04 Valdez V People
04 Valdez V People
04 Valdez V People
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* SECOND DIVISION.
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614 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
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Same; Same; The law enforcers and public officers who take
possession of the specimen is duty-bound to detail how it was cared
for, safeguarded and preserved while in his or her control to prevent
alteration or replacement while in custody.The onus of proving
culpability in criminal indictment falls upon the State. In
conjunction with this, law enforcers and public officers alike have
the corollary duty to preserve the chain of custody over the seized
drugs. The chain of evidence is constructed by proper exhibit
handling, storage, labeling and recording, and must exist from the
time the evidence is found until the time it is offered in evidence.
Each person who takes possession of the specimen is duty-bound to
detail how it was cared for, safeguarded and preserved while in his
or her control to prevent alteration or replacement while in custody.
This guarantee of the integrity of the evidence to be used against an
accused goes to the very heart of his fundamental rights.
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tion of innocence and the other compatible with the finding of guilt,
the court must acquit the accused for the reason that the evidence
does not satisfy the test of moral certainty and is inadequate to
support a judgment of conviction.
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the same vein, let this serve as an admonition to police officers and
public officials alike to perform their mandated duties with
commitment to the highest degree of diligence, righteousness and
respect for the law.
TINGA, J.:
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5
9165 (R.A. No. 9165) and sentencing him to suffer the
penalty of imprisonment ranging from eight (8) years and
one (1) day of prision mayor medium as minimum to fifteen
(15) years of reclusion temporal medium 6as maximum and
ordering him to pay a fine of P350,000.00.
I.
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II.
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17 People v. Lapitaje, 445 Phil. 729, 746; 397 SCRA 674, 687 (2003),
citing People v. Mendoza, 327 SCRA 695 (2000). See also People v.
Sevilla, 394 Phil. 125; 339 SCRA 625 (2000).
18 See People v. Lapitaje, 445 Phil. 729, 748; 397 SCRA 674, 690 (2003)
citing People v. Lagarto, 326 SCRA 693 (2000) and People v. Nitcha, 240
SCRA 283 (1995). See also People v. Kimura, G.R. No. 130805, 27 April
2004, 428 SCRA 51.
19 People v. Sarap, 447 Phil. 642; 399 SCRA 503 (2003).
623
xxx
624
20
ting an offense. The tanod did not have probable cause
either to justify petitioners warrantless arrest.
For the exception in Section 5(a), Rule 113 to operate,
this Court has ruled that two (2) elements must be present:
(1) the person to be arrested must execute an overt act
indicating that he has just committed, is actually
committing, or is attempting to commit a crime; and (2)
such overt act is done in the presence or within the view of
the arresting officer.21 Here, petitioners act of looking
around after getting off the bus was but natural as he was
finding his way to his destination. That he purportedly
attempted to run away as the tanod approached him is
irrelevant and cannot by itself be construed as adequate to
charge the tanod with personal knowledge that petitioner
had just engaged in, was actually engaging in or was
attempting to engage in criminal activity. More
importantly, petitioner testified that he did not run away
but in fact spoke with the barangay tanod when they
approached him.
Even taking the prosecutions version generally as the
truth, in line with our assumption from the start, the
conclusion will not be any different. It is not unreasonable
to expect that petitioner, walking the street at night, after
being closely observed and then later tailed by three
unknown persons, would attempt to flee at their approach.
Flight per se is not synonymous with guilt and must22 not
always be attributed to ones consciousness of guilt. Of
persuasion was the Michigan
23
Supreme Court when it ruled
in People v. Shabaz that [f]light alone is not a reliable
indicator of guilt without other circumstances because
flight alone is inherently ambiguous. Alone, and under the
circumstances of this case, petitioners
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625
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as they were
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seized during a warrantless search which was
not lawful. As we pronounced in People v. Lapitaje
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29 See People v. Lapitaje, supra note 17, citing People v. Chua Ho San,
308 SCRA 42 (1999).
30 Id., at pp. 748-749; p. 690.
31 424 Phil. 263; 373 SCRA 221 (2002).
627
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or a voluntary
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submission to the warrantless search and
seizure.
III.
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34 Id.
35 People v. Hajili, 447 Phil. 283, 295; 399 SCRA 188, 197 (2003).
36 People v. Almeida, 463 Phil. 637, 648; 418 SCRA 254, 263 (2003),
citing People v. Mendiola, 235 SCRA 116 (1994). See also People v.
Kimura, G.R. No. 130805, 27 April 2004, 428 SCRA 51, 61, citing People
v. Mendiola, supra, People v. Macuto, 176 SCRA 762 (1989), People v.
Vocente, 188 SCRA 100 (1990) and People v. Mariano, 191 SCRA 136
(1990).
37 See People v. Mapa, G.R. No. 91014, 31 March 1993, 220 SCRA 670
(1993), People v. Dismuke, G.R. No. 108453, 11 July 1994, 234 SCRA 51,
People v. Casimiro, 383 SCRA 400 (2002), People v. Pedronan, 452 Phil.
226; 404 SCRA 183 (2003), People v. Kimura, G.R. No. 130805, 27 April
2004, 428 SCRA 51, People v. Ong, G.R. No. 137348, 21 June 2004, 432
SCRA 470.
629
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630
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40 Records, p. 2.
41 Id., at p. 5.
42 Rollo, p. 87.
631
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43 Id.
44 TSN, 17 March 2004, pp. 11-13.
45 People v. Sevilla, 394 Phil. 125, 158; 339 SCRA 625, 652 (2000),
citing People v. Pagaura, 267 SCRA 17 (1997), People v. De los Santos,
314 SCRA 303 (1999).
632
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46 People v. Santos, Jr., G.R. No. 175593, 17 October 2007, 536 SCRA
489, citing People v. Samson, 421 Phil. 104; 369 SCRA 229 (2001).
47 People v. Sapal, 385 Phil. 109, 126; 328 SCRA 417, 432 (2000), citing
People v. Delos Santos, G.R. No. 126998, 14 September 1999, 314 SCRA
303 and People v. Fider, 223 SCRA 117 (1993).
48 Office of the Court Administrator v. Librado, 329 Phil. 432, 435; 260
SCRA 624, 628 (1996), citing People v. Nario, 224 SCRA 647 (1993).
49 Id., citing People v. Policarpio, 158 SCRA 85 (1988).
50 Id., at p. 436, citing People v. Bati, 189 SCRA 95 (1990), citing
People v. Lamug, 172 SCRA 349 (1989).
51 Id., citing People v. Policarpio, supra.
633
IV.
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52 People v. Sevilla, 394 Phil. 125, 159; 339 SCRA 625, 653 (2000),
citing People v. Pagaura, supra. See also People v. Sapal, supra.
634
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