Prosecutors ask judge to inhibit from Jee Ick Joo case

By Benjamin Pulta

August 13, 2019, 3:24 pm

MANILA--Prosecutors have reiterated their request for the judge trying the case of policemen named in the gruesome kidnapping and killing of South Korean businessman Jee Ick Joo two years ago, to recuse herself from hearing the case.

In a motion filed on August 7, Senior Deputy Prosecutor Richard Anthony D. Fadullon asked Angeles City Branch 56 Judge Zenaida S. Buan to voluntarily inhibit herself from the case.

The motion was also signed by Senior Assistant State Prosecutors Juan Pedro C. Navera, Olivia Laroza-Torrevillas, and Ethel Rea G. Suril.

"The people and the private complainant, whose husband was unlawfully taken and brutally murdered by the accused in these cases, cannot fathom and are profoundly disturbed with the way the presiding judge cavalierly resolved the pending incidents in these cases and by her obvious obstinacy to cling to the instant cases instead of inhibiting from them for unknown reasons," the motion said.

"Her subsequent actions and later orders indicate clear badges of partiality and bias in favor of accused Dumlao. The people and the private complainant have undoubtedly and irretrievably lost their trust and confidence that the presiding judge will hear the cases with the utmost fairness, impartiality, and probity," it added.

The judge granted the petition for bail of Police Supt. Rafael P. Dumlao III, despite the positive testimonies of discharged state witness Roy Villegas that he was part of the conspiracy in the kidnapping for ransom of Jee as he was the team leader, their mastermind, and was the instigator of the crime.

Jee was kidnapped by two unidentified men from their residence in Friendship Plaza Subdivision, Angeles, Pampanga on Oct. 18, 2016.

After their arrest, the kidnappers—who turned out to be members of the Philippine National Police (PNP)—accused Jee of being involved in the illegal drug trade.

Jee's wife, Choi Kyung-jin, made the statement that the kidnappers Patrick Joseph Banez demanded a ransom of PHP8 million, and she reportedly paid PH5 million on Oct. 30, 2016.

On Jan. 17, 2017, the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) went to a funeral parlor in Bagbaguin, Caloocan where the body of Jee was believed to have been brought and where his remains were cremated and his ash was flushed down the toilet. (PNA)

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