Court finds 4 Philippine police guilty in Duterte drug war killings

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Ms Mary Ann Domingo and her son hold photos of her husband and son after four policemen were found guilty of killing them on June 18, 2024.

Ms Mary Ann Domingo and her son hold photos of her husband and son after four policemen were found guilty of killing them on June 18, 2024.

PHOTO: AFP

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Four Philippine policemen were found guilty on June 18 of killing a father and his son, court officials said, in a rare case of law enforcement officers being prosecuted for taking part in former president Rodrigo Duterte’s deadly drug war.

The four low-ranking officers were all sentenced to up to 10 years in prison for the shooting deaths of the two victims in a Manila slum during an anti-drug police operation in 2016, Manila regional trial court judge Rowena Alejandria said in her written verdict.

“It must be worthy to note that the accused themselves did not deny their presence and participation in the police operation conducted, the same event where the victims Luis and Gabriel (Domingo) were killed,” Judge Alejandria wrote.

Thousands of drug suspects were killed by police and unknown gunmen in a campaign that became the centrepiece of Mr Duterte’s 2016-2022 rule, a crackdown that critics described as state-sponsored extrajudicial killings and is now a subject of an investigation by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Mr Luis Bonifacio’s partner, Ms Mary Ann Domingo, cried on her son’s shoulder as they listened to the verdict on two counts of homicide each being read at the cramped northern Manila courtroom.

She later told reporters that she felt the ruling showed “justice still exists”.

“I hope these (convictions) will continue not just for me but for the other victims of extrajudicial killings,” she added.

Manila policemen Virgilio Cervantes, Arnel de Guzman, Johnston Alacre and Artemio Saguros were also ordered to pay 300,000 pesos (S$6,900) each in damages to the victims’ heirs.

The convicts were marched out of the courtroom without speaking to reporters.

The family has alleged that more than a dozen police officers took part in the night-time raid at the northern Manila slum community.

The family insisted the two were not involved in drugs and were unarmed when police opened fire.

The defendants pleaded self-defence, alleging the suspects were armed and had shot at them.

But state prosecutors went with the lesser charge of homicide against only four officers, instead of murder, which involves deliberate intent to kill and which carries a heavier penalty.

ICC investigation

“We are treating this as a partial victory because in all honesty, the case we filed against these policemen was murder and not homicide,” the Domingo family lawyer Julian Oliva said.

Police said the crackdown left more than 6,000 people dead, but rights groups estimate tens of thousands of mostly poor men have been killed by officers and vigilantes, even without proof they were linked to drugs.

Mr Duterte

had openly ordered police to shoot suspects

dead

during anti-drug operations if officers believed their lives were in danger.

While the crackdown has been widely condemned and sparked an international investigation, only five other policemen have been convicted of killing drug suspects.

Three Manila police officers were convicted in 2018 of murdering a 17-year-old boy in 2017. Two other narcotics police officers were found guilty in 2023 for separate killings in 2016 and 2017, the latter victim a South Korean businessman.

Lawyers say most families are too scared to go after their relatives’ killers or do not have the money or time to pursue a case in the Philippines’ creaky judicial system.

Lawyers say most families are too scared to go after their relatives’ killers or do not have the money or time to pursue a case in the Philippines’ creaky judicial system.

“It shows how the impunity is taking place in our country,” Mr Oliva said.

The Philippine drug crackdown

is being investigated by the ICC

, which said in 2021 that it appeared “a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population took place pursuant to or in furtherance of a state policy”.

Mr Duterte

pulled the Philippines out of the ICC in 2019

, so only cases before that date are covered by the investigation.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, who succeeded Mr Duterte,

has refused to cooperate in the ICC probe

, saying Manila has a functioning judicial system. AFP

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