Thesis On Detention PDF
Thesis On Detention PDF
Thesis On Detention PDF
A. Introduction
The practice of preventive detention in the Philippines existed long
before the declaration of martial law in 1972. National heroes such as
Jose Rizal and Antonio Luna were detained during the Spanish colonial
period. Apolinario Mabini Artemio Ricarte and Pio del Pilar were
likewise detained by the US regime, the same regime during which
there existed repressive laws such as the Sedition Law of 1901,
Brigandage Act of 1902, Reconstruction Act No. 7816 of 1903 and the
Flag Law of 1907. And in the 1950s, Amado Hernandez was detained.
It was, however, on September 21, 1972 when martial law was
declared that blatant abuse of the power of arrest a d detention
proliferated. President Ferdinand E. Marcos then had the power to
order the arrest and indefinite prolonged detention of a person without
charges. Arrests were made based on the Arrest, Search and Seizure
Order (ASSO), the exercise of which was delegated by the President to
the Secretary of National Defense. The exercise of such power was
upheld by the Supreme Court in Lansang v. Garcia, 42 SCRA 488.
However, even after martial law was lifted in 1981, previous laws and
decrees had the effect of institutionalizing martial law. Among these
decrees were Proclamation No. 2045 granting the President the power
to arrest and preventively detain persons; LOI 1125 granting the
power to arrest any person by virtue of a Presidential Order of Arrest;
LOI 1125-A expanding the Presidents power to arrest through the
Presidential Commi8tment Order (PCO); and LOI 1211 correcting all
the weaknesses and deficiencies of LOI 1125-A.
Due to public outcry, Marcos eventually abolished the PCO but created
in its stead the Preventive Detention Action (PDA) by virtue of PD
1877, which was said to be similar to the Third Reichs Preventive
Presented to the South-East Asia Sub-Regional Hearing of the Eminent Jurists Panel
on Terrorism, Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights on December 4, 2006 in Santika
Hotel, Jakarta, Indonesia.
Article 125 of the Revised Penal Code has been amended by Executive
Order 272 (1987) which extended the allowable periods of detention
as follows: (2) 12 hours for offenses punishable by light penalties;
(b) 18 hours for offenses punishable by correctional penalties; and (c)
36 hours for offenses punishable by afflictive penalties. Article 125
applies only if the arrest is made without a warrant and it is lawful.
Parenthetically, E.O. 272 has been assailed by human rights
advocates. As explained by one advocate:
The obvious danger posed by this amendatory issuance is
that the deprivation of liberty of a person arrested is
legally extended, betraying the recognition a mans
freedom is of primordial importance. Considering that the
provision applies only to valid warrantless arrests, it is with
more reason that the validity of the arrest of the person
detained be resolved by mandating that he be delivered to
the proper judicial authorities with dispatch. Worse, by
doubling the periods of lawful detention, the security
forces can have more time to sway on the person of the
detained.4
The fear is that the longer the person is detained, the greater the
chances that his rights are violated. Moreover, it is claimed that the
extended periods provide an escape or an impunity for torturers or
manhandlers of detainees because the evidentiary wounds inflicted on
them would have been healed by the time they are released, if they
have not yet been salvages.5
The reason for the legal extension of the periods is given in the
whereas clause of E.O. 272, which provides: In the interest of public
safety and order, it is imperative that a reasonable and sufficient
period be given within which to conduct adequate and thorough
investigation of persons detained for some legal grounds.
For purposes of this study, the period of administrative detention
refers to that duration of time which precedes the filing of charges in
court. Although it is difficult to draw a line as to when it actually
commences, the study has included as a stage of commencement of
administrative detention the time of apprehension, arrest, and
invitation of a person.
In this connection, former Supreme Court Justice Gutierrez wrote:
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nature and for any purpose shall be inviolable, and no search warrant
or warrant of arrest shall issue except upon probable cause to be
determined personally by the judge after examination under oath or
affirmation of the complainant and the witnesses he may produce, and
particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or
things to be seized.
This provision mandates the State to respect a persons home and
possessions and, more importantly, it protects the privacy and sanctity
of the person himself. It is a guarantee against unlawful arrests and
other forms of restraint on the physical liberty of the person. The
search and seizure clause requires that between the person and the
police must intervene the protective authority of a magistrate who has
the power to issue or refuse to issue search warrants or warrants of
arrest.8 Any evidence thus obtained in violation of such provision will
be rendered inadmissible for any purpose in any proceeding.9
The above notwithstanding, in Philippine procedural law, there are
instances when an arrest maybe made legally without warrant. In
reality, this is the legal trap where cases of individuals under
administrative detention fall. The law as framed creates certain
restrictions to avoid any undue infringement of the right to liberty of
individuals. Rule 113 of the Rules of Court limits legal warrantless
arrests to only three instances:
Sec. 6. Arrest without warrant When lawful. A peace
officer or a private person may, without a warrant, arrest a
person:
(a)
When, in his presence, the person to be arrested
has committed, is actually committing, or is attempting to
commit an offense;
(b)
When an offense has in fact just been committed,
and he has reasonable ground to believe that the person to
be arrested has committed it;
(c)
When the person to be arrested is a prisoner who
has escaped from a penal establishment or place where he
is serving final judgment or temporarily confined while his
case is pending, or has escaped while being transferred
from one confinement to another.
In the case of People v. Burgos (144 SCRA 1), the Supreme Court
ruled in the following tenor: First, it recognized the general rule that
all arrests must be under a judicial warrant. S e c o n d , while
recognizing certain exigent situations as exempting from the
requirement of a warrant, it held that such exceptions must be strictly
construed. Third, it held that if the warrantless arrest is unlawful at
the moment it is made, generally nothing that happened or is
discovered afterwards can make it lawful. Such is the rule fruit of a
poisoned tree. Fourth, it applied the rule that courts indulge every
reasonable presumption against waiver of fundamental constitutional
rights and do not presume acquiescence in the loss of fundamental
rights.10
Moreover, the 1985 Rules of Court are now more stringent since it not
only requires the police to show that a crime has actually been
committed at some vague time in the past. The crime must be shown
to have been committed just before the arrest. Besides, the police are
also required to have a personal knowledge of the facts indicating that
the person to be arrested has committed the crime charged.11
Therefore, a peace officer has no power or authority to arrest a person
without a warrant upon complaint of the offended party or any other
person, except I those cases expressly authorized by law, even if after
investigation, he becomes convinced that the accused is guilty of te
offense charged. Any police officer who makes an arrest without
regard to the requirements of law would be liable for illegal arrest or
arbitrary detention.
Despite these legal safeguards, there are still areas of concern left
unanswered. The Garcia-Padilla v. Ponce Enrile case (121 SCRA 472)
poses one controversial issue. Briefly, nine of the petitioners therein
were under surveillance as members of the Communist Party of the
Philippines. They were apprehended while having a conference in a
residential house in Nueva Vizcaya. They scampered in different
directions leaving their weapons, ammunitions, cash, various
documents and plans of inflation on their conference table. The
Supreme Court ruled to the effect that the crimes were covered by
Proclamation No. 2045 and are in the nature of continuing offenses.
According to the Court, their arrest was preventive in nature since the
purpose was to quell the commission of the offenses and present them
immediately to court. Thus, the absence of a warrant is no legal
obstacle to the capture of persons engaged in rebellion.
The ruling in Garcia was reiterated in the more recent case of Umil v.
Ramos, 12 which elicited powerful dissenting opinions from Justices
9
10
12
14
15
f)
j)
17
18
realities behind the theories with the hope that this study will help
pave the way for a more wholistic approach at addressing the issues
concerning the practice of administrative detention in the Philippines.
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FOOTNOTES
1
Hugo E. Gutierrez Jr., The Unsatisfactory Status of the Law on Arrest and Detetion, Philippine Law
Journal, Vol. 46, 1971, p. 669.
2
Joaquin G. Bernas, Constitutional Structure and Powers of the Government: Notes and Cases, 1991, p.
19.
3
Ibid.
4
Marie, Yuvienco, The Impunity for Human rights Violations Through Philippine Jurisprudence, juris
doctor thesis, Ateneo de Manila University, School of Law (1993).
5
Ibid.
6
Gutierrex, p. 676.
7
Ibid., p. 678.
8
Bernas, Notes and Cases, p. 73.
9
Section 3(2), Article III of the Philippine Constitution.
10
Alfredo F. Tadiar, A Critical Analyses of Syupreme Court Decisions on Criminal Procedure from 1983
up to May 1989, Rex Printing Company, Inc., 1989, p. 7.
11
Sayo, et.zl. v. Chief of Police, et.al., 80 Phil. 859.
12
187 SCRA 251, July 9, 1990; Reconsideration, 202 SCRA 251, October 3, 1991.
13
Umil v. Ramos, 202 SCRA, 282.
14
Ibid, pp. 293-294.
15
Ibid., pp. 267-268.
16
Ibid., pp. 268-269.
17
US v. Santos, 36 Phil. 853, 855.
18
People v. Malmstedt, 198 SCRA 401, 415.
19
Oscar Herrera, Outline on Recet Development on the Law on Arrest, Search and Seizure, May 14-15,
1993, pp. 11-12.
20
Gutierrez, pp. 691-692.
21
The US case of Miranda v. Arizona deals with the admissibility of statements obtained from an
individual who is subjected to custodial police interrogation, and the necessity for procedures which assure
that the individual is accorded his privilege against self-incrimination.
22
The Philippines acced to this Convention on April 30, 1986.
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