"Just a setback."
This was how Lorayne Pardo's lawyer, Atty. Firdausi Abbas, described the resolution issued by the Dept. of Justice (DOJ), which recently dismissed Richard Gutierrez's Reckless Imprudence Resulting in Homicide case. (CLICK HERE to read related story.)
During the press conference held last March 24 at the Abbas Law Firm in Greenhills, San Juan, Lorayne's camp declared that the resolution will not halt the arraignment at the Municipal Circuit Trial Court in Silang, Cavite scheduled on March 31.
Atty. Abbas and Atty. Ombra Jainal, both working pro bono to help Lorayne in her "fight for justice," said the arraignment will push through because they filed a motion for reconsideration to the DOJ to bar the Provincial Prosecutor of Cavite, Emmanuel Velasco, from acting on the former DOJ Secretary Agnes Devanadera's order to withdraw the case from the court.
According to Atty. Abbas, Secretary Devanadera's resolution to dismiss the homicide case is "not binding" on the courts. He said the Cavite court is bound to "assess the merits of the case," and not dismiss it just because of the DOJ resolution. The lawyer said he trusts Judge Victoria N. Cupin-Tesorero to not "agree with the decision of the Secretary of Justice."
The DOJ, Abbas said, is under the Executive branch of the government, while the courts are under the Judiciary branch.
Art. III, Sec. 1 of the Philippine Constitution guarantees the separation of powers between the three branches of the government—the Executive, the Legislative, and the Judiciary—"each branch being supreme in its own sphere but with constitutional limits and a firm tripod of checks and balances."
What the DOJ can only do is to order prosecutors, who work for the DOJ, to file a motion to withdraw the criminal Information that they submitted to the courts. However, it is still up to the Court to grant or deny the said motion to withdraw based on its own assessment of the evidence. Atty. Abbas said he is confident that the Judge Cupin-Tesorero will not grant the prosecutor's motion because the evidence is clear.
DOJ RESOLUTION. The resolution, signed by Secretary Devanadera and promulgated on March 1 just before she resigned from the DOJ, "resolve(d) the separate petitions for review by the complainant Lorayne Torres Pardo and Richard Rama Gutierrez of the Provincial Prosecutor of Cavite."
This DOJ resolution cited three points to justify the Secretary's dismissal of the case: (1) that Richard left the incident because he was "injured," and that his departure can "hardly be considered as an act of abandonment," (2) that Lorayne Pardo's statements were only "hearsay at best," and (3) that the damage sustained by Richard's sports car was not a basis to conclude that he "was driving the vehicle at a 'mind-boggling speeds' (sic)."
In her petition before the DOJ seeking to upgrade the case to reckless negligence resulting to homicide, Lorayne argued that the prosecutor "erred in completely disregarding the presence of the qualifying circumstance of the failure of respondent [Richard] to lend immediate assistance to her husband, the deceased Nomar E. Pardo, during the fatal accident in the early morning of May 22, 2009."
The removal of the qualifying circumstance reduced the maximum penalty that can be served to Richard if he were found guilty by the court. It also opened the possibility of probation. (CLICK HERE to read related story)
Secretary Devanadera found "no merit" in Lorayne's petition, and instead granted the petition of the actor for the dismissal of the case, in effect dismissing the charge of simple negligence resulting to homicide charges against Richard.
MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION. Lorayne's motion for reconsideration asked the DOJ through its new Secretary Alberto Agra to reconsider former Secretary Devanadera's resolution, and thereby to dismiss Richard's petition for review, and to grant her request to add the qualifying circumstance to the current simple imprudence resulting to homicide case being heard in Cavite.
In the press conference, Atty. Abbas explained that they are filing the motion for reconsideration because the resolution is "contrary to the evidence presented, the facts, and the pertinent laws."






Kung FB fan page po kasi, i doubt that there will be any discussions kasi the members will all be fans. Just my 2 cents.
Lucky7:
About the ejection, you said it yourself in your previous statement that there is a possibility that the car rolled... or maybe spun around.
I won't engage you in a debate about the state of Phil educ na. It's irrelevant to the topic. But I find it interesting that your google search phrase is your hypothesis.
Moimason:
My apologies for the wrong attribution.
Sunrain85:
Now that you recognize that the case is about 'reckless imprudence resulting to homicide'. How can you now praise Lucky7's 'accident' defense. Again, the issue isn't the accidental death or homicide. The accident, the death and the damage to property are facts already. The issue here is recklessness.
As I've earlier stated, the cause of accident can be determined from Richard's testimony of events leading up to the crash. From there malalaman if there was overspeeding, bad turning or overtaking - all considered recklessness. Why, may I ask, are you in favor of the dismissal of the case?
Sammm888:
Kung FB fan page po kasi, i doubt that there will be any d
Paki-post iyan doon sa article na isa. Kunsabagay, kahit naman mabasa ng iba, bulag na sila sa katotohanan at pinipilit sabihin na wala tayo doon kaya hindi natin alam ang nangyari. Ang hindi naiintindihan, kaya nga may mga evidences eh.
A: You have responsibilities when you drive on the roads. It's a privilege to drive not a right. If the driver is deemed to have neglected these responsibilities, which include making sure your car is roadworthy, and driving according to the conditions of the road at the time, the law has been broken. Whether it was intentional or not. It's the same as gun ownership, it comes with responsibilities, if someone is killed with one of your guns, there's a real good chance you'll be charged, regardless of intent. A car is considered by the law in some cases to be a weapon. A great, big, huge, heavy, fast, deadly weapon. That's why.
- from Answers Yahoo
page 41 of 51
Key Points on Implementation
2. Tendency of drivers to disregard traffic laws and safety.
3. Campaigns should be based on research as to target
UNLAWFUL and UNSAFE BEHAVIOR.
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naTICKETan na si Richard Gutierrez just before this accident, for overspeeding. Then he was still driving his RACE CAR for the streets? How tempting kaya to DRIVE fast a race car, in a deserted road, at 1 AM? O baka naman, talaga lang INAANTOK, o baka both, INAANTOK pero feeling RACE CAR driver pa rin. In any case, HE LOST CONTROL of the car he is driving. Pero IBABASURA pa rin ang kasong ito, dahil, it is in a CAVITE COURT. Hawak yata ni Bong Revilla ang CAVITE, at kaibigan niya ang mga Gutierrez's.
National Road Safety Action Plan
2005-1010
page 39 of 51
Sector 10: Traffic Legislation
Objective: To achieve up-to-date and relevant legislations and AN EFFICIENT JUDICIAL SYSTEM-
RA 4136, proposed amendments:
2.b. b. Neuro-psychological test
4. Increase of penalties for violators
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Pati Asian Development Bank, napansin ang dangerous driving habits dito sa Pinas. May studies at proposal pa. at ano ang pinalalabas sa kaso ni RG? Pag may KONEKSYON ka, ABOVE the law ka.
16:05 PM
Gutierrez, who was driving his Nissan GTR sports car, was managing a curve when he
LOST CONTROL of the vehicle and
CROSSED OVER TO THE OPPOSITE LANE,
HITTING A LAMP POST,
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thanks for pointing this out, sunrain85.
LOST CONTROL of the vehicle he is driving
My verdict: Not Guilty!
Was Richard reckless in driving his car?
I hope Sunrain85 and Lucky7 answer this in their arguments.
Sabi nga ng nakararami dito, dinggin sana ang kaso. In the end, kung mapatunayang walang kasalanan si Richard, eh di wala. It will be good for him di ba? Only until then can Ruffa say na makakapag-move on na ang kapatid niya.
Very well said...thanks a lot for all the info.