Herrera v. Sandiganbayan
Herrera v. Sandiganbayan
Herrera v. Sandiganbayan
13, 2009
Lesson: Article 11 – Justifying Circumstances – no criminal liability incurred
Summarized by Cathy Pedrosa
(Please note: I omitted other facts, issues, decisions not related to the lesson)
Summary:
Petitioners Pat. Herrera & Pat. Mariano are charged as co-principals of Pat. Barrera & Pat. Alcalde
who were charged with 2 counts of murder, all members of the Parañaque Police Station by the
Sandiganbayan for killing Shi Shu Yang & George Go in two consolidated cases (one case per
victim). The former 2 petitioners asserted that they acted in self-defense, there was no conspiracy,
there should be presumption of regularity in the performance of official acts, and that guilt beyond
reasonable doubt was not proven. However, evidence & testimonies show otherwise. Hence, the
decision of the Sandiganbayan was affirmed (reclusion perpetua) with modification (payment of
damages) by the SC.
Testimony of Col. Rogelio Pureza y Abutan, PNP District Director of the NPD who approved the
progress report of investigator Rodolfo Ver and SPO4 Ticson:
1. At about noontime of December 28, 1989, Edna Go came to his office requesting for
assistance on her husband’s case, he told her to wait for the outcome of the investigation
on Illegal Possession of Firearms and Resisting Arrest filed with the Prosecutors
Office.
2. Then he got a call from SPO4 Ticzon about the shooting incident of George Go. He didn’t tell
Edna since he wasn’t sure if George Go is dead.
3. Later on, as a result of the investigation conducted, he and the other police officers filed a
case for homicide against two of their policemen based on the evaluation report of their
investigator and turned over the petitioners and the accused to the NBI for investigation.
Testimony of Dr. Frederick Singson y Soliven, Resident Physician of the Parañaque Community
Hospital:
1. He examined George Go and found out that the latter was positive for alcohol but no signs
of physical injuries. But he did not take the blood chemistry of George Go to determine
whether alcohol existed in his blood.
2. He said the abrasion on the neck of Herrera was due to a scuffle with somebody but said
injury could also be self-inflicted.
The Sandiganbayan convicted Herrera and Mariano as co-principals of the murder of Go and Yang,
hence the appeal to SC.
Defense of the Herrera and Mariano: (1) they acted in self-defense (2) there was no conspiracy
with Barrera and Alcalde (3) they are entitled to presumption of regularity in the performance of
their official acts.
Issue:
1. Applying our lesson, W/N Herrera and Mariano didn’t incur criminal liability under:
a. Art. 11 (1) Anyone who acts in self-defense of his person or rights
b. Art. 11 (5) Any person who acts in fulfillment of a duty or in the lawful exercise of a
right or office
Held: No, they are criminally liable based on evidence and testimonies:
- It has been ruled that findings of fact of the trial court on credibility of witnesses should be
accorded the highest respect.
- Winterhalter recognized the petitioners as the ones who cooperated with Pat. Barrera in killing
the victims. She established the identity of the petitioners as the companions of Pat. Barrera when
he effected the killing.
- Winterhalter’s testimony was confirmed by the autopsy of Dr. Roberto Garcia, showing the
gunshot wounds on the different parts of the victims body.
- After the incident, Winterhalter has been getting death threats, yet she voluntarily testified in
order to shed light on the commission of the crime. In fact, she did not even know the two victims.
Indeed, where there is nothing to indicate that a witness was moved by improper motives.
Fourth. Petitioners would persuade the Court that the testimony of Dr. Garcia, a prosecution
witness, supports the theory of the defense that they acted in self-defense.
- By invoking the justifying circumstance of self-defense, petitioners assume the onus of proving:
(1) unlawful aggression; (2) reasonable necessity of the means employed to prevent or repel the
unlawful aggression; and (3) lack of sufficient provocation on the part of the person defending
himself. Petitioners failed to discharge this burden.
- The argument that there was unlawful aggression by the two deceased who tried to get the
pistol, petitioners failed to prove that they used reasonable means in repelling the aggression
considering that both deceased where handcuffed and unarmed and had restricted movements, it
could only mean that the perceived threat to petitioners lives were not sufficiently serious, in which
case they were not justified in shooting the hapless victims who were unarmed.
Fifth. Petitioners assert that there was total absence of evidence to support the theory that
conspiracy attended the commission of the crime.
- Conspiracy can be inferred from the acts of the accused which clearly manifest a concurrence of
wills, a common intent or design to commit a crime.
- In this case, petitioner Herrera drove the vehicle along Timothy Street to a place which was less
conspicuous to passersby.
- While it was Pat. Barrera who actually shot the two victims, the evidence showed both petitioners
did nothing to prevent him from killing the victims, thus, indicative of the fact that they are in
unison with the criminal design of the Pat. Barrera.
- Petitioner Herrera alighted form the van without doing anything to prevent the killing, and worse,
even helped carry the two victims into the van while petitioner Mariano, made the pretense of
writing down something prior to the shooting incident. It would appear that he was faking an
alleged interrogation or trying to get the name of Yang, whose identity was not immediately
known, yet the fact remains that he did not do anything to prevent the killing and even helped in
loading the body of Go inside the patrol car.
- Consequently, applying the rule that the act of one is the act of all, petitioners are thus as guilty
as Pat. Barrera and Pat. Alcalde. In fact, conspiracy need not be established by direct evidence but
may be inferred from the surrounding circumstances.
Sixth. Intertwined with their argument that they were acting in self-defense, petitioners want this
Court to appreciate the presumption of regularity in the performance of their official acts.
- In order to consider the defense of fulfillment of a duty, it must be shown that: (1) the accused
acted in the performance of a duty or in the lawful exercise of a right or office; and (2) the injury
caused or the offense committed is the necessary consequence of the due performance of duty or
the lawful exercise of a right or office.
- There was no reason why petitioners should resort to killing the victims:
> There was no resistance at all from them when they were apprehended.
> They were handcuffed and unarmed while the petitioners were armed.
> Aida Veloria Magsipoc, who conducted the paraffin test on Go and Yang testified the test yielded
negative results, meaning the victims never fired a gun and were totally defenseless in the face of
the fully armed police officers.
- The nature and number of wounds inflicted, being repeatedly shot at close range and on vital
parts of their bodies, indicates that the police officers really intended to kill them, and not in self-
defense. Clearly, the presumption of regularity in the performance of official duties on the part of
the petitioners and the other police officers does not apply.
Seventh. Petitioners maintain that the prosecution failed to establish their guilt beyond
reasonable doubt.
Clearly, the elements of murder have been proven: 1). that the two victims were killed; 2). that
petitioners and the two other accused killed the victims; 3). that the killing was attended by the
qualifying circumstance of treachery committed by the petitioners and the two other accused who
conspired together in killing the victims; and 4). that the killing was not parricide or infanticide.
VERDICT: Sandiganbayan judgment affirmed with modification. Herrera and Mariano guilty beyond
reasonable doubt as co-principals for (2) counts of murder and sentencing each of them to suffer
the penalty of reclusion perpetua. Plus damages in the amount of P50,000 as civil indemnity,
P50,000 as moral damages, P25,000 as exemplary damages to the heirs of Go and Yang. In
addition, P11,500 for actual damages, and P1,433,418 to the heirs of Go.