of residence designated in his Release Document without the
prior written approval of the Regional Director subject to the confirmation by the Board
Outside Travel
A Chief Parole Officer may authorize a parolee to travel outside his area of operational jurisdiction
for a period of not more than thirty (30) days.
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A travel for more than 30 days shall be approved by the Regional Director.
Death of client
If a client dies during supervision, the Parole Officer shall immediately transmit a certified true copy
of the client’s death certificate to the Board recommending the closing of the case.
However, in the absence of a death certificate, an affidavit narrating the circumstances of the fact of
death from the barangay chairman or any authorized officer or any immediate relative where the
client resided, shall suffice.
Reports
The Probation and Parole Officer concerned shall submit the following reports to the Board:
a) Progress Report when a parolee commits another offense during the period of his parole
supervision and the case filed against him has not yet been decided by the court
b) Infraction Report when the parolee has been subsequently convicted of another crime;
c) Violation Report when a parolee commits any violation of the terms and conditions appearing
in his Release document or any serious deviation or non-observance of the obligations set
forth in the parole supervision program.
Arrest of Parolee
Upon receipt of the infraction report, the BPP shall immediately order the arrest of the parolee.
Extraordinary circumstances
The Board shall recommend to the President the grant of executive clemency when any of the
following extraordinary circumstances are present:
a) the trial court or appellate court in its decision recommended the grant of executive clemency
for the prisoner;
b) Under the peculiar circumstances of the case, the penalty imposed is too harsh compared to
the crime committed;
c) Evidence which the court failed to consider, before conviction, which would have justified an
acquittal of the accused;
d) Inmates who were over fifteen (15) years but under eighteen (18) years of age at the time of
the commission of the offense;
e) Inmates who are seventy (70) years old and above whose continued imprisonment is inimical
to their health as recommended by a physician of the Bureau of Corrections Hospital and
certified under oath by a physician designated by the Department of Health;
f) Inmates who suffer from serious, contagious or life-threatening illness/disease, or with severe
physical disability such as those who are totally blind, paralyzed, bedridden, etc., as
recommended by a physician of the Bureau of Corrections Hospital and certified under oath
by a physician designated by the Department of Health;
g) Alien inmates where diplomatic considerations and amity among nations necessitate review;
and
h) Such other similar or analogous circumstances whenever the interest of justice will serve
thereby.
Other circumstances
When none of the extraordinary circumstances enumerated exist, the Board may nonetheless review
and/or recommend to the President the grant of executive clemency to an inmate provided the inmate
meets the following minimum requirements of imprisonment:
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7) at least twenty (20) years for inmates sentenced to two (2) or more reclusion perpetua or life
imprisonment even if their sentence were adjusted to a definite prison term of forty (40) years in
accordance with the provisions of Art. 70, RPC;
8) at least twenty-five (25) years for inmates originally sentenced to death penalty but which was
automatically reduced or commuted to reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment.
Who may File Claims. – The following may file claims for compensation before the Board:
1) any person who was unjustly accused, convicted and imprisoned but subsequently released by virtue
of a judgment of acquittal;
2) any person who was unjustly detained and released without being charged;
3) any victim of arbitrary or illegal detention by the authorities as defined in the Revised Penal Code
under a final judgment of the court; or
4) any person who is a victim of violent crimes. For purposes of this Act, violent crimes shall include
rape and shall likewise refer to offenses committed with malice which resulted in death or serious
physical and/or psychological injuries, permanent incapacity or disability, insanity, abortion, serious
trauma, or committed with torture, cruelly or barbarity.
Award Ceiling
For victims of unjust imprisonment or detention, the compensation shall be based on the number of
months of imprisonment or detention and every fraction thereof shall be considered one month;
Provided, however, That in no case shall such compensation exceed One Thousand pesos (P1,000.00)
per month.
In all other cases, the maximum amount for which the Board may approve a claim shall not exceed
Ten thousand pesos (P10,000.00) or the amount necessary to reimburse the claimant the expenses
incurred for hospitalization, medical treatment, loss of wage, loss of support or other expenses
directly related to injury, whichever is lower. This is without prejudice to the right of the claimant to
seek other remedies under existing laws.
When to File Claims
Any person entitled to compensation under this Act must, within six (6) months after being released
from imprisonment or detention, or from the date the victim suffered damage or injury, file his claim
with the Department, otherwise, he is deemed to have waived the same.
Filing of Claims by Heirs
In case of death or incapacity of any person entitled to any award under this Act, the claim may be
filed by his heirs, in the following order:
a) by his surviving spouse, c) natural parents,
b) children, d) brother and/or sister.
Resolution of Claims
The Board shall resolve the claim within thirty (30) working days after filing of the application.
The Board shall adopt an expeditious and inexpensive procedure for the claimants to follow in order
to secure their claims under this Act.
Appeal
Any aggrieved claimant may appeal, within fifteen (15) days from receipt of the resolution of the
Board, to the Secretary of Justice whose decision shall be final and executory.
43
An Act amending Article 29 of the Revised Penal Code, to give full time credit under certain
conditions to offenders who have undergone preventive imprisonment (detention prisoners) in the
service of their sentences.
Recognizance
is a mode of securing the release of any person in custody or detention for the commission of
an offense who is unable to post bail due to abject poverty. The court where the case of such
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person has been filed shall allow the release of the accused on recognizance as provided
herein, to the custody of a qualified member of the barangay, city or municipality where the
accused resides.
Duty of the Courts.
For purposes of stability and uniformity, the courts shall use their discretion, in determining whether
an accused should be deemed an indigent even if the salary and property requirements are not met.
The courts may also consider the capacity of the accused to support not just himself/herself but also
his/her family or other people who are dependent on him/her for support and subsistence.
Other relevant factors and conditions demonstrating the financial incapacity of the accused at the
time that he/she is facing charges in court may also be considered by the courts for the purpose of
covering as many individuals belonging to the marginalized and poor sectors of society.
Release on Recognizance as a Matter of Right Guaranteed by the Constitution.
The release on recognizance of any person in custody or detention for the commission of an offense
is a matter of right when the offense is not punishable by death, reclusion perpetua, or life
imprisonment: Provided, That the accused or any person on behalf of the accused files the application
for such:
(a) Before or after conviction by the Metropolitan Trial Court, Municipal Trial Court, Municipal
Trial Court in Cities and Municipal Circuit Trial Court; and
(b) Before conviction by the Regional Trial Court: Provided, further, That a person in custody for
a period equal to or more than the minimum of the principal penalty prescribed for the offense
charged, without application of the Indeterminate Sentence Law, or any modifying
circumstance, shall be released on the person’s recognizance.
Requirements.
The competent court where a criminal case has been filed against a person covered under this Act
shall, upon motion, order the release of the detained person on recognizance to a qualified custodian:
Provided, That all of the following requirements are complied with:
(a) A sworn declaration by the person in custody of his/her indigency or incapacity either to post
a cash bail or proffer any personal or real property acceptable as sufficient sureties for a bail
bond;
(b) A certification issued by the head of the social welfare and development office of the
municipality or city where the accused actually resides, that the accused is indigent;
(c) The person in custody has been arraigned;
(d) The court has notified the city or municipal sanggunian where the accused resides of the
application for recognizance. The sanggunian shall include in its agenda the notice from the
court upon receipt and act on the request for comments or opposition to the application within
ten (10) days from receipt of the notice. The action of the sanggunian shall be in the form of a
resolution, and shall be duly approved by the mayor,
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Except in cases of children in conflict with the law as provided under Republic Act No. 9344, the
custodian of the person released on recognizance must have the following qualifications:
(a) A person of good repute and probity;
(b) A resident of the barangay where the applicant resides;
(c) Must not be a relative of the applicant within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity;
and
(d) Must belong to any of the following sectors and institutions: church, academe, social welfare,
health sector, cause-oriented groups, charitable organizations or organizations engaged in the
rehabilitation of offenders duly accredited by the local social welfare and development officer.
If no person in the barangay where the applicant resides belongs to any of the sectors and institutions
listed under paragraph (d) above, the custodian of the person released on recognizance may be from
the qualified residents of the city or municipality where the applicant resides.
Duty of the Custodian.
The custodian shall undertake to guarantee the appearance of the accused whenever required by the
court. The custodian shall be required to execute an undertaking before the court to produce the
accused whenever required. The said undertaking shall be part of the application for recognizance.
The court shall duly notify, within a reasonable period of time, the custodian whenever the presence
of the accussed is required. A penalty of six (6) months to two (2) years imprisonment shall be
imposed upon the custodian who failed to deliver or produce the accused before the court, upon due
notice, without justifiable reason.
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An Act amending Art. 29, 94, 97, 98 & 99 of Act No. 3815, as amended, otherwise known as the
Revised Penal Code
ART. 29. Period of preventive imprisonment deducted from term of imprisonment
ART. 94. Partial extinction of criminal liability.
Criminal liability is extinguished partially:
i. By conditional pardon;
ii. By commutation of the sentence; and
iii. For good conduct allowances which the culprit may earn while he is
undergoing preventive imprisonment or serving his sentence."
ART. 97. Allowance for good conduct
ART. 98. Special time allowance for loyalty.
ART. 99. Who grants time allowances
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