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Ombudsman orders filing of criminal charges vs 25 Coast Guard officials

Metro Manila (CNN Philippines, July 28) — The Ombudsman ordered the filing of multiple criminal charges against 25 Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) officials for their involvement in ₱68 million in irregular disbursements and procurement of supplies in 2014.

The following are ordered indicted before the Sandiganbayan for violating the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act:

Ex-Commandant Rodolfo Isorena

Commo. William Melad

Commo. Aaron Reconquista

RAdmn. Cecil Chen

Cdrs. John Esplana

William Arquero

Jude Thaddeus Besinga

Roben De Guzman

Enrico Efren Evangelista, Jr.

Ferdinand Panganiban

Joselito Quintas

Ivan Roldan

Rommel Supangan

George Ursabia, Jr.

Ferdinand Velasco

Wilfred Burgos

Allen Dalangin

Capt. Joeven Fabul

Capt. Angelito Gil

Capt. Angel Lobaton IV

Capt. Christopher Villacorte

Capt. Ramon Lopez

Lt. Mark Larsen Mariano

Ens. Mark Franklin Lim II

Accounting Head Rogelio Caguioa

Isorena, Esplana, Fabul, Caguioa, Arquero, Lopez, and Quintas are also facing charges for violation of the Government Procurement Reform Act.

In an 83-page resolution, the investigating panel found irregularities in transaction of cellular cards: Arquero was allowed a total budget of ₱930,300, Lopez and Quintas were allowed ₱4,239,710, and Supangan was allowed ₱899,700.

There was also a “nefarious practice” of splitting purchases to several transactions to avoid public bidding. For example, purchases of regular office supplies, which was made daily or at close intervals, were split into ₱1-million purchases from February to May 2014.

“In sum, the Office found that the respondents have acted in their individual official capacities with manifest partiality, evident bad faith, and gross inexcusable negligence in using public funds to purchase cellcards, hardware, office, construction, and IT supplies such as moleskine journals, artline fabric markers, pilot ballpens, Epson styluses, colored printer ink, wireless optical mouses, energizers, paints, screwdrivers, wireless routers, among other things, without public bidding,” the Ombudsman said.

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