Area-6 - Correctional Administration
Area-6 - Correctional Administration
Area-6 - Correctional Administration
INSTITUTIONAL CORRECTIONS
1. RECALL AND EXPLAIN THE THEORIES AND PRINCIPLES OF PENOLOGY,
PUNISHMENT, PENALTY, SENTENCING, AND REHABILITATION, INCLUDING THE
RIGHTS, LEGAL LIMITATIONS, AND CONDITIONS SET FORTH BY THE
CONSTIRUTION, LAW, AND UNITED NATIONS DECLARATIONS.
PENOLOGY defined:
- The study of punishment for crime or of criminal offenders. It includes the study of
control and prevention of crime through punishment of criminal offenders.
Etymology of the word penology
- The term is derived from the Greek word “POINE” as well as Latin word “POENA”
which means pain or suffering and “LOGOS” which means study.
- Penology is otherwise known as Penal Science. It is actually a division of criminology
that deals with prison management and the treatment of offenders, and concerned itself
with the philosophy and practice of society in its effort to repress criminal activities.
Penal Management: - Refers to the manner or practice of managing or controlling
places of confinement as in jails or prisons.
2. STOCKS - is a wooden device with holes for the wrists and legs,
but not for the head. An offender has to sit down in order to lock
his wrists and legs. The stocks is a punishment device that is
similar to the pillory in terms of purpose but with slight variation in
terms of its design or appearance.
6. Iron Maiden – box-like structure with the front half hinged like and door so
that a person could be placed inside. When the door was shut, protruding
spikes both back and front entered the body of the prisoner.
7. The Rack – device that drags apart the joints in the feet
and hands.
12. Milk & Honey – the person was encased in a box from which his head, hands & feet
protrude, forcibly feed with milk and honey which was also smeared in his face and
then exposed to the sun seventeen (17) days, he lingered on this horrible condition
until he had been devoured alive by insect and vermin.
13. FURCA – a V. shape yolk worn around the neck and the outstretched arms of convict
are tied also
14. ERGASTULUM – convicts are attached to work benches and forced to do hard labor.
15. SHOT-DRILL – carrying heavy loads for one place to another
16. CHAIN GANGS – prisons are chained together and work in public projects.
17. TREADMILL – prisoner is continually made to constantly climb stairs up to 14,000
feet.
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EARLY FORMS OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
1. BEHEADING or DECAPITATION Beheading or decapitation is the cutting off of
the head from the body by using an ax or sword. This was regarded as the most
honorable form of capital punishment because a sword was a symbol that was both
noble and aristocratic
DURATION OF PENALTIES
The duration of penalties is provided by Article 25 of the Revised Penal Code:
Capital Punishment
Death
Afflictive Penalties
Reclusion Perpetua – 20 years and 1 day to 40 years
Reclusion Temporal – 12 years and 1 day to 20 years
Prision Mayor – 6 years and 1 day to 12 years
Correccional Penalties Prision Correccional – 6 months and 1 day to six years
Arresto Mayor – 1 month and 1 day to 6 months
Destierro – 6 months and 1 day to 6 years;
shall not be permitted to enter the place or places designated in the sentence, nor within
the radius therin specified, which shall be not more than 250 kilometers and not less than
25 kilometers from the place designated
Light Penalties
Arresto Menor – 1 day to 30 days
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INDETERMINATE SENTENCE
Indeterminate sentence - is one in which the actual number of years a person may serve
is not fixed but is rather a range of years. Penalty imposed may be in its minimum,
medium or maximum period, as provided by the Revised Penal Code.
Act No. 4103, as amended by Act No. 4203 and Act No. 4225 – is the Indeterminate
Sentence Law, which took effect on 5 December 1933 and currently still enforceable.
This law is responsible for the establishment of the parole system in the Philippines and
the Board of Pardons and Parole, which is tasked to administer the parole system.
BUREAU OF CORRECTIONS
The Bureau of Corrections, or BUCOR, is an attached agency to the Department of
Justice.
It is the only primary institution in the corrections pillar that provides full custody and
rehabilitation programs for the transformation of insular prisoners, those sentenced to
more than three (3) years to life imprisonment.
The reformation of national inmates shall include the following: moral and spiritual
program, education and training program, work and livelihood program, sports and
recreation program, health and welfare program and behaviour modification program, to
include therapeutic community.
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ORGANIZATION AND KEY POSITIONS OF THE BUCOR
-The head of the BUCOR shall have the position and title of Director General of
Corrections and he shall have the rank of Undersecretary. He shall be appointed by the
President upon the recommendation of the Secretary of the DOJ and he shall serve for a
period of six (6) years.
The third officer in command shall have the position and title Corrections Chief
Superintendent and he shall have the rank of Chief Superintendent.
The fourth officer in command shall have the position and title of Corrections Senior
Superintendent and he shall have the rank of Senior Superintendent.
The fifth officer in command shall have the position and title of Corrections
Superintendent and he shall have the rank of Superintendent.
COMPOSITION OF THE UNIFORMED PERSONNEL OF THE BUCOR
The safekeeping of the inmates shall be undertaken by the Custodial Force consisting of
the corrections officers with the ranking system and salary grades similar to the BJMP.
HEIGHT REQUIREMENT
1.62 meters – Male
1.57 meters – Female
*Height waivers are also accepted for applicants who are members of cultural minorities
TRAINING OF BUCOR PERSONNEL
The training of BUCOR personnel will continue to be done through its Personnel
Training School, which was renamed as Corrections Training School or Institute
patterned after the BJMP’s Jail National Training Institute.
RA 10575 also ordered for a study to be conducted in order to prepare for the
establishment of the Philippine Corrections Academy, to be patterned after the Philippine
National Police Academy, for its commissioned officers.
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BUCOR PERSONNEL-TO-INMATE RATIO
1:7 – custodial personnel-to-inmate ratio
1:24 – reformation personnel-to-inmate ratio
THE BUREAU OF JAIL MANAGEMENT AND PENOLOGY
The Bureau of Jail Management and Penology, or BJMP, was created by virtue of RA
6975, otherwise known as the Department of the Interior and Local Government Act of
1990, which took effect on January 2, 1991.
Republic Act No. 9263, otherwise known as the Bureau of Fire Protection and Bureau of
Jail Management and Penology Professionalization Act of 2004, was enacted on March
10, 2004, amending pertinent provisions of RA 6975 regarding the BJMP. RA 9592,
another amendatory law, was enacted on May 8, 2009, amending the provisions on
educational qualifications of BJMP personnel, among others.
CLASSIFICATION OF JAILS
1. Jail – is a place of confinement for city and municipal prisoners, any fugitive from
justice, or person detained awaiting or undergoing investigation or trial and/or transfer to
the national penitentiary, and/or violent mentally-ill person who endangers himself or the
safety of others, pending transfer to a mental institution.
confinement for inmates coming from a city or clustered municipalities who are awaiting
or undergoing trial or serving sentence for a term of one (1) day to three (3) years. It is
headed by a Jail Warden or Wardress.
2. City Jail – is a facility or place of confinement for inmates whose sentence ranges
from one (1) day to (3) three years, and for those who awaiting or undergoing trial or
waiting for judgment of the court. It is headed by a jail warden.
Objectives of Casework:
1. To obtain clear description of social history
2. Solving immediate problems involving family problems or other
personal relationship.
3. Assist inmates towards acceptable solutions.
4. Support inmates, who are nearly release by giving them guidance or
information.
5. Professional assistance to offenders on probation or parole.
6. Rehabilitation and Treatment of Inmates.
Inmate Services
1. Inmate services – As part of the prison rehabilitation and treatment program, the
inmate shall be guaranteed access to health, educational, religious, and related
rehabilitation services.
2. Health Service – Health care and services shall be given to inmates similar to those
available in the free community and subject to prison regulations. A prison shall have at
least one qualified medical doctor and a dentist.
3. Medical consultation and visiting hour – Medical consultation and visiting hours
shall be established by the Superintendent in consultation with the medical staff.
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4. Basic guidelines on medical consultation – the following guidelines shall be
observed whenever an inmate visits a prison hospital/clinic for consultation and/or
treatment.
a. The inmate shall be in proper uniform during consultations.
b. He shall be attended to on a first come first served basis.
c. The number of inmates allowed at the hospital/clinic for
consultation/treatment shall depend on the number of available doctors.
d. An inmate shall be subjected to a body search upon entering and leaving
the prison hospital/clinic.
e. In emergency cases, only the medical staff and the patient shall be allowed
inside the emergency room. An inmate shall not loiter in the hospital/clinic
or leave the same without permission from the medical staff.
f. Visitors of inmates shall not be allowed to stay inside the hospital/clinic to
attend to the sick inmate without the permission of the prison medical staff.
g. Children below twelve (12) years of age shall not be allowed to stay inside
a hospital ward or treatment room.
h. Patients in the hospital shall not be required to stand for checking.
5. Pregnant CIW inmates – In the CIW, there shall be special accommodations for
pregnant women. Whenever practicable, however, arrangements shall be made for
children to be born in a hospital outside the prison.
6. Infant born to a CIW inmate – an infant born while the mother is serving sentence in
the CIW may be allowed to stay with the mother for a period not exceeding one (1) year.
After the lapse of said period, if the mother of the infant fails to place the child in a home
of her own, the Superintendent shall make arrangements with the Department of Social
Welfare and Development or any other social welfare agency for the infant’s care. As far
as practicable, the CIW shall have a nursery staffed by qualified personnel.
7. Recommendation for release of seriously-ill inmate – The prison medical officer
shall visit all sick inmates daily and attend to those who complain of any ailment. He
shall render a report to the Superintendent whenever he considers that an inmate’s mental
or physical health has been or will be injuriously affected by continued imprisonment or
by any condition of confinement.
I. REFERENCES:
1. BJMP Manual;
2. Presidential Decree No. 1566: Strengthening of the Philippine Disaster Control
Capabilities and the establishment of the national program on community disaster
preparedness;
3. Eight United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and Treatment of
Offenders, Havana, Cuba, 27 August to 7 September 1990
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II. CONCEPT:
This is a comprehensive policy which prescribes the minimum standard that must
be met for managing critical incidents. This provides the necessary structure, as well as
determines the chain-of-command for an organized response to a critical incident.
III. PURPOSES:
IV. SCOPE:
2. The Incident Commander shall designate an employee to assume specific duties during
a critical incident. If necessary, the following staff assignment are members of the
Command Staff:
a. the liaison Officer serves as the point of contact for other agencies;
b. the Jail manager is responsible for directing the operations of the non-affected
areas of the jail;
c. the Safety Officer’s Function is to develop and recommend measures for assuring
personnel safety, and to assess and/or anticipate hazardous and unsafe situations;
d. the recorder will develop and maintain an accurate and complete written record of
the actions and activities of the incident Commander;
e. the Public Information Officer (PIO) shall be responsible for entertaining the
media personalities and shall release information only upon the approval of the
Incident Commander.
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3. The Incident Commander may designate an employee to assume the duties of the
General Staff, if necessary; the following staff assignments are members of the General
Staff:
C. Chain of Command
1. The Highest-ranking jail officer present at the facility at the time of an incident
shall be the Incident Commander.
2. The Chain of Command in a critical incident at a jail facility shall be:
a. Jail Warden
b. Deputy Jail Warden
c. Duty OD
3. When necessary, the Regional Office may designate a trained incident
Commander to ensure effective control over the crisis situation.
4. A transfer of command shall not occur until a thorough briefing has been done
and all operation areas of the facility are notified of the transfer.
D. Notifications
1. After the confirmation of a critical incident, the Incident Commander shall ensure
that the Regional Office is notified immediately.
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2. The appropriate friendly forces shall also be notified. Depending on the
circumstances, this may include:
a. PNP;
b. BFP;
c. Neighboring communities via the Communication Alert Network (CAN).
E. The National Headquarters Office Responsibilities
The National Headquarters Office shall monitor all critical incidents and may, if
appropriate and necessary, provide direction, assistance and resource management to the
jail experiencing a critical incident.
V. Specialized Teams
1. Special Tactics and Response (STAR) Team
a. Each BJMP Regional Office shall organize and maintain in at least one (1)
20-man STAR team, consisting of a weapons unit and a negotiations unit.
b. STAR-Weapons Unit shall be composed of 15 staff and a weapons unit
commander.
c. STAR-Negotiations unit shall be composed of primary negotiator,
secondary negotiator, intelligence negotiator and the negotiation unit
commander.
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d. The STAR team shall be equipped with the necessary gears and trainings
for any critical incidents.
e. Within the scope of the Incident Management System, STAR team
members shall be designated as part of the D Level response.
3. Each jail must follow a single tactical approach, which is applicable to all or most
critical incident situations. The 5-steps tactical plan must be integrated as part of the
jail contingency plans. The 5-step tactical plan phases are reporting, containment,
mobilization, response, and recovery.
3.1 Reporting
3.2 Containment
a. Once verified, isolation and containment of the critical incident are
essential in reducing the possibility of involvement of other areas or
additional inmates.
b. The Incident Commander shall activate the Immediate Response Teams
(teams A, B, etc…). When an incident is reported and assistance is needed,
these teams will be the initial response teams.
c. Every inmate shall be secured in his/her cell/housing unit. Those not in a
housing unit shall be placed in the nearest area providing adequate
security. All internal security posts shall be double-manned to the extent
possible.
d. A headcount of staff, visitors, volunteers and inmates shall be
e. initiated.
3.3 Mobilization
a. Notifications shall be made to Jail Administrative Staff, Regional Office,
National Headquarters Office, initiate staff callbacks and possible support
agencies.
b. Activate notifications of special teams and recall jail personnel, as
applicable.
c. Contingency plan shall be activated to deal with the critical incident.
d. Staff shall not fail to evacuate an inmate from a life threatening condition.
e. In a hostage situation or other kind of inmate disturbance, evacuation of
the area with the outer perimeter shall begin as soon as possible. However,
caution must be taken not to unjustifiably compromise the containment
security during this process.
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(1) Every inmate and non-involved staff be moved behind the lines of the
outer perimeter.
(2) Every individual in danger shall be evacuated:
(a) First priority shall be given to any individual inside the inner perimeter;
(b) Second, every individual in exposed areas to threats of any sort shall
be evacuated; then
(c) Individual(s) in more exposed areas but within the outer perimeter
shall be evacuated.
(3) An evacuee shall be held at a designated location for identification and
debriefing purposes. The intelligence Officer/designee shall debrief every
evacuee. An inmate evacuee shall be considered as a suspect until proven
otherwise.
3.4 Response
a. Response to every critical incident involves two different tactics and
strategies. However, during all critical incidents, staff actions shall be directed
from the Incident Command Post.
b. Special Critical Incidents Checklist, which may contain possible response
options for each specific type of critical incident, are attached in appendices.
c. The primary goal of the response step is to:
(1) Respond to violent or potentially violent critical incidents with
minimal necessary force;
(2) Continue to isolate and contain the incident operations;
(3) Establish control and restore order as quickly as possible;
(4) Prevent escapes during critical incident operations;
(5) Maintain the personal safety of staff, innocent bystanders
(visitors, volunteers, the public, inmates, etc…), inmates who may be
involved in or creating the critical incident; and
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(6) Minimize the impact of the critical incident on the rest of the facility
and the surrounding community.
3.5 Recovery
Once the critical incident is contained, a demobilization plan shall be drafted and
forwarded to the Regional Office for review/approval. The regional office shall
determine whether a sufficient number of management staff is present to properly
manage the demobilization process. The plan shall be activated when it has been
approved by the regional Director. The plan shall include, but not be limited to:
a. monitor staff and inmate interaction by specific management personnel,
including:
(1) Account for all staff, visitors and inmates, keys, tools, equipment;
(2) Restrain inmates;
(3) Search inmates, all areas, inmate property, preserve areas of crime
scene for and the collection and preservation of evidence;
(4) Escort inmates to a secure area;
(5) Separate inmates-involved versus non-involved;
(6) Place inmates in a secure area with the security measures in place;
(7) Transport involved inmates to other facilities; and
(8) Request PNP-SOCO assistance in the conduct of a crime scene
investigation.
b. evaluates the medical condition of staff and inmates;
c. inspects the physical plant, primarily security barriers, locking device and safety
issues;
d. debrief/defuse involved staff, reports, videotapes collected prior to being relieved from
critical incident;
e. interview/interrogate the inmates based on his/her known level of involvement;
f. monitors the critical incident stress management plan for staff, ensure mental health
practitioners are available and provided an assessment of involved staff;
g. record and videotape the demobilization process. Once the demobilization phase is
over, collect and submit all applicable documentation to the Regional Office;
h. develops a step-down plan to assist with the returning of the facility to normal
conditions;
i. ensures the accountability of those inmates transported to local hospitals for treatment
and those transferred to other facilities; and
j. demobilizes the Incident Command Post.
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NON-INSTITUTIONAL
CORRECTIONS
What is correction
• Corrections that branch of the administration of justice charged with the
responsibility for the custody, supervision, and rehabilitation of convicted offenders.
Penology
• comes from the Greek word POENA, which mean pain or suffering.
• Study of punishment for crime or of criminal offenders.
GALLEYS
• long, low, narrow, single decked ships propelled by sails, usually rowed by criminals.
• a type of ship used for transportation of criminals in the 16th century
HULKS
• former warships used to house prisoners in the 18th and 19th century.
• abandoned warships converted into prisons, also called “FLOATING HELLS”.
Code of hittites
• Based on morality
Code of Kalantiaw
• promulgated in 1433 by Datu Kalantiao
Code of Draco
• a harsh code that provides the same punishment for both citizens and the slaves
Code of Solon
• Repealed the code of draco.
The Twelve Tables (XII Tabulae)
• represented the earliest codification of Roman law incorporated into the Justinian
Code.
Justinian Code
• written by Emperor Justinian of Rome in 6th C.A.D
Burgundian Code
• specified punishment according to the social class of offenders.
EARLY PRISONS
Mamertine Prison
• early Roman place of confinement which is built under the main sewer of Rome
in 64 B.C.
Bridewell Workhouse
• built in 1557 in London for the employment and housing of English prisoners.
Wallnut Street Jail
• first American Penitentiary.
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PIONEERS
William Penn (1614-1718)
• first leader to prescribe imprisonment as correctional treatment for major
offenders.
• responsible for the abolition of death penalty and torture as a form of punishment
Charles Montesquieu (1689-1755)
• a French historian and philosopher who analyzed law as an expression of justice.
Francois Marie Aroet (Voltaire) (1694-1778)
• he believes that fear of shame was a deterrent to crime.
Cesare Bonesana Marchese de Beccaria (1737-1794)
• presented the humanistic goal of law.
Jeremy Bentham (1746-1832)
• the greatest leader in the reform of English Criminal Law. He believes that
whatever punishment designed to negate whatever pleasure or gain the criminal derives
from crime, the crime rate would go down.
• the one who devise the ultimate PANOPTICAL PRISON
John Howard (1726-1790)
• Sheriff of Bedfordshire in 1773 who devoted his life and fortune to prison reform.
B. DISADVANTAGE OF PAROLE
Parole involves the risk that the parolee may become a repeat offender (known as
recidivism in the criminal justice field). It also involves the risk that he won't, in fact, be
able to survive on his own upon release, and will fall victim to chronic unemployment,
homelessness, social maladjustment or substance abuse. Another disadvantage of parole
is that it frequently involves the continuation of involvement by the criminal justice
system (at a financial cost to the public and to the detriment of individual liberty) in the
parolee's life, because parole is often accompanied by monitoring for a certain period
thereafter.
PRISONERS QUALIFIED AND DISQUALIFIES FOR PAROLE
A. PRISONERS QUALIFIED
Unless otherwise disqualified under Sec. 15 of the rules, a prisoner shall be eligible for
the grant of parole upon showing that –
• He is confined in a jail or prison to serve an indeterminate prison sentence, the
maximum period of which exceeds one year, pursuant to a final judgment of
conviction; and that
• He has served the minimum period of said sentence less the good conduct time
allowances (GCTA) earned.
• There is a reasonable probability that if relearned he will become law-abiding;
and
• His release will not be incompatible with the interests and welfare of society.
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"RULE 2.1. ELIGIBILITY FOR REVIEW OF A PAROLE CASE - AN INMATE'S
CASE MAY BE ELIGIBLE FOR REVIEW BY THE BOARD PROVIDED:
1. Inmate is serving an indeterminate sentence the maximum period of which
exceeds one (1) year;
2. Inmate has served the minimum period of the indeterminate sentence;
3. Inmate's conviction is final and executor;
4. In case the inmate has one or more co-accused who had been convicted, the
director/warden concerned shall forward their prison records and
carpets/jackets at the same time.
5. Inmate has no pending criminal case; and
6. Inmate is serving sentence in the national penitentiary, unless the confinement
of said inmate in a municipal, city, district or provincial jail is justified.
The Board of Pardons and Parole administers the Parole system of the country.
A. COMPOSITION OF THE BOARDS OF PARDON AND PAROLE
Chairman - Secretary of the DOJ
Ex-Officio - Probation Administrator of the Parole and Probation Administrator
Members:
a. Sociologist
b. Clergyman/Educator
c. Psychiatrist
Person qualified for the work by training/experience and a member of the Philippine
BAR.
B. EXECUTIVE ORDER NO. 292 - ADMINISTRATIVE CODE OF 1987;
[BOOK IV/TITLE III/CHAPTER 6-BOARD OF PARDONS AND PAROLE]
CHAPTER 6
Board of Pardons and Parole
SECTION 17. Board of Pardons and Parole. —The Board of Pardons and Parole shall
continue to discharge the powers and functions as provided in existing law and such
additional functions as may be provided by law.
SECTION 18. Board Composition. —The Board shall be composed of the Secretary as
Chairman and six (6) members consisting of: The Administrator of the Parole and
Probation Administration as ex-officio member, a sociologist, a clergyman, an educator,
a person with training and experience in correction work, and a member of the Philippine
Bar; Provided, that one of them is a woman. The members of the Board shall be
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appointed by the President upon the recommendation of the Secretary and shall hold
office for a term of six (6) years, without prejudice to reappointment. In case of vacancy
by reason of death, incapacity, resignation or removal of any of the Board members, the
Secretary shall have the authority to designate a temporary member possessing the
qualifications of his predecessor and to serve out his unexpired term or until the President
shall have appointed a regular member to fill the vacancy.
SECTION 19. Executive Director and Board Secretary; Support Staff. —In the
performance of his duties as Chairman of the Board of Pardons and Parole, the Secretary
shall be assisted by a staff headed by the Executive Director who is at the same time the
Secretary of the Board. The Executive Director shall be appointed by the President upon
the recommendation of the Secretary. The Executive Director shall receive a monthly
salary of thirteen thousand five hundred pesos. The Board Secretary shall prepare and
keep the minutes of all the board sessions in a book of records kept for the purpose, as
well as all the resolutions and recommendations of the Board on all actions involving
parole, pardons and executive clemency to the President; authenticate and/or attest all
minutes, resolutions and recommendations of the Board; prepare and serve all notices of
board meetings or sessions to the members of the Board; prepare an annual report of all
resolutions and recommendations for parole or executive clemency and other reports that
the Department may require. He shall also perform such other functions as the Board may
from time to time assign to him.
SECTION 20. Board Meetings. —The Board shall meet regularly every week, or as the
Board may direct, or upon call by the Chairman/Secretary. The members shall act only as
a Board, and every decision of the majority shall be valid as an act of the Board provided,
that the Board may direct a Board member to prepare and submit a report involving any
application for parole, pardon or any request for executive clemency for appropriate
action by the Board.
SECTION 21. Board Rules and Regulations. —The Board is hereby authorized to
establish and prescribe, subject to the approval of the Secretary, rules and regulations to
govern the proceedings of the Board.
SECTION 22. Indeterminate Sentence Law. —The provisions of Act No. 4103,
otherwise known as the Indeterminate Sentence Law, as amended, shall continue to apply
except as otherwise amended, modified or repealed by this Code.
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3. UNDERSTAND, USE, AND EVALUATE THE FORMS OF CLEMENCY SUCH AS BUT NOT
LIMITED TO: EXEVUTIVE CLEMENCY – PARDON, ABSOLUTE AND CONDITIONAL,
COMMUTATION OF SENTENCE, AND REPRIEVE; OTHER RELEVANT REMEDIES
GRANTED BY THE COURT; OTHER CLEMENCY SUCH AS DESCRIMINALIZING
CERTAIN CRIMINAL ACTS, REPEALED PENAL/CRIMINAL LAWS; AND AMNESTY.
INLUDING THE PROCESSES AND PROCEDURES OF THE GRANT
DENIAL/DISQUALIFICATIONS, PROCESS OF SUPERVISION AND MONITORING,
VIOLATION OF THE CONDITION/S, CHANGES IN THE CONDITION/S, SUSPENSION,
REVOCATION, ARREST OF THE GRANTEE, EARLY DISCHARGE, AND RELEASE OF
GRANTEE
EXECUTIVE CLEMENCY
It shall refer to Absolute Pardon, Conditional Pardon with or without Parole conditions
and Commutation of Sentence as may be granted by the President of the Philippines upon
the recommendation of the Board of Pardon and Parole.
1. ABSOLUTE PARDON - It refers to the total extinction of the criminal liability of the
individual to whom it is granted without any condition whatsoever and restores to the
individual his civil rights and remits the penalty imposed for the particular offense of
which he was convicted.
Purpose:
a. To right a wrong
b. To normalize a tumultuous political situation.
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ABSOLUTE PARDON is also granted by a President to an imprisoned president the
incumbent has deposed. Absolute Pardon is granted in order to restore full political and
civil rights to convicted persons who have already served their sentenced and have
reached the prescribed period for the grant of Absolute Pardon.