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Saturday, August 26, 2017

‘DIGITAL KARMA CATCHING WITH KIAN'S KILLER.


    ‘Digital karma catching up          with Kian’s killers’




Luzviminda Siapo has practically given up hope that justice will be served in the case of her 19-year-old son Raymart, who was abducted and killed by unidentified gunmen on March 29 this year, a day after his Navotas City neighbor accused him of peddling marijuana.
But the former overseas worker now feels a sense of kinship with another family in neighboring Caloocan City who recently suffered a similar tragedy. For the past several days, Siapo has been closely following the case of 17-year-old Kian Loyd delos Santos, who was killed last week also because of supposed involvement in the drug trade.
But unlike Raymart, Kian was shot dead by the police. And while Raymart’s case has gone cold, that of Kian immediately led to a Senate inquiry, a murder complaint against three Caloocan policemen, and a fresh wave of condemnation from critics of President Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody war on narcotics.


Still, Siapo feels that the scales may be finally tilting against the forces who, on flimsy or fabricated evidence, have taken the Raymarts, Kians and other victims of drug-related killings away from their families.
‘God is real’

In an interview on Friday, Siapo spoke of “digital karma” finally catching up with the killers, at least in Kian’s case.
She was referring to the closed-circuit television camera (CCTV) footage that surfaced after Kian’s death, showing how he was first dragged away by officers in civilian clothes before he was shot in a dark alley on the night of Aug. 16.
Apart from eyewitness accounts, the video clip raised doubts over the policemen’s claim that Kian was shot because he tried to put up a fight with a .45-caliber pistol. His family and friends strongly denied the allegations, saying the Grade 12 student was neither kept a gun nor served as a courier for a local drug pusher. (The Caloocan police chief later admitted in the Senate hearing that Kian became a drug suspect based on information posted on social media.)
“God is real,” Siapo told the Inquirer in a phone interview. “The perpetrators have finally met their match.”
Siapo said the CCTV footage in the Caloocan incident only proved that people “don’t fight back,” contrary to police statements justifying the death of suspects in many antidrug operations.
“Those who could really fight back are the drug lords, the bigtime dealers, those who have the money and the lawyers,’’ she said. “But the police hardly touch them. Why do they always go after the poor?”

Siapo noted several similarities in Kian and Raymart’s case.
Both boys, she said, were falsely accused. Both were abducted before they were killed in cold blood: Raymart was told to “run” despite having club foot, while Kian, according to witnesses, was given a pistol by the officers who dared him to pull the trigger.
Both were shot in the head.
Both had mothers who were working abroad as domestic helpers when their sons were killed, and had to beg their employers for permission to rush home for the funeral.
Siapo contacted the Inquirer after hearing Senators Panfilo Lacson and Risa Hontiveros and Commission on Human Rights chair Chito Gascon mention Raymart’s case during the Aug. 24 Senate hearing on Kian’s death.
Having moved to a new address after losing Raymart, she is now willing to testify should there be another hearing and present witnesses “who could identity some of the 14 men who kidnapped Raymart the night he died.”
“According to my witnesses, barangay personnel and police were part of the team that abducted Raymart. They were all wearing masks.”
A day after the Senate hearing, she learned from her former neighbors in Barangay North Bay Boulevard-South, Navotas, that a group of policemen went to her old house.

Saldy and Lorenza delos Santos who buried their son Kian on Saturday.— Photo by NIÑO JESUS ORBETA
No movement
She surmised that the officers went there because Lascon had asked PNP higher-ups during the hearing for an update on Raymart’s case. “But are they really doing an investigation?”
Siapo said she had to come out now because Raymart’s case “had not moved forward” despite pronouncements from Director General Ronald dela Rosa, the Philippine National Police chief himself, that an investigation was underway.
“When I talked to a certain PO1 Latagan of Navotas police last May (or two months after the killing). The response I got from him was: ‘Who was your son?’ I had to explain Raymart’s case all over again. They have forgotten about him.”
It also pained Siapo to recall that right after Raymart’s death, Navotas police and barangay officials assured her that he was not on any drug watch list, but changed their tune and called him a pusher after the case made headlines.
With no plans of returning to her job abroad, the single parent now sells barbecue to raise her second child, a daughter aged 10.
“It’s painful when you look back and realize you were not there to defend your son. For a mother, that’s so painful and difficult,” she said. “I’ve tried to move on. But sometimes, when I’m alone preparing the skewers, I couldn’t help but cry. I miss my son.”

Thursday, August 24, 2017

PHILIPPINES FOOTBALL TEAM SEA GAMES


PH football teams finish fourth in SEA Games

The Philippine football squads finished in fourth place both in the men’s and women’s division in the 2017 Southeast Asian Games.
But the under-22 squad ended its campaign with a 2-1 victory over Timor Leste Thursday UM Arena Stadium in Shah Alam, Kuala Lumpur.
Same could not be said for the Malditas, who lost 1-3 to Thailand over at UiTM Stadium in Shah Alam.


Jarvey Gayoso’s brace helped the Philippines wind up with six points on two wins and three defeats in the football tournament.
Gayoso first put the Philippines up, 1-0, in the 13th minute before Timor Leste equalized just before the halftime break.
The 20-year-old striker saved his best for last, squeaking a goal at the 94th minute to end the Filipinos’ run on a high note.


Meanwhile, the Malditas faced a 3-0 deficit against Thailand before Hali Moriah Long scored off a Marnelli Dimzon assist to give the Philippines its lone goal in added time.
The Philippines had three points after a victory and three defeats in the women’s tournament.


THE FLASH MANU GINOBILI RETURNING FOR 16TH SEASON WITH SPURS


Manu Ginobili returning for 16th season with Spurs

SAN ANTONIO — Manu Ginobili is returning for his 16th season with the San Antonio Spurs.
The Spurs re-signed the 40-year-old Argentine guard Thursday. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.
Ginobili will become the eighth player in NBA history to spend his entire career with one team and play at least 16 seasons, joining Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Kobe Bryant, Dirk Nowitzki, John Stockton, Reggie Miller and John Havlicek.


Ginobili averaged 7.5 points, 2.7 assists and 2.3 rebounds in 69 games last season, In 992 career regular-season games, he has averaged 13.6 points, 3.9 assists and 3.6 rebounds. In 213 playoff games, the four-time NBA champion has averaged 14.1 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.8 assists.


MR.MVP RAYMAR JOSE PBA PLAYER

       Raymar Jose credits    teammates for MVP honor




Even Raymar Jose was surprised that he got the Conference MVP award for the 2017 PBA D-League Foundation Cup.
“In all honesty, I wasn’t expecting this. I just gave my best every game, especially on my rebounding because that’s my strength. So I get all my confidence from there,” Jose, who is in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia for the Southeast Asian Games, told reporters in Filipino.
His numbers, though, back up his victory as he averaged 12.27 points and 10.18 rebounds for the conference to help Cignal advance to the Finals.


Though he was unable to help the Hawkeyes complete the championship run owing to his Gilas Pilipinas responsibilities, Jose said that the glory still would not be possible if not for his teammates.
“I’m happy for this because I won’t be able to get this if not for the coaching staff and my teammates, so I’m really grateful for them,” the 24-year-old bruiser said.
The MVP recognition is also proof that hardworking players like Jose, who are willing to do the dirty work, could also get their fair share of the limelight even if they’re not topping their teams in scoring.
“These awards are big for players like me that bank on our hardwork. Right now, almost everyone wants to score. They forget the little things like playing defense and rebounding,” he said.
Jose became only the third FEU alumnus to win the plum, after Mac Belo and Mike Tolomia, but the 6-foot-4 said awards like these are just a bonus. The biggest prize remains winning the championship.
“We’re raised in FEU with the mindset that awards are just bonuses. We just want to do our best to help our team win,” he said.


IF MCGREGOR KNOCKS OUT MAYWEATHER BOOKIES WILL LOSE MILLIONS.


Bookies will lose millions if McGregor knocks out Mayweather 

Floyd Mayweather Jr., izquierda, y Conor McGregor posan para fotógrafos durante una conferencia de prensa el miércoles, 23 de agosto del 2017, en Las Vegas. (AP Foto/John Locher)
LAS VEGAS — Conor McGregor is making a lot of wise guys nervous in this gambling city.
Should he somehow manage to knock out Floyd Mayweather Jr. in the early rounds Saturday night, the city’s bookmakers would lose millions of dollars in the biggest single event loss in the history of sports betting.
McGregor fans have flooded sports books with $100 bills backing the mixed martial arts fighter, and even a late surge of money on Mayweather might not be enough to balance the books.


“I’m OK now,” said William Hill oddsmaker Nick Bogdanovich. “But you might want to have a heart monitor on me when the bell rings and Conor starts throwing wild lefts.”
Bogdanovich said his chain of sports books will suffer multimillion dollar losses — their worst ever — should McGregor win the fight in any fashion. If he wins early as he has promised, the losses would be even worse.
The big bettors are putting their money on Mayweather, who is 49-0 as a pro. But so many McGregor fans are betting small amounts that the betting slips at William Hill were 18-1 in the Irish fighter’s favor.
“This isn’t professional money, just the regular Joe,” Bogdanovich said. “The butcher and the barber are putting their $100 on McGregor and it’s added up.”
The action is reflected in the odds, which bookmakers adjust either way as money comes in on the two fighters. Bookmakers have been lowering the odds steadily since the fight was announced, but even that hasn’t stopped the deluge of McGregor bets.
A fight that began with Mayweather an 11-1 favorite is now 5-1 or even less in some sports books. Even that hasn’t stopped McGregor supporters from lining up at the betting windows to hand over even more cash.
They’re backing a longshot, hoping that the payoff will be huge.
“There’s plenty of money on a guy who has never been in a boxing ring,” said Jimmy Vaccaro, oddsmaker at the South Point resort. “It’s uncharted waters and that’s what makes it so interesting.”


Vaccaro said his sports book stood to lose about $400,000 on a McGregor win, but that was balanced off a bit by a bettor who put $100,000 Wednesday night on Mayweather. His book also took an $880,000 bet on Mayweather earlier that would pay off just $160,000 if he wins.
There have also been big Mayweather bets at the MGM Grand, including a $500,000 wager on Wednesday. MGM Resorts oddsmaker Jay Rood, though, said the sheer volume of McGregor bets is overwhelming the big Mayweather bet.
Rood said his books have taken 6,700 bets on McGregor and only 300 on Mayweather. The average bet on McGregor is $125, while the average for Mayweather is $4,000.
If McGregor wins, Rood said MGM will be a big loser and the state will suffer its biggest single event loss ever.
“We’re all in the same boat,” Rood said. “Anything McGregor one to four rounds is pretty bad. Any McGregor knockout is not going to be good.”
So far, the betting has been unusually active around town, bringing predictions that the volume could set records. Bookmakers say as the fight draws closer the heaviest influx of money will come, especially on Saturday.
The news is not all bad for oddsmakers, who have struggled to make lines for a fight that has no precedent. Most believe Mayweather is an easy winner and should be favored by a much bigger margin, but have had to cut odds to try and balance their books.
Though an overwhelming majority of the tickets are on McGregor, a lot of books have more money wagered on Mayweather. Since bookmakers will have to pay out a lot less to those betting Mayweather, they will likely score big if Mayweather wins as expected.
“We’re just kind of going along balancing and are in great shape win on both sides, no matter who wins,” said Johnny Avello, oddsmaker at the Wynn resort. “A lot of guys are putting down $125,000 or so to win whatever on Mayweather so we’re high on him now.”
Even if McGregor wins and the sports books lose big, all is not lost. Bettors like to be reminded they can win, and the extra betting on football generated by McGregor bettors at the books will help ease some of the pain.
“We don’t mind a large decision on a big spectacle like this,” Bogdanovich said. “It gets people in our books.”


MAYWEATHER CONOR MCGREGOR FIGHT AUGUST 26 2017

          Nocturnal animal Mayweather visits strip club




Floyd Mayweather Jr., left, and Conor McGregor pose for photographers during a news conference Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2017, in Las Vegas. The two are scheduled to fight in a boxing match Saturday in Las Vegas. AP
Las Vegas, United States — Floyd Mayweather has been taking an unorthodox approach to his pre-fight preparations to face Conor McGregor — with a late-night visit to his strip club.

USA Today reported that Mayweather was out at the strip club he owns in Las Vegas — Girl Collection — at 3:30am local time early Thursday after arriving in a white Rolls Royce.

Quoted by the newspaper, Mayweather insisted his nocturnal activities would not interfere with his preparations for Saturday’s fight against mixed martial star McGregor.

“Nobody can beat me,” Mayweather told the paper. USA Today said Mayweather greeted patrons at the club before retiring to a VIP section with four dancers.

He told the paper he had decided to open a strip club when he was serving a two-month prison sentence in 2012 following a conviction for domestic abuse.

“When I was locked up and doing time, I drew the club up,” Mayweather said. “Women never go out of style.”


The boxer, who retired from the sport in 2015 with a perfect 49-0 record, is the overwhelming favorite to defeat McGregor when the two men clash at the T-Mobile Arena on Saturday


FAELDON FIRES BACK, ACCUSES LACSON SON PAMPI CEMENT SMUGGLER


Faeldon fires back, accuses Lacson son cement smuggler  


This was how Senator Panfilo Lacson’s son and namesake, Panfilo Lacson Jr., vehemently denied on Thursday the allegation of resigned Customs Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon that he was delivering money to the latter’s office.

“I asked my son on the assertion of Faeldon that he was delivering money to the commissioner’s office. He said, he has not done so at any time, he has not met Faeldon,” the senator said in a statement.
“He has absolutely no reason to bribe Faeldon or the Customs Bureau. That’s a big, big lie, he said,” Senator Lacson further quoted his son as saying.
Faeldon, in a televised press conference, earlier accused Lacson’s son of allegedly smuggling billions-worth of cement into the country.

The allegation came just a day after the senator accused Faeldon of allegedly receiving P100 million “pasalubong” or welcome gift when he assumed the post at the Bureau of Customs.

COMM. FAELDON LINKS LACSON SON TO COMENTS SMUGGLING


Faeldon links Lacson, son to cement smuggling




STRIKING BACK Outgoing Customs Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon disputes corruption charges of Sen. Panfilo Lacson, saying the senator’s son undervalued his cement imports. —NIÑO JESUS
ORBETA
TAYTAY, RIZAL—A day after Sen. Panfilo Lacson named him as among the corrupt officials in the Bureau of Customs (BOC), outgoing Customs Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon fired back at Lacson, accusing the senator and his son of cement smuggling.
Faeldon, in a press conference near his home in Barangay Dolores in Taytay, Rizal province, said the senator’s son and namesake, Panfilo Lacson Jr., was the managing director of Bonjourno Trading, a company that the customs commissioner said was cited as the “No. 1 smuggler of cement in the country” by the Cement Manufacturers Association of the Philippines (CeMAP) Inc.
Lacson, however, said Faeldon should have filed charges against his son if he had a case against the latter.

“If my son is guilty or he is into smuggling, I will be the one and not (Faeldon) to file a case against him,” Lacson said in a news conference, which he called after the resigned BOC chief made the public accusations.
He said his son had denied any wrongdoing.

Faeldon said that during his one-year stint at the BOC, Bonjourno brought in 67 shipments of cement, 63 of which were valued at P4.6 billion.
He said one of his staff members, a brokerage exam topnotcher, discovered that Lacson Jr.’s company attempted to undervalue by 50 percent the freight cost of at least four shipments.
Faeldon said Lacson’s son declared a freight cost of $8 per metric ton when the prevailing market price was between $16 and $20.
“We discovered the smuggled shipment during our first 12 days in office at [the Bureau of] Customs,” he said.

YOUNG POLICE OFFICER ADMIRED BY CEBUANOS...


Mga Bagitong Police Officer, Ginawang Drug-Free Ang Buong Camotes Island!




Four Rookie police officer significantly reduced the quantity of drug addicts in Camotes Island.
Their activities are being praised by the general population of Cebu.
Get to know them here!

Police Officers are commanded by law to "serve and protect" the citizenry from harm, particularly to make preparations for crooks. The police constrain is prepared to act vigilant and exercise sound logic for whatever situation or wrongdoing they experience. This story highlights cops who epitomize these beliefs.

A gathering of rookie police officers from Cebu stood out as truly newsworthy when they effectively disposed of drugs from Camotes Island.

According to Press Reader, then-police inspectors Jade Sumugat (26), Sigmund Freud Cruz (26), and Emmanuel Abaya (25) were advanced as the police chiefs for the towns of Poro, Tudela, and Pilar, separately. Additionally given acknowledgment was Senior Inspector Janus Giangan (28), who was assigned to San Francisco.

One month later, on December 2016, they were able to effectively rid Camotes Island of drug addicts. The report said that all of them initially came from the Regional Public Safety Battalion in Sibonga town.

Police officers Sumagat, Cruz, and Rabaya were classmates in the Philippine National Police Academy, batch 2014. Meanwhile, Giangan was three years their senior.

Rabaya, who was assigned to Pilar town, said that he immediately implemented “Oplan Tokhang” after he took office. 16 drug addicts surrendered under his service. He has also created programs for the surrenderers, which feature moral recovery, physical fitness activities, community clean-up in every barangay, and vegetable gardening.
Cruz, meanwhile, supported the 11 barangays under Tudela’s jurisdiction in their community programs that aimed to help drug dependents. These programs often involved sports-related activities. About 110 drug addicts have surrendered in the town that Cruz was assigned to.

Sumagat, for his part, reported that 118 out of 441 suspected drug addicts in Poro have surrendered. He added that he also helped implement the recovery programs that were initiated by local government units.
Giangan said that 441 out of around 2,000 drug addicts have also surrendered in the town he was assigned to. He helped with counseling and values formation for the surrendered drug addicts.

In an additional report from the Facebook page “Ronald ‘Bato’ Dela Rosa Supporters,” Rabaya entered the Philippine National Police Academy when he was just 17-years-old, making him an inspiration to other young people.
He claimed that the youth is the country’s hope for tomorrow, just as Philippine national hero Dr. Jose P. Rizal said.
Here are more pictures of the inspirational rookie cops:

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

COMM.FAELDON POINTS LACSON A SMUGGLER


LACSON A SMUGGLER



This was how resigned Customs Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon described Senator Panfilo Lacson after accusing the latter’s son of “smuggling billions-worth of cement” into the country.
“Senator Lacson this is not chismis, hindi ito kathang-isip kagaya ng paninira mo sa amin. Isa kang smuggler,” Faeldon said in a televised press conference on Thursday.


(Sen. Lacson this is not hearsay, this is not just imagination like what you have done to destroy us. You are a smuggler.)
The former Customs chief said the Bureau of Customs (BOC) has uncovered alleged billions worth of 67 shipment of “smuggled” cements belonging to a company named Bonjourno, owned reportedly by Lacson’s son, Panfilo “Pampi” Lacson Jr.
“He has to explain that also. But ako 12 days pa lang ako (noon) sa opisina ko eh, I gave the senator the benefit of the doubt na matino sya at yung kanyang anak. Iniisip ko na baka hindi alam ni senator tong kalokohan ng junior nya, see?” Faeldon said.
(But for me, I’m only 12 days in office when I gave the senator the benefit of the doubt: That he and his son area clean. I was thinking that the senator may have not known the shenanigans of his junior.)
“But today, yesterday, he seems to know everything in Bureau of Customs. That’s why we can now ask him, do you know these? O ikaw pasimuno nito Senator Lacson? Anak mo to eh (Or you Senator Lacson is the perpetrator of this? This is your son.),” he added.
Faeldon also said he texted Lacson several times and said he wanted to know the truth.
“Now, Senator Lacson, I’ve texted you several times. I’m the number one person who wants the truth to come out,” he said.

Ano yan gusto mo ulit tumakbo na presidente? Gusto mong magpasikat at the expense of our family? (What’s all of these, you want to run again for president? You want your name to shine at the expense of our family?)You want to destroy people like me and the names of the officers in my team? You know them, matitino sila eh (they are clean),” he added.
Faeldon pointed out that what he pitied the most are those families of his appointees at BOC whom, he said, were being “destroyed” by Lacson.
“That’s why I cried sometimes during the hearing. I pity the families of these people you are destroying. Nagtatago ka ‘dun sa immunity mo (You are hiding in the cloak of immunity). You have an ambition to become president,” he said of Lacson.
Faeldon had earlier said during the press conference that he only recommended six out of the 23 appointive positions in BOC.
“‘Yung 17 hindi ko rekomendando. Yung anim na to, kami po yong pinangalanan nya (Lacson) don (sa listahan ng tumatanggap ng ‘tara’),” said Faeldon.
(The 17 I did not recommend. The six Lacson had named in the list of receiving grease money.)
The beleaguered former Customs chief also appealed to Lacson to stop using them for the senator’s “ambitions.”
“You have proven that already, tumakbo ka nung 2004 eh (you ran in 2004). Gusto mo pa tumakbo uli (you want to run again) by destroying me, by destroying the few people I put in there to try to find out what’s happening inside the Bureau. Now you know mag kababayan. This is senator Lacson,” Faeldon said.
He added that he would bare the documents and evidence that would prove the “smuggling” of Lacson’s son.
“I’ll provide you the documents. The documents, the evidence will bare this out, patutunayan nya ito. Senator Lacson this is not chismis, hindi ito kathang-isip kagaya ng paninira mo sa amin,” Faeldon said.

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