People v. Ang
People v. Ang
People v. Ang
BELLOSILLO, J.:
ANG CHUN KIT, a Chinese national and reputed to be a member of a Hong Kong-based drug
syndicate operating in Metro Manila, was collared by NARCOM operatives in a buy-bust operation
after he sold to an undercover agent for P400,000.00 a kilo of methamphetamine hydrochloride
known as shabu. His car also yielded more of the regulated drug neatly tucked in a Kleenex box.
On 8 November 1991, at three o'clock in the afternoon, a Confidential Informer (CI) reported to Chief
Investigator Avelino I. Razon that he (CI) had arranged a transaction with a drug dealer interested in
selling a kilo of shabu for P400,000.00 and agreed to consummate the sale at seven o'clock that
evening at the lobby of the Cardinal Santos Medical Center. Chief Investigator Razon immediately
organized a buy-bust team composed of Chief Inspector Rolando Magno as team leader, SPO3
Lolita Bugarin, SPO2 Cesar Jacobo as poseur-buyer, SPO2 Albert San Jose, and SPO2 Domingo
Rubi. Forty (40) bundles of genuine and counterfeit P100-bills were prepared with each bundle
supposed to contain P10,000.00. To camouflage the counterfeit bills genuine P100-bills were placed
on the top and bottom of ten (10) bundles.
At five o'clock in the afternoon the team went to the Cardinal Santos Medical Center. The CI and
SPO2 Jacobo who was carrying the plastic bag of money proceeded to the lobby of the hospital
while the others moved around to avoid detection. At fifteen minutes past seven the accused arrived
in a gray Toyota Corolla with Plate No. TBC-958. He was met at the lobby by the CI who introduced
SPO2 Jacobo to him as the person interested to buy shabu. After allowing the accused a quick look
at the bundles of money, SPO2 Jacobo and the CI followed him to the parking lot where the latter
took out from the trunk of his car a blue SM Shoemart plastic bag and handed it to SPO2 Jacobo.
After ascertaining that the bag contained approximately one (1) kilo of shabu, SPO2 Jacobo handed
the boodle money to the accused. Then SPO2 Jacobo casually lit a cigarette to signal to the other
NARCOM operatives to move in and effect the arrest. The other members of the team closed in,
placed the accused under arrest and seized the money from him. They also searched his vehicle
and found on the dashboard of his car three (3) packets more of crystalline substance in a Kleenex
box.
SPO3 San Jose brought the regulated drug recovered from the accused to the PC Crime Laboratory
where after a qualitative examination the forensic chemist confirmed the substance found in the SM
Shoemart bag and in the Kleenex box to be shabu and weighing 983.27 grams and 293.70 grams,
respectively:
The accused refuted the charges. He tried to explain his presence at the Cardinal Santos Medical
Center thus: In the early evening of 8 November 1991 as he was preparing to have dinner with some
friends in Greenhills, San Juan, he received a telephone call from his friend Johnny Sy asking if he
could ride with him to Greenhills to visit a sick friend at the Cardinal Santos Medical Center. Since he
(accused) was able to borrow the car and the driver of his cousin Roman Ong, he acceded to
Johnny. He passed for him and his friend Anthony Co and brought them to the medical center.
Johnny and Anthony alighted in front of the lobby. He proceeded to the parking lot with the driver
and answered the call of nature. Then he lit a stick of cigarette. However some twenty (20) to thirty
(30) minutes later, plainclothesmen with guns drawn, Johnny and Anthony in tow, suddenly
appeared from nowhere and arrested him and Uy without informing them the reason for their arrest.
He together with Uy, Sy and Co was then brought to Camp Crame where he was mauled, detained
and interrogated without the assistance of counsel. His repeated requests to make a telephone call
to his relatives and counsel were denied.
Loreto Jacobe, the security guard on 12-hour duty at the hospital starting seven o'clock that evening,
testified that from the time he took his post that night until he left there was no untoward incident at
the hospital lobby or in its vicinity as reflected in the logbook. His statements were corroborated by
his supervisor Vicente Praga. The accused concludes that if there was indeed an unusual incident at
the lobby, e.g., sale of regulated drugs, then the security guards on duty would have noted it in their
logbook.
On 14 August 1992 the Regional Trial Court of Pasig, Br. 155,1 giving credence to the testimonies of
the prosecution witnesses, found appellant Ang Chun Kit also known as "Romy Ang" guilty of selling
shabu in violation of Sec. 15, Art. III, R.A. No. 6425, as amended, sentenced him to life
imprisonment and ordered him to pay a fine of P30,000.00. Hence this appeal.
The accused maintains his innocence and faults the trial court in not holding that the crime could not
have been committed under the circumstances narrated by the arresting officers and that the alleged
buy-bust operation was a frame-up and the evidence merely planted. He argues that the prosecution
was not able to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt since every piece of evidence presented
against him is tainted with constitutional infirmities.
We are not impressed. The crux of this appeal hinges on the credibility of witnesses. In People
v. Co2 we said that "[i]t is doctrinally entrenched that the evaluation of the testimonies of witnesses
by the trial court is received on appeal with the highest respect because such court has the direct
opportunity to observe the witnesses on the stand and determine if they are telling the truth or not."
Corollarily, in People v. Ballagan3 we ruled that "[i]n a long line of decisions this Court has
consistently held that the findings of facts of a trial judge who has seen the witnesses testify and who
has observed their demeanor and conduct while on the witness stand should not be disturbed on
appeal unless certain facts of substance and value have been overlooked which, if considered, may
affect the outcome of the case. When the issue is one of credibility of witnesses the appellate courts
will generally not disturb the trial court's findings." In the case before us we do not see any fact of
substance and value which may have been overlooked by the trial court. Consequently, we defer to
its holding that ". . . indeed the prohibited drugs in question were confiscated from the accused Ang
Chun Kit alias "Romy Ang" when he sold the drugs to poseur-buyer SPO2 Cesar Jacobo."4
Moreover, we do not believe that Police Officers Jacobo, Rubi and San Jose, all public officials who
enjoy the presumption of regularity in the performance of official duty, will enmesh themselves in
falsehood and implicate the accused unless they have been impelled by an evil or ulterior motive.
But neither the accused nor the record offers any. As correctly observed by the trial court, "[o]f the
thousands, nay, millions of people in Metro Manila, why would the police officers single out the
accused to be the object of a frame-up."5 While the accused maintains that he is a victim of a frame-
up, which is the usual defense put up by persons accused of being drug pushers,6 he failed to
substantiate his claim. It is settled that where there is no evidence to indicate that a prosecution
witness was actuated by improper motive the presumption is that he was not so actuated and that he
would not prevaricate and cause damnation to one who brought him no harm or injury; hence his
testimony is entitled to full faith and credit.7
We do not consider the supposed inconsistencies substantial or of such nature as to cast serious
doubt on the credibility of the prosecution witnesses. On the contrary they appear to be more of
honest lapses which do not impair the intrinsic credibility of their testimonies. Thus when later asked
by the trial court with regard to the marked money SPO2 Jacobo clarified that after he showed the
boodle to the accused the latter immediately left for his car —
COURT.
WITNESS.
Q: After showing the boodle money what did the accused do?
For sure the alleged inconsistencies do not detract from the established fact that the accused was
caught in flagrante delicto as a result of a buy-bust operation since the arresting agents were able to
give an otherwise clear and convincing account of the circumstances leading to the arrest of the
accused. And, in every prosecution for illegal sale of dangerous drugs what is material and
indispensable is the submission of proof that the sale of illicit drug took place between the seller and
the poseur-buyer.
The accused submits that "it is beyond human comprehension how such a big transaction, illegal at
that, could be perfected . . . in front of the watchful eyes of so many people." 10
We can comprehend. From the testimony of the prosecution witnesses, which we find credible, the
exchange was casual and swift: the accused was introduced to the poseur-buyer by the CI; he was
shown the money; he passed on the prohibited drug to the poseur-buyer. There was no verification
of the identity of the buyer. Neither was the money counted nor tests conducted to determine the
quality and quantity of the regulated drug. There was no need.
The accused knew the CI who introduced the poseur-buyer to him. There was rapport at once. Thus
the transaction which was consummated in the parking lot of the hospital is no different from an
ordinary drug-pushing — informal, casual, daring and swift — where the peddlers at times operate in
the open and in the presence of other people, e.g., in a billiard hall, 11 in front of a store, 12 along a
street at 1:45 p.m., 13 in front of a house, 14 which does not necessarily discourage them from plying
their trade as these may even serve to camouflage their illicit trade. 15 As we have said, there was
nothing absurd in such a scenario. The selling of regulated or prohibited drugs to complete
strangers, openly and in public places, has become a common occurrence, a sad fact which this
Court has taken notice of and attributed to the growing casualness of drug pushers in the pursuit of
their clandestine activity, as if it were a perfectly legitimate operation involving no particular caution
or qualm of conscience. 16 Drug pushers have become increasingly daring in the operation of their
trade and have not hesitated to act openly, almost casually, even in scornful violation of the law, in
selling the illegimate merchandise to any and all buyers. 17
The accused then harps on the testimonies of his witnesses, the security guards on duty, that "there
was nothing untoward that happened at the hospital lobby or premises." 18 If we were to believe
these security guards in their version then all the more should we discredit the accused himself who
narrated that while he was at the parking lot of the hospital several armed men and women with
drawn guns suddenly swooped down on him, pointed their weapons at him, ordered him to raise his
hands in the air and then arrested him for no apparent reason. Certainly, if these security guards
were conscientious in the performance of their duties, as how the accused would like them to
appear, then they should have noticed and noted in their logbook the arrest of the accused in the
hospital parking lot which was just a few meters away from the lobby. Accordingly, we cannot give
full faith to the testimonies of defense witnesses Jacobe and Praga.
The defense also asks the Court to reject the story of the prosecution that the shabu was contained
in one plastic bag instead of several small plastic bags as how drug dealers would normally pack the
prohibited drug for easy concealment. We cannot yield. While the swiftness with which the
transaction was undertaken is reminiscent of small-time drug-pushing, what is involved in the case at
bench is not a measly sum of money and a small quantity of drugs that could be packed in tea bags
but a wholesale deal involving P400,000.00 and a kilo of shabu.
The defense then faults the prosecution for its failure to present the marked money and urges the
Court to apply People v. Distrito 19 where in acquitting the accused we said that "[n]o marked money
was seized from (him) as none passed from the alleged buyers to the alleged sellers." But the
reliance on People v. Distrito is misplaced. We have ruled often enough that the absence of marked
money used in buy-bust operations does not create a hiatus in the evidence for the
prosecution. 20 Parenthetically, if the defense only read People v. Distrito carefully it would have
realized that in that case there was really no exchange of money as even the policemen admitted
that they arrested the suspect before an actual buy-bust operation could be effected, unlike in the
case at bench where there was an actual exchange of illegal merchandise for money.
The accused also takes to task the absence of a blotter report before the buy-bust operation and the
supposed failure of the apprehending officers to seal the plastic bag of shabu upon its seizure.
These are trivialities which do not abate the fact that the accused was arrested after he unlawfully
sold methamphetamine hydrochloride to NARCOM agents. Suffice it to say that a prior blotter report
and the sealing of the plastic bag of shabu are not indispensable nor required in buy-bust
operations.
The defense argues that the shabu found inside the car is inadmissible in evidence as it was
procured through an illegal search and seizure, the same having been found inside the car and not
in the person of the accused who was outside the car. But the search inside the car was an incident
of a lawful arrest. It must be remembered that the accused was with a driver who was inside the car.
Upon the arrest of the accused, the arresting agents also had to neutralize the driver inside the car
who could be presumed at that instance to be acting together and in conspiracy with the accused.
For a weapon could have easily been concealed in the dashboard of the vehicle which was very well
within the reach of the driver at that time. Corollarily, in People v. Figueroa we reiterated that "[t]he
warrantless search and seizure, as an incident to a suspect's lawful arrest, may extend beyond the
person of the one arrested to include the premises or surroundings under his immediate
control." 21 Thus whether the accused gave his consent to the search of the car which the arresting
agents say he did, but which he denies, is immaterial.
We however agree with the accused that his signature on the receipt or lists of items confiscated
from him is inadmissible in evidence as there is no showing that he was then assisted by counsel.
In People v. Mauyao we said that "conformance to these documents are declarations against
interest and tacit admissions of the crime charged, since merely unexplained possession of
prohibited drugs is punished by law. They have been obtained in violation of his right as a person
under custodial investigation for the commission of an offense, there being nothing in the records to
show that he was assisted by counsel." 22 With regard to the Booking Sheet and Arrest Report, we
already said in People v. Morico that "when an arrested person signs a Booking Sheet and Arrest
Report at a police station he does not admit the commission of an offense nor confess to any
incriminating circumstance. The Booking Sheet is merely a statement of the accused's being booked
and of the date which accompanies the fact of an arrest. It is a police report and may be useful in
charges of arbitrary detention against the police themselves. It is not an extra-judicial statement and
cannot be the basis of a judgment of conviction." 23
But as in the cases of Mauyao and Morico, accused Ang Chun Kit's conformity to the questioned
documents has not been a factor in his conviction since his guilt has been adequately established by
the detailed and unshaken testimonies of the officers who apprehended him. Hence even
disregarding the questioned documents we still find the accused guilty beyond reasonable doubt of
the crime charged.
Interestingly, we find it difficult to believe the version of the accused. He did not even present Johnny
Sy or Anthony Co to substantiate his story, much less did he reveal the name of the patient they
were to visit in the hospital. Besides it appears that there was no reason for the accused to wait for
Johnny Sy and Anthony Co in the parking lot as they did not have any prior agreement to meet
there. On the contrary the accused still had to attend a dinner somewhere and should not have
waited any longer.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the trial court finding accused-appellant Ang Chun Kit also known as
"Romy Ang" guilty beyond reasonable doubt of selling methamphetamine hydrochloride in violation
of Sec. 15, Art. III, R.A. 6425, as amended, sentencing him to life imprisonment and ordering him to
pay a fine of P30,000.00 is AFFIRMED. Costs against accused-appellant.
SO ORDERED.
Footnotes
5 Ibid.
6 People v. De los Reyes, G.R. No. 106874, 21 January 1994, 229 SCRA 439.
7 See Note 2.
11 People v. Sarmiento, G.R. No. 72141, 12 January 1987, 147 SCRA 252.
12 People v. Khan, G.R. No. 71863, 23 May 1988, 161 SCRA 406.
13 People v. Toledo, G.R. No. 67609, 22 November 1985, 140 SCRA 259.
14 People v. Policarpio, G.R. No. 69844, 23 February 1988, 158 SCRA 85.
15 See People v. Mauyao, G.R. No. 84525, 6 April 1992, 207 SCRA 732.
16 People v. Dela Cruz, G.R. No. 101315, 12 May 1993, 221 SCRA 789.
17 People v. Pinto, G.R. No. 93407, 20 January 1993, 217 SCRA 279.
20 People v. Lucero, G.R. No. 84656, 4 January 1994, 229 SCRA 1; People v.
Martinez, G.R. Nos. 105376-77, 5 August 1994, 235 SCRA 171; People v. Doroja,
G.R. No. 81002, 11 August 1994, 235 SCRA 238.
23 G.R. No. 92660, 14 July 1995, citing People v. Bandin, G.R. No. 104494, 10
September 1995, 226 SCRA 299.