What Went Before: PH’s top fugitives
MANILA, Philippines—The country’s top fugitives remain elusive despite a multi-million reward for information that could lead to their arrest.
In August last year, President Benigno Aquino III offered a reward of P2 million each for the arrest of the Big Five fugitives composed of retired Army Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan, former Palawan Gov. Joel Reyes and his brother, former Coron Mayor Mario Reyes, former Dinagat Island Rep. Ruben Ecleo Jr. and Globe Asiatique developer Delfin Lee.
Called “the butcher” by political activists, Palparan went into hiding in December 2011 when he was ordered arrested by the regional trial court in Malolos, Bulacan province, in connection with the 2006 abduction of University of the Philippines students Sherlyn Cadapan and Karen Empeño.
The Reyes brothers disappeared in March 2012 after the regional trial court in Puerto Princesa City issued warrants for their arrest in connection with the murder of Palawan broadcaster and environmentalist Gerry Ortega.
Ecleo went into hiding after he was meted a 31-year jail sentence by the Sandiganbayan in 2006 in a graft case. In April 2012, a Cebu City court sentenced him to life imprisonment for the killing of his wife. He remains the object of a nationwide manhunt.
Article continues after this advertisementLee has a standing arrest warrant issued by a Pampanga court in May 2012 for syndicated estafa in connection with a P7-billion housing loan scandal that involved Globe Asiatique’s Xevera housing projects in Bacolor and Mabalacat towns in Pampanga province.
In May, Chief Supt. Francisco Uyami Jr., the head of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group, said his group had created 17 “tracker teams” to intensify the manhunt operations for the high-profile fugitives. Inquirer Research