Non Institutional
Non Institutional
Non Institutional
PROBATION
When the sentence imposes a fine only and the offender is made to serve
subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, the period of probation shall not be
less than nor be more than twice the total number of days of subsidiary imprisonment
Page 2 of 35
Probation, on the other hand, was first introduced in the United States
several decades earlier than parole. A certain John Augustus of Boston,
Massachusetts concerned with the plight of prisoners began bailing out
prisoners and helping them finds residence and employment around the
middle of the 19th century. In time, the Courts in his area began to recognize
his efforts. If the temporarily free offender conducted himself well, Augustus
would recommend a sentence other than incarceration to the court, and his
recommendations were usually accepted.
The Spanish philosopher George Santayana once wrote that those who fail to
learn from the lessons of history are condemned to repeat its mistakes.
This lack of historicity is also apparent in our corrections system. We do not have
any books or publications at all that deal with the corrections history of our country.
This problem, in fact, has already been brought out seven years ago during the
Strategic Planning Workshop on the Modernization of the Philippine Correctional
System held at St. Michael Retreat House in Antipolo, Rizal on November 13-15,
1995 on the occasion of National Correctional Consciousness Week.
One of the recommendations that came out of the said workshop is the need to
formulate a substantially complete historical account of the development of the
Correctional System in the Philippines. To highlight the importance of this, a
Committee on History was tasked to prepare the same. Indeed there is a very
embarrassing dearth of writings dealing with the history of Philippine corrections. In
fact, one of the weaknesses cited by participants in the said workshop during their
SWOT Analysis session was the lack of systematic research and inadequate data
collections
Prior to the coming of the Spaniards, available evidences point to the existence
in this country of a penal system although its jurisdiction is only tribal and localized.
Some of these legal and penal systems are the codes of Datu Sumakwel, Kalantiaw,
Maragtas, Sikatuna and still many others that left scant traces however into our
history books. Among these codes, the most extensive is the Kalantiaw Code, which
is comparable to the Greek, Roman, English and Spanish Laws.
These early codes are likewise very simple, easily understandable and,
therefore, subjects of those days find it easy to comprehend and follow. Hence,
criminality does not at all pose a problem. Rather violators are looked up to as
aberrations, exceptions rather than the rule. For instance, the Kalantiaw Code, which
was the governing law in the island of what is now Panay, particularly in what is now
the province of Aklan, has been the governing law and is based on the beliefs,
customs and practices of those days. This Code also reflects the level of uprightness
and morality of the people. When we look at this code and compare with our
supposedly civilized laws of today, it becomes a shame that we who claim to be more
civilized are actually the uncivil ones while those we look down on as primitive and
uncivilized are the more advanced and more humane.
Page 4 of 35
The laws that exist now in our country are laws that were imposed by
the Spaniards and then the next slavers to replace them, the Americans. The
laws they imposed did not reflect the customs, beliefs and practices of the
natives but it reflects the customs, beliefs and practices of foreigners who
tailored it to fit their interests in subjugating the people of this land for their
benefits. This is now the reason why our laws have become complicated,
distorted and convoluted. It was remodeled and remodeled to find the correct
mix of what is applicable to us but to no avail. Our present laws are one of the
causes why there is so much conflict and un-peace in our country. And this
conflict and lack of peace is the cause of our backwardness and
underdevelopment. We cannot find the true rules that should govern us and
be followed by all in the pursuit of our national destiny.
Rule 2 - Pay all your debts promptly. Punishment for first offense is whipping
of 100 lashes. If the debt is large the violator’s hand will be immersed in
boiling water three times. Second offense will be death by beating;
Rule 3 - Do not be too lustful. Do not marry young girls (phaedophilia) nor
marry more than you can handle and support. First offense is swimming for
three hours. Second offense is laceration with thorns;
Rule 4 - Respect the dead, do not disturb their graves and burial places. First
offense is exposure to the ants while subsequent offense is beating to death
by means of thorns;
Rule 6 - Valuable trees and places that are holy should be respected. Fine for
violation should be equal to one month’s labor and paid in gold or honey.
Subsequent offense is the equivalent of five years labor;
Rule 8 - Setting fire to another’s crops, stealing the wives of Chiefs and
owning dogs that bit the Chiefs is punishable by one year slavery;
Page 5 of 35
Rule 9 - Those who sing at night while on the road, kill the manual bird, destroy the
Chief’s records, deceive others and mock the dead will be beaten for two days;
Rule 10 - Mothers should educate their daughters secretly about sex hygiene to
prepare them for motherhood; Men should be kind to their wives and should not harm
them if they are caught in adultery. Violators will be cut to pieces or thrown to the
crocodiles;
Rule 11 - Those who escape and evade punishment, kill young children and steal the
wives of old men will be burned alive;
Rule 12 - Slaves who attack their masters or the chiefs, masturbates, or destroy their
anitos will be drowned;
Rule 13 - Those who steal from the Chiefs or old men will be exposed to the ants for
half a day;
Rule 14 - Those who refuse to marry their daughters to the sons of the chiefs will be
slaved for life;
Rule 15 - Those who kill the young of the manual birds or white monkeys will be
beaten;
Rule 16 - Those who break the idols on their altars and temples, destroy the daggers
used by the priestesses for killing sacrificial pigs or break their wine vessels will have
their fingers cut off;
Rule 17 - Those who destroy the altars and temples and urinates or defecates in
these sacred places will die; ad
Rule 18 - Chiefs who disobey any of these rules will be stoned or crushed to death
while old men who disobey will be fed to the sharks or crocodiles.
Although our own brand of justice even if adjudged as backward and primitive
contains basic characteristics that respects the old people, women and motherhood
and prohibits immoral acts such as masturbation or self-gratification that is being
lobbied hard by the international gay rights and decadent feminist movement
ethanating from the West to become an accepted practice. The Kalantiaw Code also
shows a strong respect for a God, the dead and even the environment with each rule
on the protection of valuable trees, the manual birds and white monkeys.
Our primitive laws also contain traces of Restorative Justice especially those
from the tribes of the Cordilleras in Northern Luzon, which have their own brand of
justice termed by some as the sipat. These continue to exist today in many remote
areas of the country. In fact, when Father Conrado Balweg, the priest who turned
rebel during the Martial Law years in the 1970s and 1980s surrendered to the
government and formed the Cordillera People’s Liberation Army, one of his group’s
demands is for the Philippine government to recognize the “BODONG” which is some
kind of a court to settle tribal and even individual people’s conflicts.
Page 6 of 35
This Recompilation Laws were in effect until 1887 when the Spanish
Penal Code enacted seventeen years before in 1870 were decreed for
implementation in the country upon the recommendation of the Committee for
Overseas Provinces (Provincias de Ultramar) with some minor amendments
to suit local conditions. This code prepared and recommended by the
Committee for Overseas Provinces should have been in effect on September
4, 1884 or three years earlier by virtue of a Royal Decree of the Spanish
Crown but its implementation was held in abeyance owing to the opposition of
the Spanish Governor General in the Philippines. Owing to these objections,
the Spanish King issued a follow-up Royal Decree on December 17, 1886
ordering the implementation of the code. On March 13, 1887, the code finally
became enforceable in the Philippine Islands together with the “Ley
Engiciamiento Criminal” and another Royal Decree, the “Legislacion
Ultramarina.”
But while the Bilibid Prison was already in operation since 1847., it
was only recognized and formally designated as an insular penitentiary
through a Royal Decree issued some eighteen years later in 1865.
Page 7 of 35
The physical lay-out of the Bilibid Prison was constructed in conformity with the
dominant concept of criminology existing in Europe during those times; custody,
security and confinement of prisoners. As such, the cells were constructed in a radial
shape similar to the spoke of a wheel. A central, commanding tower was erected at
the center of the spokes for easy control of prisoners especially in times of tumult or
disturbances such as riots. In this tower, the Officer of the Day exercises command
and supervision of the facility.
The buildings, which were referred to, as “Brigadas” are made of very strong
adobe stones. Incidentally, the term brigada continue to be used in prisons even until
today. These brigades are so sturdy that they have withstood the ravages of time and
even the bombings perpetrated by the Americans during their reoccupation of the
Philippines from the Japanese Imperial Forces. Incidentally, the bombings done by
the Americans on Manila was second only to Warsaw, Poland in the entire world in
the extent of its devastation. Yet, the Bilibid Prison continued to exist to this day in full
defiance of the earthshaking brutal conflicts it has undergone. In fact, this historical
landmark is still being used as jail by the City of Manila.
Twenty-two years after the establishment of the Bilibid Insular Penitentiary, the
San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm followed in 1869. This prison and penal farm was
constructed near the southern tip of Zamboanga peninsula nearby what is now
Zamboanga City and originally intended for the confinement of convicted Moro
“insurrectos” fighting subjugation by the Spanish “conquistadors.” The Zamboanga
peninsula was also a banishment site for political non-conformists coming from
Luzon and the Visayas. This is the reason why our own national hero, Dr. Jose P.
Rizal who fought for reforms, which the island colonial authorities found objectionable
and subversive to their tastes, was exiled in Dapitan.
In those days, insurgents who were not killed by the Spanish forces were either
exiled to Guam or the Marianas Islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean which
happened to be Spanish colonies too, or in Zamboanga peninsula. However, Moro
insurgents, whose lives were spared by the Spanish authorities for some reason or
another, cannot be incarcerated here considering the proximity of the place to their
homeland. So they were either sent to Guam or the Marianas.
But rather than banishing them to these far-flung Spanish colonies in the middle
of the Pacific Ocean, where sea transportation is rare and hard and highly vulnerable
to Moro marauding attacks, not to mention the rough seas, the Spanish authorities
eventually found it more advisable and convenient to construct a penal facility nearby
and confine these Moro rebels there. As a countervailing measure to the presence of
Moro insurgents in the vicinities, they simply strengthened security.
San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm was named in memory of its founder, Ramon
Blanco, a Spanish captain in the Royal Army. It was closed during the Spanish-
American War of 1898 but reopened in 1904 after the victorious Americans grabbed
possession of the Philippines from Spain and the Americans have established control
over this new colony of theirs. This penal prison and farm has an aggregate area of
1,524.6 hectares and was made productive through the blood, sweat and tears of
Page 8 of 35
confined prisoners who passed the portals of this penal institution in the
course of our country’s march in history.
Today, the principal product of the San Ramon Prison is copra. which
is one of the biggest sources of income of the Bureau of Prisons. It also
raises rice, corn, coffee, cattle and livestock. Presently, it houses maximum,
medium and minimum-security prisoners. It now also accepts convicts who
were directly committed by the courts in the area to this prison but are later
sent to the Reception and Diagnostic Center in the Central Office in Camp
Sampaguita in Muntinlupa City for study and diagnosis.
The Department of Justice today has nine agencies of which three are involved
in corrections work both institutional and community-based. These agencies are: the
Bureau of Corrections or BuCor, the Board of Pardons and Parole and the Probation
and Parole Administration.
One of the first acts of the Bureau upon its creation is to reverse the status of
Iwahig Penal Colony as a destination for maximum-security incorrigible prisoners.
Instead, convicts who were well behaved and pliable were assigned to this Facility.
The reason of the authorities then is to convert 38,611 hectares of fertile virgin lands
into production areas for revenue and as a means to prisoner rehabilitation.
By the Act of 1905 the Bureau of Prison was created under the Department of
Commerce and Police. Later, it was transferred under the Department of Public
Instruction and finally under the Department of Justice.
Today, this penal institution is considered as one of the most open penal
institutions in the world. It was from this facility that the term “Prison Without Walls”
had its beginnings. Iwahig is divided into four sub-colonies for a more practical
consideration of easier administration and management. These sub-colonies are
Santa Lucia, Inagawan, Montible and Central. Each sub-colony operates as an
autonomous institution under the management of a penal supervisor.
Iwahig Penal Colony, owing to its vast landholdings allocated 1,000 hectares,
which was distributed to release inmates who no longer had any desire to return to
their original homes and who instead want to settle for good in Palawan. This is the
Tagumpay Settlement, which infers a successful rehabilitation and return of prisoners
to the mainstream society. Each released prisoner awardee is given a six- hectare
farm lots as homestead.
Page 10 of 35
On November 27, 1929, Republic Act 3579 was passed into lawn
establishing the Correctional Institution for Women. This penal institution for
women was constructed on an I8-hectare piece of land in what is now
Mandaluyong City. Before the establishment of this institution, women
prisoners were confined in portion of the Bilibid Prison, in 1934, the position of
Female Superintendent was created to superintend the operations of this
penal facility. Today, the institute is run entirely by female personnel with the
exception of the perimeter guards who are male,
The prison authorities at the time were compelled to move away from
the Old Bilibid site because of the inevitable development of the area for
commercial purposes. Bilibid was in the immediate vicinity of Quiapo and
Santa Cruz districts, which were the principal trading and commercial center
of the country in those days. Economic growth and construction activities
rendered the Bilibid Prison to be fast becoming out of place in its present site
and in its role as the national penitentiary.
The place where the Bilibid Prison was relocated is a 552 hectare
Muntinlupa estate owned by the City of Manila. This site was previously
acquired by the city to become the site for its Boys Training School. But
because the site is far from Manila, the city gladly exchanged their Muntinlupa
property to the Bilibid facilities when the Bilibid Prisons was looking for a
relocation site. This was in 1936 and construction started immediately
thereafter.
The actual transfer of the prison was effected in 1941. It became the
New Bilibid Prison (NBP) while the one left behind in Manila was renamed the
Old Bilibid Prison to avoid confusion and became the site of the Manila City
Jail until this day. Shortly before the outbreak of World War II in the
Philippines, all the prisoners at the Old Bilibid were transferred to the NBP on
the recommendation of the cabinet. Prison labor was the main work force in
the construction of the facility.
During the war, the Japanese imperial forces used the NBP to confine
suspected guerillas and anti-Japanese Filipinos as well as American
prisoners of war. The Japanese forces also installed anti-aircraft battery
positions atop the hills OF the prison reservation. Probably, the Japanese
military thinking is that the United States warplanes will not retaliate at these
Page 11 of 35
When Manila was reoccupied by Filipino and American troops, the victors
continued to use the facilities of the NBP to camp freed American prisoners of war to
recuperate from their injuries and illnesses.. NBP also used by the American forces
as confinement facility for Japanese war collaborators. Then at the height of the Huk
rebellion after the war that intensified because of the American government refusal to
give the promised back pays to the partisans of the HUKBALAHAPs.
The Americans took the advised of the Filipino elite who also own vast
landholdings not to recognize the Huks because they were fighting for agrarian
reform which is detrimental to the vested interests of the elite “balimbings” who were
pro-Japanese and anti-Americans now became anti-Japanese and pro-Americans
when the US returned to the country.
Naturally, the Huks who were the most active guerilla units who fought the
Japanese Imperial Forces during the war did not take this lying down. They were
furious at such betrayal and non-compliance of the US on their promise to pay back
wages so they resumed their resistance. With this development, NBP was used as
incarceration facility for arrested Huks. At this point in time, the NBP became the
place of confinements for both anti-American, pro-Japanese collaborators as well as
anti- American, anti-Japanese Huk partisans.
The NBP, therefore, can be seen from a historical perspective that it played a
sensitive role in every ebb and flow of the country’s historical tide. It is here where
partisans in the changing political fortunes, both heroes and heels were imprisoned.
Pro-Americans were imprisoned during the Japanese times. Then, pro-Japanese
Filipinos came their turn when the Americans returned. Then the next wave of
political prisoners was the Anti-American Huks. NBPs history is truly colorful and
fascinating.
Outside the compound and within the reservation, three other satellite prisons
are situated. These are the minimum-security camp called Camp Bukang Liwayway,
the name implying the coming release of prisoners destined here. The second camp
is Camp Sampaguita, which houses medium security prisoners. The Youth
Rehabilitation Center for juvenile offenders is also situated here. And the third facility
is the Reception and Diagnostic Center that receives newly committed prisoners
coming mainly from the jails nationwide except those committed by courts within the
jurisdiction of the two Zamboanga provinces, Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi.
Sentenced prisoners coming from these provinces are directly committed to the San
Ramon Prison and Penal Farm. A skeletal! Reception and Diagnostic Office is
Page 12 of 35
available in this penal facility for the formulation of the treatment program of
committed prisoners.
The Davao Penal Colony was established at almost the same time
and under the same authority that the New Bilibid Prison was established in
January 21, 1932 by virtue of Republic Act No. 3732 and Proclamation No.
414, series of k93 1. Retired General Paulino Santos, the incumbent Prisons
Director at the time led the first contingent of prisoners that opened the colony
that covers an area of about 18,000 hectares.
During World War II, the Japanese Imperial Forces as internment and
concentration camp used the colony for captured American prisoners of war.
The Japanese transferred the prisoners who were destined here to the
inagawan sub-colony of Iwahig Penal Colony. Before the Japanese left the
facility due to the return of the Americans, they destroyed all its buildings,
machineries and industries. By August 1946, however, the colony was able to
re-establish its pre-war status.
The first contingent of prison personnel and prisoners were drawn from the
Iwahig Penal Colony. The penal colony is designed for minimum-security prisoners
and after conducting the surveys; the actual area of the land allocated by the
President has become 16,408.5 hectares. The principal activity here as in any penal
colony of the country is agriculture and rice is the main product that is not only used
by the inmate of the colony but also supplying some of the rice needs of the New
Bilibid Prison.
Another unique facility to be built by the Bureau is the Manila Office, which
was originally a holding facility for prisoners working as orderlies in the different
offices of the Department of Justice at Padre Faura, Manila. It was converted to a
regular penal institution following the riots in the New Bilibid Prison in 1958. The
hardwood shop of the Prison Industries Office was pinpointed as the source of
deadly weapons used by the rioting prisoners. As a consequence, the hardwood
shop was transferred to the Manila Office to cut the source of weapons in the New
Bilibid.
The last penal facility to be built by the Bureau of Prisons is the Leyte Regional
Prison in Abuyog, Leyte. This was established in January 16, 1973 on the orders
issued under Martial Law by President Ferdinand E. Marcos.
On the other hand, the Provincial Jail System was first established in 1910
under the American regime. Each province of the country has been mandated by the
American colonizers to establish their own provincial jails to be under their own
supervision and control.
Before P.D. 603 went into effect, however, there is already a long existing law
covering the probationary treatment of juveniles in conflict with the law. This is
Commonwealth Act No. 3203 that went into effect’ on December 3, 1924. This is the
first youth offender’s law of the land. This law established the Welfare Institutions,
which took responsibility of taking charge of all government child-caring institutions,
Home for the Aged and Infirm as well as the Philippine Training School for Boys.
They were put under the supervision of the Office of Public Welfare Commission.
All these facilities were centralized and located at what was known as
Welfareville in Mandaluyong, which was still then part of the province of Rizal.
Welfareville was a fifty-hectare land with forty- (40) buildings. Five of the
buildings were for orphanages of different types of orphaned children, homes
for the homeless, neglected, displaced and abandoned boys picked up by the
police, the Philippine Training School for Boys and the Philippine Training
Page 14 of 35
School for Girls which serve for confinement institution for youths in conflict
with the laws; and a home for the aged and infirm.
On November 29, 1969 the Philippine Training School for Boys was
transferred to Sampaloc, Tanay, Rizal where it continues to stay to this day. It
was named Vicente Madrigal Rehabilitation Center (VMRC) in honor of the
one who donated the land. Eventually, however, it returned to its old official
name, the National Training School for Boys.
On the other hand, the Philippine Training School for Girls transferred
to Alabang, which became the Marillao Hills up to this day. However, in view
of the increased incidence of child abuse and exploitation, Marillao Hills now
only has a cottage for youthful offenders.
Advantages of Probation
4. Those who have been once on probation under the provisions of this Decree;
and
5. Those who are already serving sentence at the time the substantive
provisions of the Probation law became applicable.
A BRIEF HISTORY
The PAO came into being in response to the challenge for a government
agency for the advancement and protection of legal rights of the less privileged
sector of our society as enshrined in the Philippine Constitution.
The seed, as it were, of the PAO was planted on August 20, 1954, when
Republic Act No. 1199 created the Agricultural Tenancy Commission, which was
later, renamed as Tenancy Mediation Commission (TMC). With the passage on
August 8, 1963 of R.A. No. 3844, otherwise known as the “Agricultural Land Reform
Code”, TMC was further strengthened and renamed as the Office of the Agrarian
Counsel (OTAC).
However, the economic and social changes that occurred since then as well
as the demands of the time, invariably blew the winds of public clamor for a more
accessible legal service to our people, thus necessitating an expansion of agrarian
related assistance provided by OTAC to include civil, criminal, administrative, and
labor cases. This paved the way for the creation of Citizen’s Legal Assistance Office.
(CLAO) under P.D. No. 1 and Implementation Order No. 4, dated October 23, 1972.
The CLAO started out with a work force of 94 lawyers and an organizational set-up,
which had 10 regional and 26 district offices.
With the advent of the Administrative Code of 1987 (E.O. 292) on July 25,
1987, the CLAO was renamed Public Attorney’s Office (PAO). The change being
merely nominal, the mandate remained the same, that is to extend legal assistance
free of charge to indigent persons in civil, criminal, administrative, and labor cases.
Since its creation, the growth of the PAO was quiet and steady with 16
regional offices, 251 district offices, and 5 sub-district offices in existence at the end
of the year 2001. There is also a rapid increase in the number of civil and criminal
cases handled annually by the PAO, from approximately 169,205 in 1992 to over
408,145 in 2001. It was able to serve a total of 5,400,637 clients for the whole year of
2001, through its rendition of free legal services which include judicial and non-
judicial services, mediation and counseling, jail visitation, inquest assistance,
documentation, legal advice and on-air counseling. This swelling workload
underscores the fact that there is a demand for free legal services from the indigent
sector of the Philippines that must be met if we would safeguard our kind of society.
Keeping pace with this daunting task is an actual work force of 940 lawyers and 760
support staff nationwide.
Page 16 of 35
From January 2001 to September 2002, the PAO field lawyers have
won 2,694 cases before the lower courts and other quasi-judicial and
administrative bodies by way of acquittals and favorable judgment] decision in
civil cases. The Special and Appealed Cases Division (SACD), PAO-Central
Office, was able to obtain 107 reduction of penalty from death to life from
January 2001 to July 2002. It was also able to obtain 14 acquittals in the
appealed cases of those accused who were sentenced to death by the lower
courts.
No less than the UNICEF and the British Embassy have recognized
the vital role the PAO plays in the justice system that they have
magnanimously shared their resources to finance seminars/workshops to
further hone the skills of its lawyers. The World Bank and UNDP, has already
signified its willingness to support trainings and seminars for PAO lawyers
and possible assistance and donation of equipment.
Truly, the PAO has become more accessible to the indigent Filipino
masses who are in dire need of legal assistance arid services. It has become
an institution on its own when it comes to providing free legal assistance to
the whole nation.
The PAO past leadership who all contributed to its growth and
expansion since its creation thirty (30) years ago, were as follows: Attys.
Oscar M. Ontimare (CLAO), Reynold S. Fajardo, Josefina G Bacal and
Carina J. Demaisip.
MISSION
In order to focus its functions, the PAO set its sight on this Mission: to
provide the indigent litigants free access to courts, judicial and quasi-judicial,
by rendering legal assistance. This is in consonance with the Philippine
Constitution, which mandates that “free access to courts shall not be denied
to any person by reason of poverty (Sec. 11, Art. 3, 1987 Philippine
Constitution.)
Page 17 of 35
VISION
In support of its Mission and Vision, the PAO adheres to the following
objectives and thrust:
To provide the low-income and indigent sector access to counsel at the time of need;
and
To implement the constitutional guarantee of free access to courts, due process and
equal protection of the law and rights of a person under investigation for the
commission of an offense.
Those residing in Metro Manila, whose family income doesnot exceed P14, 000 a
month;
Those residing in other cities whose family income does not exceed P13, 000 a
month; and
Those residing in other places whose family income do not exceed P12, 000 a
month.
b) Jail Visitation. Every District Public Attorney should ensure that jails within their
territorial jurisdiction are visited at least once a month.
c) Barangay Outreach Program. The main thrust of this program is to provide a more
accessible free legal to the poverty-stricken Filipinos residing in barangays
nationwide.
PAO:
4. Indigent aliens;
5. Qualified overseas contract workers in all cases within the original and
exclusive jurisdiction of the POEA;
Republic Act 4864, otherwise known as the Police Act of 1966 mandated
the National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM) to formulate a National Crime
Prevention Program. In compliance with this mandate, the NAPOLCOM created
an Inter-Disciplinary Committee on Crime Prevention (IDCCP) in 1974 to draft the
National Crime Prevention Program. The IDCCP in turn, utilized for the first time,
the five-pillar approach in crime prevention. On July 22-24, 1976, the First
National Conference on a Strategy to Reduce Crime was held. Eventually, the
IDCCP evolved into the Technical Committee on Crime Prevention and Criminal
Justice and this was entrenched in the law with the enactment of Republic Act
6975 otherwise known as the Philippine National Police Act which underscored
the pivotal role of the NAPOLCOM in coming up with an annual crime prevention
program within sixty (60) days of every calendar year to be submitted to the
President and both houses of Congress through the Secretary of the DILG
Page 19 of 35
As a way to strengthen the community pillar of the criminal justice system, the
government issued Presidential Decree 1508 in 1978 establishing the Barangay
Court System or Katarungan Pambarangay. This system is but a return to the pre-
Spanish, traditional method of compulsory arbitration, mediation and reconciliation by
the community to conflicting parties.
The seeds of the probation system in the country came in August 1971 when the
Philippine Government requested the services of Dr.Torsten Eriksson, UN
Interregional Adviser on Social Defense to make a study of the social defense plans
and programs in the Philippines. Among the recommendations forwarded by Dr.
Eriksson is the strengthening of the criminal justice system and adoption of the
probation system in dealing with convicted offenders
Meaning of Terms. - As used in this decree; the following shall, unless the
context otherwise requires, be construed thus:
Grant of Probation. - Subject to the provisions of this Decree, the trial court
may, after it shall have convicted and sentenced a defendant, and upon application
by said defendant within the period for perfecting an appeal, suspend the execution
of the sentence and place the defendant on probation for such period and upon such
terms and conditions as it may deem best; provided, That, no application for
probation shall be entertained or granted if the dependant has perfected an appeal
from the judgment of conviction.
(a) sentenced to serve a maximum term of imprisonment of more than six (6)
years;
(b) convicted of subversion or any crime against national security or the public
order;
(c) who have previously been convicted by final judgment of an offense
punished by imprisonment of not less than one month and one day and/or
fine of not less than Two Hundred Pesos (P200.00);
(d) who have been once on probation under the provisions of this Decree; and
(e) who are already serving sentence at the time the substantive provisions of
this Decree became applicable pursuant to Sec. 33 hereof.
The court shall inform in writing the probation officer and the probationer of
any change in the period or conditions of probation
Control and Supervision of Probationer. - The probationer and his
probation program shall be under the control of the court that placed him on
probation subject to actual supervision and visitation by a probation officer.
Whenever a probationer is permitted to reside in a place under the
jurisdiction of another court, control over him shall be transferred to the
Executive Judge of the Court of First Instance of that place, in such a case, a
copy of the probation order, the investigation report and other pertinent
records shall be furnished said Executive Judge. Thereafter, the Executive
Judge to whom jurisdiction over the probationer is transferred shall have the
power with respect to him that was previously possessed by the court, ,which
granted the probation.
Disposition. - At any time during probation, the court may issue a warrant
for the arrest of a probationer for any serious violation of the conditions of
probation, the probationer, once arrested and detained, shall immediately be
brought before the court for a hearing of the violation charged. The defendant
may be admitted to bail pending such hearing. In such case, the provisions
regarding release on bail of persons charged with a crime shall be applicable to
probationers arrested under this provision.
In the hearing, which shall be summary in nature, the probationer shall have
the right to be informed of the violation charged and to adduce evidence in his
favor. The court shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence but may inform
itself of all the facts, which are material and relevant to ascertain the veracity of
the charge. A prosecuting officer in any contested hearing shall represent the
State. If the violation is established, the court may revoke or continue his
probation and modify the conditions thereof. If revoked, the court shall order the
probationer to serve the sentence originally imposed. An order revoking the grant
of probation or modifying the terms and conditions thereof shall not be appeal
able.
may order the final discharge of the probationer upon finding that he has fulfilled
terms and conditions of his probation and thereupon, the case is deemed
terminated.
The final discharge of the probationer shall operate to restore to him all civil
rights lost or suspended as a result of his conviction and to fully discharge his
liability for any fine imposed as to the offense for which probation was granted.
The probationer and the probation officer shall each be furnished with a
copy of such order.
The Administration shall have such staff, operating units and personnel as
may be necessary for the proper execution of its functions.
c) make annual reports to the Secretary of Justice in such form as the latter
may prescribe, concerning the probation, administration and improvement
of the probation system;
d) promulgate subject to the approval of the Secretary of Justice, the
necessary rules relative to the methods and procedures of the probation
process;
e) recommend to the Secretary of Justice the appointment of the
subordinate personnel of his administration and other offices established
in this decree; and
f) generally, perform such duties and exercise such power as may be
necessary or incidental to achieve the objectives of this Decree.
PARDON
History of Pardon.
In England, pardon developed out of the conflict between the King and
the Nobles who threatened his powers. Pardon was applied to members of
the Royal family who committed crimes, and occasionally to those convicted
of offenses against the royal power. It was the general view that the
pardoning power was the exclusive prerogative of the King. In England today
the power to extend pardon is vested in the Queen upon advise of the
Minister of the Interior.
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In the United States, pardon among the early American colonies was a carry-
over of the England practice. The pardoning power was exercised by the Royal
governor through the power delegated by the King. After the declaration of
independence, the federal and state constitutions vested the pardoning power on the
President of the United States and the Governors in federal and state cases,
respectively.
“The President shall have the power to grant reprieves, commutations, and
pardons, and remit forfeitures, after conviction for all offenses, except in cases of
impeachment, upon such conditions and with such restrictions and limitations as he
may deem proper to impose. He shall have the power to grant amnesty with the
concurrence of the National Assembly.”
Kinds of Pardon.
As practiced in the Philippines, there are two kinds of pardons, namely the
absolute and conditional pardon.
Absolute Pardon
Absolute pardon is one which is given without any condition attached to it.
The purpose of this kind of pardon are:
c. To restore full political and civil rights of persons who have already
served their sentence and have waited the prescribed period.
Absolute pardon does not work to restore the right to hold public office
or the right of suffrage, unless such rights are expressly restored by the terms
of the pardon. A pardon does not exempt the offender from the payment of
civil indemnity imposed upon him by the sentence. Absolute pardon totally
extinguishes the criminal liability but not the right of the offended party to
enforce the civil liability against the offender.2
In Cristobal vs. Labrador, et al., 71 Phil. 34, the Supreme Court laid
down the doctrine that absolute pardon removed all that is left of the
consequences of conviction, and that is absolute insofar as it restores the
pardonee to full civil and political rights.
In another case, the Supreme Court reiterated the doctrine laid down
in the Cristobal vs. Labrador case and elucidated further that “an absolute
pardon not only blots out the crime but removes all disabilities resulting from
the conviction; and that when granted after the term of imprisonment has
expired, absolute pardon removes all that is left of the consequences of
conviction.” (Pelobello vs. Palatino, 72 Phil. 441).
In Barrio Quinto, et al. vs. Fernandez, O.G. 303, the Supreme Court
distinguished pardon from amnesty in that “pardon is granted by the Chief
Executive and as such it is private which must be pleaded and proved by the
person pardoned, because the courts take no notice thereof; while amnesty is
by proclamation with concurrence of Congress, and it is a public act which the
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courts should take judicial notice. Pardon is granted to one after conviction,
while amnesty is granted to classes of persons who may be guilty of political
offenses, generally before or after the institution of criminal prosecution and
sometimes after conviction.”
The power of the Chief Executive to grant pardon is limited to the following:
a. Pardon cannot be extended in case of impeachment. (Art. VII, Sec. 10, Par.
2, Constitution of the Philippines)
It is an elementary principle in political law that pardon can only be given after
final conviction. Cases pending trial or on appeal are still within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Courts, hence, pursuant to the theory of separation of
powers, the Chief Executive has no jurisdiction over the accused.
Conditional Pardon.
likelihood that the offender will not become a public charge and will not
recidivate in crime. If all these factors are favorable, then the Board will
endorse the petition favorably to the President. If the case is premature, the
petitioner is so informed.
b) Due (but not undue) regard should be given the attitude of the
people in the community from which he was sentenced.
Conditions of Pardon.
a. That he shall live in his parole residence and shall not change his
residence during the period of his parole without first obtaining the
consent of the Board of Pardons and Parole.
b. That he shall report to the Municipal Judge (of the area where he will
reside) or to such officers as may be designated by the Executive
Officer of the Board of Pardons and Parole during the first years once
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c. That he shall not indulge in any injurious or vicious habits, and shall
avoid places or persons of disreputable or harmful character.
e. That he shall not commit any crime and shall conduct himself in an
orderly manner.
f. That he shall pay not less than P50.00 a month to the cashier of the
Department of Justice in payment of the indemnity imposed upon him.
This condition is not strictly adhered to unless the pardonee is
regularly employed.
g. That he shall comply with such orders as the Board or its Executive
The power vested on the President by the Constitution to grant pardon is very
broad and exclusive. It is not subject to review by the Courts. Neither does Congress
have the right to establish conditions nor provide procedure for the exercise of
pardon. Under these circumstances, it is therefore possible that this power can be
abused by unscrupulous Chief Executives. In fact, in nearly every presidential
election, the alleged abuse of the pardoning power has come up as a campaign
issue against the incumbent President. The truth of the charge has never been
investigated, but the fact that the alleged anomaly is aired publicly is an indication
that the power to grant pardon may be abused.
There are certain safeguards, however, against the abuse of the pardoning
power.
First is the constitutional provision that the President may be impeached for a willful
violation of the constitution. This is enough deterrent for the Chief Executive to abuse
this power. Second, is the policy of the Officer of the Chief Executive, ever since the
time of the American Governor Generals, to approve pardon cases which are
favorably recommended by the Board of Pardons and Parole. Although this policy
does not wholly bind the President, seldom, if ever, has it been disregarded.
Judges are human and are therefore apt to commit errors. It is possible for an
innocent person to get convicted as it is possible for a criminal to escape the
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hands of justice to prove his innocence, or he may not have the money to hire a
good counsel. Many of our penal laws are outmoded and have not kept abreast
with the current trends of criminal justice administration. Judges are limited by
laws as to the use of discretion they may exercise in any given case. Under any
of the above circumstances, an injustice may result, which can only be remedied
by the exercise of pardon.
The Supreme Court, in the case of People vs. Santos, et al., 47 O.G.
6168, stated that the “purpose of amnesty is to bring about the return of
dissidents and recalcitrant elements of our population to their homes and to
ensure the resumption of their lawful pursuits, or occupations, as loyal and
law-abiding citizens, to accelerate the rehabilitation of the war-devastated
country, restore peach and order, and secure the welfare and happiness of
the communities.”
Commutation.
Purposes of Commutation.
cruel; for example, a law making qualified theft, the stealing of young
coconuts from the trees, or fish from the fishpond, or sugar cane from the
sugar cane field. Qualified theft imposes an unusually heavy penalty on the
culprit which is greatly disproportionate to the value of the article stolen. Even
if the judge would want to impose a light penalty, he could not do so because
his hands are tied by the provision of the law. The sentence in this cast may
be reduced by commutation of sentence.
b. To extend parole in cases where the parole law do not apply Commutation
enables the recipient to be released on parole when his sentence does not
allow him parole, like, for example, when the sentence is determinate or is a
life sentence, or when the prisoner is serving two or more sentences. The
sentence maybe changed to an indeterminate sentence by commutation to
sentence.
Procedures in Commutation.
The Board of Pardons and Parole processes the petition and will
deliberate on the recommendation after a careful study of the papers,
including the reports of the Reception and Diagnostic Center. It will then
forward the petition, including its recommendation, to the President. The
President will then act on the petition. In giving or denying commutation, the
President may or may not follow the recommendation of the Board of Pardons
and Parole.
Reprieve.
Good-Conduct-Time Allowance.
violated, will result in the issuance of a warrant, revocation of his release, and
the requirement that he return to prison to serve the maximum term.
In the Philippines, the prisoner who is released from prison after serving his
sentence less the good-conduct-time allowance, is released without any condition
and is considered to have served his sentence in full.
Act No. 2489, otherwise known as the Industrial Good Time Law, pries that
when a prisoner has classified as trusty or penal colonist, he is given an additional 5
days time allowance for every month of service. A prisoner serving lifetime sentence
as his sentence automatically reduced to 30 years of imprisonment upon attaining
the classification of trusty or penal colonist.
Probation is given in cases in which the ends of justice do not require that the
offender go to prison. This is so when all the following circumstances exist: that there
is a strong likelihood that the defendant will reform; that there is little danger of his
seriously injuring or harming members of society by further crimes, as for instance,
his case is not a violent crime and that he has no previous record of conviction; and
that the deterrent effect of imprisonment on other criminals is not required.