JV Ejercito, San Juan VM Zamora face graft raps over P2.1-M gun deal

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Senator JV Ejercito. Screengrabbed from INQUIRER.net video

The Office of the Ombudsman on Wednesday filed graft and technical malversation cases against Senator Joseph Victor “JV” Ejercito over the allegedly anomalous purchase of high-powered fireams worth P2.1 million when he was still San Juan City mayor in 2008.

The Ombudsman’s Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), in two separate charge sheets, charged Ejercito with one count of violation of Section 3 (e) of Republic Act 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act and one count of technical malversation as defined under Article 220 of the Revised Penal Code (RPC).

San Juan City Vice Mayor Francisco Zamora is also among the other former and incumbent city officials who were charged for technical malversation. Zamora is eyeing the city’s top seat currently being held by Ejercito’s mother Guia Gomez.

Zamora and Gomez will go head to head in May.

READ: Zamora: Ejercito-Estrada clan stunted San Juan’s progress

The OSP recommended P30,000 bail bond each for five city officials accused of graft—city administrator Ranulfo Dacalos, treasurer Rosalinda Marasigan, attorney Romualdo delos Santos, budget officer Lorenza Ching and engineer Danilo Mercardo.
While a P6,000 bail bond for the 14 former and incumbent city officials accused in the technical malversation case was recommended in exchange for their provisional liberty—former San Juan vice mayor Leonardo Celles and city councilors Andoni Carballo, Vincent Pacheco, Angelino Mendoza, Dante Santiago, Rolando Bernardo, Grace Pardines, Domingo Sese, Francis Peralta, Edgardo Soriano, Jannah Ejercito-Surla, Franciso Zamora, Ramon Nakpil and Joseph Christopher Torralba.

READ: Ombudsman finds probable cause to charge JV Ejercito with graft, malversation

According to the information provided by the Ombudsman, Ejercito conspired with other city officials in February 2008 to purchase high-powered firearms using the city’s calamity fund as “investment for disaster preparedness.” This led the city council to pass a city ordinance allowing Ejercito to buy the firearms for the city’s police department.

It was also noted that the city was not under a state of calamity when the purchase was made.

The firearms bought using the city’s calamity fund include: three units of model K2 cal. 5.56mm sub-machine guns and 17 units of Daewoo model K1 cal. 5.56 mm sub-machine guns.

The purchase of the firearms was done with haste without “competitive bidding and without any post-qualification, bolstered by bid documents bearing dates earlier than the publication of the invitation to bid, showing that an unwarranted benefit, advantage and preference was accorded to the supplier.”
The Ombudsman said that under Circular No. 2003-1 of the Department of Budget and Management and Department of Interior Local Government did not include high-powered firearms among the items needed for disaster relief and mitigation.

Ejercito, the son of former president and incumbent Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada, will have a Senate term until 2019. AJH/CDG

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