Sta. Rosa slay suspect: Husband asked us to videotape killings | Inquirer News

Sta. Rosa slay suspect: Husband asked us to videotape killings

/ 05:16 PM March 22, 2016

SAN PEDRO CITY- The self-confessed killer of a mother and her child in Sta. Rosa City in Laguna province said he and another suspect had videotaped the crime using a mobile phone provided by the alleged mastermind, the victim’s husband.

In a telephone interview on Tuesday, Supt. Reynaldo Maclang, Sta. Rosa City police chief, said Ramoncito Galo (not Gallo as earlier identified by the police), one of the two suspects identified through a footage from a security camera, sought protection for his family.

Claiming he was bothered by his conscience, Galo, a tricycle driver from Barangay Cupang in Muntinlupa City, surrendered to the police on Friday.

Article continues after this advertisement

He said Ricardo “Richard” Sta. Ana contracted them to kill his wife, Pearl Helene, 29, and one-year-old son, Denzel, on March 2.

FEATURED STORIES

Denzel died in a hospital hours after the attack, while Pearl passed away on March 5.

Senior Supt. Ronnie Montejo, Laguna provincial police director, said the parricide charges against Sta. Ana were filed at the Sta. Rosa City prosecutor’s office.

Article continues after this advertisement

Separate charges of homicide were filed against Galo and another suspect.

Article continues after this advertisement

Quoting Galo’s affidavit, Maclang said Galo and his companion, identified only as Bryan, had known Sta. Ana as “Sir Jeff.”

Article continues after this advertisement

“There was a [middleman] who referred [Sta. Ana to Galo]. They were told that their target was a relative of his (Sta. Ana’s) sibling’s boyfriend,” Maclang said.

Montejo said Sta. Ana allegedly wanted to exact revenge.
“The word he used was ‘resbak,'” he said.

Article continues after this advertisement

Sta. Ana met Galo and Bryan at a fast food restaurant in Sta. Rosa City on Feb. 29 where he gave them an initial payment of P10,000 and a map of the victims’ house in a subdivision in Barangay Labas.

On March 2, Maclang said Sta. Ana met Galo twice – first early in the morning and the second time, with Bryan, around 11 a.m. in a shopping mall in Alabang, Muntinlupa City.

Sta. Ana allegedly gave Galo and Bryan a fake company identification card from a telecommunication company and a form they would later use so Pearl would allow them in. Police later recovered the ID card that led them to identify a supposed employee of a telecommunication firm, one David dela Cruz, as a suspect.

“All those came from [Sta. Ana],” Maclang said.

He said Sta. Ana had traveled with Galo and Bryan from Muntinlupa City to Sta. Rosa City on the day of the murder.

In a restaurant at the city center, Sta. Ana handed Galo and Bryan a white Samsung mobile phone. The phone was used to videotape the killing as evidence that the job was completed, Maclang said.

Galo, in his statement, admitted to tying up and gagging Pearl in the bathroom. He also said he hit her with a hammer in the nape.

Galo said he realized that “Jeff” was the woman’s husband when he saw the couple’s wedding photo in the living room, Maclang said.

Sta. Ana, at that time, was waiting at a jeepney terminal in Sta. Rosa City.

After meeting Galo and Bryan, they traveled back to Muntinlupa City where Sta. Ana took the mobile phone and gave the suspects the rest of the P50,000 payment.

Maclang said police asked Sta. Ana to turn over the mobile phone but he refused.

“He’s being uncooperative [but] it’s his right,” he said.

In a separate telephone interview last Monday, lawyer Persida Acosta, chief of the Public Attorney’s Office (PAO), whose office is representing Sta. Ana, said their client was not hiding.

“He is innocent per evidence,” Acosta said. “Why would a father have his child, who looked very much like him, killed?”

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

“If those were really hired killers, why leave [their targets] alive?” she added. AC

TAGS: Crime, News, Regions

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.