Olongapo SubicBay BatangGapo Newscenter

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

‘VK’ rampant in 3 provinces & Olongapo

Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Q. Pimentel, Jr. (PDP-Laban) took yesterday the Philippine National Police (PNP) to task for its apparent failure to implement the Anti-Illegal Gambling Law (Republic Act 9287) which imposes harsher penalties for violators of the law.

Pimentel said the PNP’s lip service treatment, if not disregard of RA 9287, which was enacted into law on April 2, 2004, could explain why jueteng, masiao and other underground numbers games continue to proliferate in many parts of the country.

He called the attention to this problem in view of persistent reports that police officers continue to use Presidential Decree 1602, issued during the martial law years, in filing charges against persons caught for involvement in jueteng and other forms of illegal numbers game.

Only last week, the Quezon City Police District Intelligence Division used the antiquated Marcos decree in charging officials and employees of Benchmark Acquisition International Corp. for illegally operating the small town lottery in QC.

Instead of invoking RA 9287, The Quezon City police charged the respondents with violation of PD 1602, despite the fact that this has already been superseded by RA 9287. Benchmark was found to be operating without a mayor’s permit, a breach of city ordinance SP-91. Also charged in the case with the Quezon City prosecutor’s office were some PCSO-STL officials.

"Why do our police officers keep on using Presidential Decree 1602 as the legal basis for filing criminal cases against illegal gambling operators and agents when this martial law decree is already deemed repealed after Republic Act 9287 took effect two years ago?" Pimentel said.

He said it is a flagrant and condemnable act of omission on the part of the PNP to overlook the enforcement of RA 9287 because this law was crafted by Congress precisely to impose more severe penalties on perpetrators of illegal gambling and to address the frequent complaint of law enforcers about the weaknesses of the old law specially in terms of light punishment.

Under PD 1602, violators of the law could be fined for as low as R400 and as high as P2,000 and may be imprisoned only for six months.

But under RA 9287, maintainers, managers and operators of jueteng and other forms of outlawed gambling may be punished with imprisonment from 12 years to 14 years while public officials and lawmen found protecting them may be jailed for 16 to 20 years. Gambling operators can be fined for P3 million to P5 million.

Supervisors, bet collectors and other workers of illegal gambling outfits may be jailed from six to 12 years. Even ordinary bettors may be imprisoned from 30 to 90 days.

Pimentel said it is a big mistake for the PNP to keep on using PD 1602 as the legal basis for prosecuting illegal gamblers because the prevailing law for this type of criminal offense is RA 9287.

Meanwhile, sources at the Department of Interior and Local Government disclosed that Video Karera (horse race on video or VK) operations have become rampant in the provinces of Bulacan, Pampanga, Bataan, Nueva Ecija and in Olongapo City.

They said the VKs operate with impunity and "without any trouble from the police". The sources named the sources in Bulacan and the number of machines they operate in each town: Fredo, 20 units in San Jose; Sherwin, 80 units, Malolos; Obet, 25 units, Bocaue; Carlito, 10 units, Meycauayan; and Gil, 30 units, Obando.

In Pampanga: Mer, five units, Apalit; Laxamana, 60 units in San Fernando and 20 units in Mabalacat; Sgt. Mendoza, 30 units, Guagua; and Nitang, 30 units, Porac;

In Bataan, sources said a certain Dennis S. operates 40 units in Dinalupihan and Mariveles while a certain Lando runs the VK business with 20 units in Papaya and Pinaranda in Nueva Ecija. One Romy M. has 20 units in Olongapo, the same sources said. TEMPO

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