People v. Holgado and Misarez GR207992
People v. Holgado and Misarez GR207992
People v. Holgado and Misarez GR207992
Issue:
w/n chain of custody was broken
SC Ratio:
Yes. Compliance with the chain of custody requirement provided by Section 21,
therefore, ensures the integrity of confiscated, seized, and/or surrendered drugs
and/or drug paraphernalia in four (4) respects: first, the nature of the substances or
items seized; second, the quantity (e.g., weight) of the substances or items seized;
third, the relation of the substances or items seized to the incident allegedly causing
their seizure; and fourth, the relation of the substances or items seized to the
person/s alleged to have been in possession of or peddling them. Compliance with
this requirement forecloses opportunities for planting, contaminating, or tampering
of evidence in any manner.
By failing to establish identity of corpus delicti, non-compliance with Section 21
indicates a failure to establish an element of the offense of illegal sale of dangerous
drugs. It follows that this non-compliance suffices as a ground for acquittal. As this
court stated in People v. Lorenzo:32 [G.R. No. 184760, 23 April 2010, 619 SCRA 389]
In both illegal sale and illegal possession of prohibited drugs, conviction
cannot be sustained if there is a persistent doubt on the identity of the drug.
The identity of the prohibited drug must be established with moral certainty.
Apart from showing that the elements of possession or sale are present, the
fact that the substance illegally possessed and sold in the first place is the
same substance offered in court as exhibit must likewise be established with
the same degree of certitude as that needed to sustain a guilty verdict. 33
(Emphasis supplied)
The prosecutions sweeping guarantees as to the identity and integrity of seized
drugs and drug paraphernalia will not secure a conviction. Not even the
presumption of regularity in the performance of official duties will suffice. In fact,
whatever presumption there is as to the regularity of the manner by which officers
took and maintained custody of the seized items is negated. 34 Republic Act No.
9165 requires compliance with Section 21.
Even the doing of acts which ostensibly approximate compliance but do not actually
comply with the requirements of Section 21 does not suffice. In People v. Magat,35
[G.R. No. 588 Phil. 395 (2008)] for instance, this court had occasion to emphasize
the inadequacy of merely marking the items supposedly seized: Marking of the
seized drugs alone by the law enforcers is not enough to comply with the clear and
unequivocal procedures prescribed in Section 21 of R.A. No. 9165. 36
The exactitude which the state requires in handling seized narcotics and drug
paraphernalia is bolstered by the amendments made to Section 21 by Republic Act
No. 10640. Section 21(1), as amended, now includes the following proviso, thereby
making it even more stringent than as originally worded:
Provided, That the physical inventory and photograph shall be conducted at
the place where the search warrant is served; or at the nearest police station
or at the nearest office of the apprehending officer/team, whichever is
practicable, in case of warrantless seizures.
(pages 10 to 11)
The defense also points out that PO1 Aure . . . failed to disclose who, in particular,
held the sachet of shabu from the crime scene (after it was marked) up to the police
station, and finally to the crime laboratory for the requisite chemical examination. 43
It added that nothing on (sic) the records showed who, in particular,
submitted/brought the specimen to the crime laboratory for examination. 44
In People v. Gatlabayan45 [G.R. No. 186467, 13 July 2011, 653 SCRA 803] and People
v. Sitco,46 [G.R. No. 178202, 14 May 2010, 620 SCRA 561] this court considered as
fatal to the prosecutions case the lack of evidence on the identity of the person
who submitted the specimen for examination to the PNP Crime Laboratory and/or
the forensic chemist. In Sitco, this court characterized the lack of evidence on this
matter as glaring gaps or missing links in the chain of custody of evidence, raising
doubt as to the identity of the seized items and necessarily their evidentiary
value.47 This court also underscored that [t]his broken chain of custody is
especially significant given that what are involved are fungible items that may be
easily altered or tampered with.48
In sum, the integrity of three (3) of the four (4) links enumerated in People v. Nandi 49
[G.R. No. 188905, 13 July 2010, 625 SCRA 123] (i.e., seizure and marking, turnover
by the apprehending officer to the investigating officer, and turnover by the
investigating officer to the forensic chemist) has been cast in doubt. As in Nandi,
this doubt must be resolved in favor of accused-appellants. (pages 12 to 13)
Re: Sec. 21 noncompliance proviso:
It is true that Section 21(1), as amended, now includes a proviso to the effect that
noncompliance of (sic) these requirements under justifiable grounds, as long as the
integrity and the evidentiary value of the seized items are properly preserved by the
apprehending officer/team, shall not render void and invalid such seizures and
custody over said items. However, the prosecution has not shown that when the
buy-bust operation was allegedly conducted on January 17, 2007 and the sachet
was supposedly seized and marked, there were justifiable grounds for dispensing
with compliance with Section 21. Rather, it merely insisted on its self-serving
assertion that the integrity of the seized sachet has nevertheless been, supposedly,
preserved. The omission became more glaring considering that the prosecution
asserted that the events of January 17, 2007 entailed a carefully planned operation,
engendered by reports of drug-related activities along C. Raymundo Street. This
planning even led to the application for and issuance of a search warrant.
While the miniscule amount of narcotics seized is by itself not a ground for
acquittal, this circumstance underscores the need for more exacting compliance
with Section 21. In Malilin v. People,50 [576 Phil. 576 (2008)] this court said that
the likelihood of tampering, loss or mistake with respect to an exhibit is greatest
when the exhibit is small and is one that has physical characteristics fungible in
nature and similar in form to substances familiar to people in their daily lives. 51