QC police official linked to extortion
In the late afternoon of Friday, June 12, a longtime friend, Nelia Lim, called to inform me that a mutual friend, Bel, needed my help.
Nelia told me that some policemen were trying to extort a big amount of money from Bel.
I learned from Nelia that Bel’s 19-year-old son, Nikko, was arrested early morning Friday at the Philcoa area in Quezon City while trying to buy “shabu” (methamphetamine hydrochloride) from a policeman who posed as a pusher.
When I called Bel, a single mother, she was in the office of the Station 6 chief of the Quezon City Police District in the Batasan area.
I told her to leave the office for a few minutes while I talked to her.
She claimed she was being pressured by the chief, Supt. Victor Pagulayan, and his men to come up immediately with P200,000. Otherwise, they would charge Nikko with the nonbailable offense of drug pushing, instead of the much lesser offense of drug possession.
Article continues after this advertisementTake note, dear readers, that Nikko was buying—not selling—shabu from a pusher-poseur. He should be charged with mere possession, not with pushing.
Article continues after this advertisementBesides, the cops were operating out of their jurisdiction as the Philcoa area is within the sphere of Station 9.
Bel said the Station 6 cops first demanded half a million pesos for Nikko’s release but that she had haggled with them into lowering it to P200,000.
At that moment she told Pagulayan she couldn’t produce the money as all the banks were closed—it was Independence Day, a holiday—but she alleged that the police official was insisting she produce the money quickly.
I remember telling Bel: “Bide for time, tell them you can only come up with that amount on Monday. I will do the rest.”
After talking to Bel, I called up Deputy Director General Leonardo Espina, Philippine National Police officer in charge, and told him about Pagulayan’s alleged negotiations with Bel.
Espina and this columnist agreed to set up a trap for Pagulayan on Monday.
The PNP’s acting chief said he would form a team from the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) in Camp Crame to entrap Pagulayan and his men.
On my part, I would produce fake P500 and P1,000 bills in my office at “Isumbong Mo kay Tulfo” which my staff and I have used many times for entrapment purposes.
I would have my staff submit the fake bills to the CIDG men so they could sprinkle invisible powder on it; the powder would be all over a subject’s hands when he gets arrested.
That was late Friday.
But on Saturday, Bel told me that Nikko’s father had gone to the station and started berating her for not producing the bribe money.
This gave the cops at Station 6 the idea they could force Nikko’s parents into coming up with the P200,000 bribe money immediately.
While Bel and Nikko’s father were arguing, they could hear their son whimpering in the next room. Apparently, he was being punched in the stomach.
The father immediately produced the money.
After receiving the money, the cops gave them a veiled warning that they would get back at them if they revealed the bribery.
Bel told me the police know her address.
I texted Bel this message yesterday: “I’m sorry Bel. I will have to write about your experience with the Batasan precinct cops. I will mention the name of the police chief who allegedly negotiated with you for bribe money. If the charges are true and I don’t expose them, they will continue to fleece other civilians.”