Hubert Webb's Urgent Motion To Acquit - 28 Oct. 2010
Hubert Webb's Urgent Motion To Acquit - 28 Oct. 2010
Hubert Webb's Urgent Motion To Acquit - 28 Oct. 2010
SUPREME COURT
Manila
En Banc
Ground
taken from the cadaver of Carmela Vizconde for DNA analysis. The
longer produce the semen specimen that was in its custody. Through
piece of evidence that could have proven, once and for all, that
the prosecution.”2 It has also been held that the State has a
1
Supreme Court Resolution dated 20 April 2010, p. 12.
2
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963).
2
constitutional duty to preserve evidence with exculpatory value that
means. x x x.”3
acquittal.
would establish his innocence, as the test results would show whether
3
California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479 (1984).
4
People v. Webb et al., Rollo, Vol. 17, pp. 186-192.
5
Id., p. 192.
3
the sperm found in Carmela Vizconde’s vaginal canal belonged to him
November 1997. Judge Tolentino was of the belief that the proposed
DNA examination would not serve the ends of justice but only lead to
courts. Judge Tolentino also held that there was no assurance that the
that appellant had not shown that the proper procedure for the
with.8
Dissenting Opinion, cited the Honorable Court’s ruling in the 2004 case
of People v. Yatar9 to show that DNA testing could finally settle the
“In People vs. Yatar, the High Court pointed out the
importance of a DNA examination, viz:
6
Id., pp. 187-188.
7
Resolution dated 20 April 2010, citing Records, Vol. 17, pp. 256-259.
8
Id.
9
428 SCRA 504 (2004).
4
“‘DNA print or identification technology
has been advanced as a uniquely effective
means to link a suspect to a crime, or to
exonerate a wrongly accused suspect, where
biological evidence has been left. For purposes
of criminal investigation, DNA identification is a
fertile source of both inculpatory and
exculpatory evidence. It can assist immensely
in effecting a more accurate account of the
crime committed, efficiently facilitating the
conviction of the guilty, securing the acquittal
of the innocent, and ensuring the proper
administration of justice in every case.
10
A.M. No. 06-11-5-SC effective 15 October 2007.
5
litigation, order a DNA testing. x x x.”11 The order shall issue after due
6
taken from the cadaver of Carmela Vizconde
under the custody of the National Bureau of
Investigation is hereby GRANTED. The NBI is
ORDERED to ASSIST the parties in facilitating
the submission of said specimen to the UP-
Natural Science and Research Institute,
Diliman, Quezon City and they (NBI and UP-
NSRI) are further ORDERED to REPORT to this
Court within fifteen (15) days from notice
hereof regarding compliance with and
implementation of this Resolution.”
first requested for the DNA analysis, he was finally granted that
DNA analysis, he was still denied that singular opportunity to prove his
innocence, as the State could not produce the semen sample that was
ARGUMENT
submitted to the Honorable Court, the NBI claimed that the desired
Vizconde was no longer in its custody because the same was already
6, and 7, 1996.15
15
Compliance and Manifestation dated 27 April 2010, p. 3.
7
10. But the trial court denied the NBI’s claim, declaring that no
such semen sample was submitted in court during the testimony of Dr.
testimony, the Branch Clerk of Court explained that what were marked
in evidence as Exhibits “S,” “T,” and “U” were the photographs of the
Moreover, Dr. Cabanayan had testified that the slides were kept by the
11. The NBI’s claim that the slides were submitted by Dr.
Cabanayan to the trial court was also contradicted by its own letter to
appellant Webb in 1997. Appellant had asked the NBI to confirm the
dated 23 April 1997 from Dr. Renato C. Bautista of the NBI Medico-
Legal Division, stating that the specimen gathered is still existing and
Manifestation dated 27 April 2010, the NBI filed its Compliance dated
8
cadaver of Carmela Vizconde were “no longer in the custody of the NBI
Regional Trial Court Branch 274, Parañaque City, when I testified, both
7, 1996 before said Court.”18 Dr. Bautista, for his part, claimed in his
April 1997 based only the information given to him by the medical
the slides were still in their custody and the medical technologist
that Exhibits “S,” “T,” and “U” were merely the photographs of the
slides containing the vaginal smear. Nowhere in the Formal Offer was
stated that the slides were not available on that date, but that the
18
Affidavit of Dr. Prospero Cabanayan dated 27 April 2010, attached as
Annex “C” to NBI’s Compliance dated 16 July 2010.
19
Par. 4.4 of the Affidavit of Dr. Renato C. Bautista, attached as Annex
“E” to NBI’s Compliance dated 16 July 2010.
9
“FISCAL ZUNO:
“I believe, Your Honor, at this point, The
best evidence is the slide itself.
“ATTY. AGUIRRE
Without prejudice to the production of
the actual slide so that we could ask
questions.
“COURT
Is this slide available now?
“FISCAL ZUNO
It is not available, Your Honor with these
questions propounded by the counsel, we
can produce the slide itself, Your Honor,
and can be produced by the laboratory
technician who examined the slide, Your
Honor. So that the doctor will not make
any estimate of the slide. Because
further questions on the slide, on the size
of the slide, Your Honor, we will object to
it on the ground that it is not the best
evidence. We will be presenting the
slide, Your Honor.
“x x x
“FISCAL ZUNO
It is a general term, Your Honor. If
counsel refers to the slides which is not
available, we will produce the slide so
that we will be not speculating on the
size.
“COURT
“FISCAL ZUNO
Or they can go to another point and they
on the next hearing, we will bring the
slide, and they can ask and propound
questions.
“COURT
Is the slide not available today?
“FISCAL ZUNO
It is not available, Your Honor because
we did not expect that questions will be
asked on the slide. We will bring the
slide on the next hearing, Your Honor.”20
20
Transcript of Stenographic Notes, 5 February 1996, pp. 29 – 34.
10
16. At the next hearing held on 6 February 1996, Dr.
“ATTY. AGUIRRE:
WITNESS
“DR. CABANAYAN:
February 1996, Dr. Cabanayan testified that he last saw the sperm
“ATTY. BAUTISTA:
“Q: Did you ever see the slides again?
“ATTY. BAUTISTA:
“Q: When did you see the slides again?
21
Transcript of Stenographic Notes, 6 February 1996, p. 4.
11
safekeeping. And I think the last time I
had these slides taken was when I had
the photographs.
“ATTY. BAUTISTA:
“Q: When did the photographs of the slides
take place?
“ATTY. BAUTISTA:
“Q: Last Year. So, in 1995?
did not submit the sperm specimen to the trial court as he claimed in
his affidavit dated 27 April 2010. Dr. Bautista’s affidavit dated 12 July
2010 does not make Dr. Cabanayan’s claim any more persuasive. Dr.
supposedly told him that the slides were in their custody in 1997.
Assuming Dr. Bautista’s story were true, there is no proof that the
claim that he submitted the slides to the trial court when he testified.
19. The records show that the semen specimen was not
submitted to the trial court in evidence. From the time the semen
22
Transcript of Stenographic Notes, 7 February 1996, p. 19 – 21.
12
been in the custody of the NBI. Consequently, the NBI’s failure to
produce the specimen for DNA testing shows, at the very least, the
evidence.
20. The State’s failure to produce the semen sample for DNA
21. In the case, In re: The Writ of Habeas Corpus for Reynaldo
opinion, which was joined by former Chief Justices Hilario Davide, Jr.
23
En Banc, 442 SCRA 706, 733 (2004).
13
he may invoke it whenever there is a
compelling and valid ground to do so.”
that allowing appellant Webb to avail of the latest DNA technology was
circumstance[.] x x x.”
24. In Dabbs, the defendant who had been tried and convicted
evidence – cuttings from the victim’s underwear and pants, and the
gauze pad from the rape kit. The court granted the request, ruling
that:
14
simply to ensure the finality of
convictions is untenable.”27
(Emphasis
supplied.)
DNA testing of the piece of cloth from the victim’s underwear excluded
ruled that DNA tests should have been performed on the samples
taken from the victim “[i]n view of the wide acceptance and
27
Commonwealth v. Brison, supra, quoting In the Matter of Dabbs v. Vergari.
28
People v. Dabbs, 154 Misc. 2d 671 (1991).
15
27. In the present case, the loss or suppression by the
avail of the latest DNA technology and prove his innocence. This is
29
317 U.S. 213, 215-216.
30
373 U.S. 83 (1963).
16
“The principle of Mooney v. Holohan is
not punishment of society for misdeeds of a
prosecutor but avoidance of an unfair trial to
the accused. Society wins not only when
the guilty are convicted but when
criminal trials are fair; our system of the
administration of justice suffers when any
accused is treated unfairly. x x x. A
prosecution that withholds evidence on
demand of an accused which, if made
available, would tend to exculpate him or
reduce the penalty helps shape a trial
that bears heavily on the defendant. That
casts the prosecutor in the role of an architect
of a proceeding that does not comport with
standards of justice, even though, as in the
present case, his action is not ‘the result of
guile,’ to use the words of the Court of
Appeals.” (Emphasis supplied.)
and denied a complete defense against the charge against him. The
trial court should have, at the outset, allowed DNA testing of the
(13) years ago to submit a semen sample for comparison with the
court to order a DNA analysis, the result of which could have excluded
the DNA examination, the trial court denied him the singular piece of
31. Instead, the trial court gave full faith and credence to the
however, was a perjured witness, and the NBI knew this. As testified
31
Resolution dated 20 April 2010, p. 3.
17
by NBI Head Agent Artemio Sacaguing, Alfaro had informed him that
1995, one of which stated that she did not enter the Vizconde
eyewitness to the crime. But in spite of all this, the NBI proceeded to
32. Now, almost thirteen (13) years after he filed his Motion to
– this time by the NBI’s failure to produce the semen specimen for DNA
testing. This is just the latest in a series of acts showing how the State
shaped the trial of this case to bear heavily against appellant Webb.
deliver this evidence to appellant Webb for DNA testing denies him a
complete defense and violates his right to due process. As held by the
18
preserve such evidence. The Court declared in California v.
Trombetta:32
guilt. x x x.”
19
breath-analysis tests to be admissible in criminal prosecutions.
reason was that the evidence did not meet the standard of
20
provide inculpatory than exculpatory
evidence.”
was evident from the time it was taken, which was several hours after
her death, and throughout the trial of the case. To be sure, the NBI’s
“ATTY. BAUTISTA:
“DR. CABANAYAN:
21
“Q: Will you be able to identify for instance
the person to whom a sperm belongs
with DNA test under the present
conditions that you have just described?
was raped, offering the photographs of the glass slides containing the
36
Transcript of Stenographic Notes, 7 February 2010, pp. 21-22.
22
sperm cells as proof that “Carmela was raped on or about the late
the Prosecution’s only evidence that it was appellant Webb who raped
Carmela Vizconde was the testimony of Jessica Alfaro that on the night
the crime was committed, she saw appellant Webb “pumping” Carmela
Vizconde when she entered one of the rooms of the Vizconde house:
40. The testimony of Alfaro was heavily relied upon by the trial
court to convict the accused in this case. Her narration was given full
credit by the trial court and the Court of Appeals despite all its
was at the United States at the time the crime was committed. A DNA
analysis of the sperm specimen could have determined, once and for
all, if he was in the Philippines at the time and had raped Carmela. The
37
Exhibit “S,” “T,” and “U” of the Prosecution’s Formal Offer of Evidence.
23
41. Recent legal developments in our country have highlighted
the new Rule on DNA Evidence which took effect on 15 October 2007,
42. In this case, the Honorable Court had given appellant Webb
the best opportunity to prove his innocence with its order granting DNA
24
a complete defense, in violation of his constitutional right to due
PRAYER
appellant Hubert Jeffrey P. Webb and order his immediate release from
By:
25
ELOYSA G. SICAM
Roll of Attorneys No. 43078
IBP OR No. 803325, Makati City, 01-04-10
PTR OR No. MKT 2089318, Makati City, 01-05-
10
MCLE Compliance No. III-0014999, 04-30-10
Copy Furnished:
THE DIRECTOR
26
National Bureau of Investigation
Taft Avenue, Manila
LEONILA AG DANGLE
Chief, Criminal Case Section
Court of Appeals, Manila
[CA G.R. H.C. No. 00336]
27
Maysan, Valenzuela City
28
LGS:JZH/rmr(my docs/JZH/P. v. Webb:Urgent Motion to Acquit)
29