Posted by
ian villalon
7 February 2012
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A tortoise was spotted at the shoreline of Ilocos Norte. While a grass owl was caught in Davao. Palparan says that he is innocent and will not surrender. Retired Army general Jovito Palparan, wanted for a kidnapping case, has no plans of surrendering even after repeated appeals from MalacaƱang and the manhunt operation launched by communist rebels. In a statement issued through his lawyer, Palparan maintained that he is innocent of the charges being leveled against him regarding the disappearance of two University of the Philippines students in 2006. While the Malacanan Palace urges Palparan to surrender since the New Peoples Army (NPA) is already in search for him. Meanwhile, Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) Secretary Jesse Robredo said that they already junked the suggestion to give out a shoot to kill order for Palparan. The under secretary said that Palparan should be caught alive to answer the allegations in Bulacan regarding the los of the two students in the University of the Philippines. The camp of Chief Justice Renato Corona on Tuesday formally opposed the Senate impeachment court's decision allowing his bank records to be subpoenaed to the proceedings. In a seven-page motion, Corona’s counsel said the documents should be deemed "inadmissible and irrelevant" to the proceedings. The defense also noted that the Senate had earlier ruled that no evidence should be presented in connection with Paragraph 2.4 of Article II of the impeachment complaint, which is about Corona’s alleged ill-gotten wealth. Less than two months after the House of Representatives impeached Chief Justice Renato Corona, the House committee on justice on Tuesday found sufficient grounds to seek the impeachment of another member of the high court: Associate Justice Mariano del Castillo. The panel agreed to proceed with the investigation of Del Castillo, who allegedly plagiarized the work of foreign authors when he wrote his decision on the case of sexual slavery victims — commonly known as “comfort women" — during the Japanese occupation in the 1940s. Watch 24 Oras News Feb. 07 epiosde replay below:
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