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Posted on Monday, January 17, 2005

 

Hubert’s main defense: ‘I was in California’

By Jonathan M. Hicap, Reporter 

Last of two parts

AT THE start of the probe of the Vizconde murders in 1991, the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) was already investigating Hubert Webb as a suspect in the crime. But it took the Department of Justice four more years to file the case against him and six others suspected of killing the three members of the Vizconde family.

In his testimony Robert Heafner, the former legal attaché of the Federal Bureau of Investigation assigned to the US Embassy in Manila, said that on December 27, 1991, or six months after the Vizconde murders, then NBI director and now Sen. Alfredo Lim and then NBI Assistant Director Epí­maco Velasco came to his office at the US Embassy to verify Hubert Webb’s presence in the US.

As a suspect in the crime, Hubert relied on only one line of defense: He was in the Uni­ted States on June 30, 1991, when the Vizconde family members were murdered.

His lawyers used this de­fense to rebut the testimony of Jessica Alfaro, who said she acted as the “lookout” when Hubert and his co-accused killed Estrellita, Carmela and Anna Marie Jennifer in the Vizconde house on Vinzons Street, BF Homes, Parañaque.

Alfaro gave a detailed account of how she saw Hubert, partially naked, on top of Carmela, raping her.

The defense pounced on Alfaro’s two conflicting affidavits to paint her as a lying and cunning state witness.

It questioned Alfaro’s two testimonies before the Supreme Court, which in turn dismissed the petition. The High Court said the justice department’s “panel believes that the inconsistencies in Alfaro’s two sworn statements have been sufficiently explained, especially so where there is no showing that the inconsistencies were deliberately made to distort the truth.”

The Court declared: “Consequently, the probative value of Alfaro’s testimony deserves full faith and credit. As it has been often noted, ex parte statements are generally incomplete because they are usually executed when the affiant’s state of mind does not give her sufficient and fair opportunity to comprehend the import of her statement and to narrate in full the incidents which transpired.”

Voluminous documents and testimonies

The defense produced stacks of signed testimonies and documentary evidence to support Webb’s alibi that he was in the US from March 9, 1991, to October 26, 1992. It also presented people who had come into contact with Hubert in the US and his immigration record, employment papers and proof of purchases.

Gloria Webb, Hubert’s aunt, testified that she and Hubert boarded United Airlines flight UA-808 for San Francisco, California, on March 9, 1991, and arrived in the US on the same day.

Ferdinand Sampol, a Bureau of Immigration and Deportation employee at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, said he stamped the date of Hubert’s departure on his passport. Their testimonies were certified by former Immigration Commissioner Andrea Domingo and Bella Estrada, an Immigration employee, that one “H. Webb” left Manila on March 9, 1991, on United Airlines flight 8080.

In its investigation the NBI sought the help of the US Embassy in Manila, which in turn asked the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, the US State Department, the US Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and other agencies to check their records on Hubert’s presence in the US as he had claimed and to provide certifications.

The following persons made their affidavits for the defense:

• Dorothy Wheelock, an American friend of Elizabeth Webb, who said Hubert joined her and her family on a trip to Lake Tahoe, California, in April 1991.

• Jennifer Claire Cabrera, a friend of Hubert and a neighbor of the Webbs, who testified she received letters and a phone call from Hubert from the US in June and July 1991.

• Steven Keeler, an American who worked with Hubert in the Environment First Termite Control company in South Laguna Beach, California, who said he saw Hubert on several occasions in California from June to July 1991.

• Christopher Esguerra, an American and a relative of Gloria Webb, who testified he saw Hubert on several occasions in California from March to May 1991.

• Louis Whitaker, an American, who said he met Hubert in the house of his aunt in California on June 29, 1991.

• Sonia Rodriguez, a friend of Freddie Webb, who said she saw Hubert in the house of Susan Brottman in the US on June 30, 1991.

• Honesto Aragon, former NBI Director Antonio Aragon’s nephew, who testified he was with Hubert in the US on June 28-29, 1991.

• Antonio Rodriguez, son of Sonia and Jack Rodriguez, who said Hubert stayed at the Rodriguez family’s house in Florida from August 1991 to August 1992.

• Singer Gary Valenciano, who testified that he met Hubert in Florida at the home of Jack and Sonia Rodriguez in November 1991.

• Victor Yap, a stranger, who said he videotaped Freddie and Elizabeth Webb with Hubert in Disneyland, Anaheim, California, on July 3, 1991. The videotape was presented in court.

US certifies Hubert was in the US

The most important and compelling pieces of evidence for the defense were the certifications issued by the US government indicating that Hubert entered the US on March 9, 1991, and left on October 26, 1992.

The NBI had worked closely with the US Embassy to get information in the US on Hubert’s whereabouts in America.

In his 1995 affidavit the FBI legal attaché, Robert Heafner, said he had been “deeply involved” since December 1991 in helping the Philippine government seek vital information on Hubert’s stay in the US.

During the early period of the trial, Heafner was subpoenaed by Branch 274 of the Parañaque Regional Trial Court to testify on the Vizconde case. But he was prohibited from testifying because he had a diplomatic status at the time. He retired from the FBI in 1998.

Heafner said that on December 27, 1991, then-NBI Director Alfredo Lim and then-NBI Assistant Director Epímaco Velasco came to his office at the US Embassy to verify Hubert Webb’s presence in the US.

In reply, Heafner wrote to Lim on January 10, 1992, about the initial finding that showed Hubert was issued a California driver’s license on August 9, 1991, with his address listed in Anaheim, California. The letter also showed personal information on Hubert based on his visa application at the US Embassy.

Heafner said the FBI verified that Hubert was issued his license on June 14, 1991, which was computerized on August 19, 1991.

On July 6, 1993, Heafner wrote to NBI Director Velasco to confirm that Hubert, based on the FBI’s investigation, entered the US in 1991.

“A review of the US Government Records revealed that Hubert Webb, born 11/7/68, Philippines, entered the United States on 3/9/91 (March 9, 1991) at San Francisco, California,” Heafner said in his letter.

The information came from the US Immigration and Naturalization Office in San Francisco and from the US INS Central Office in Washington, D.C.

Heafner said a review of the US Customs Treasury Enforcement Computer System I-94 arrival/departure record revealed the same information.

He  emphasized that two agencies, the INS and US Customs Service, “separately verified the arrival of Hubert Webb in the US.”

 “When a visitor arrives in the United States,” he said, “the US INS stamps the date of arrival on both the visitor’s passport and the I-94 form.”

Heafner noted that because of the information on Hubert’s arrival in the US, “the NBI had advised that it had discontinued investigating Webb as a suspect, in part because US Government Records had showed that he had been in the US.”

He said the NBI requested no additional information from US sources until June 1995, when its acting director, Antonio Aragon, asked about Hubert’s employment record, his contacts in the US and his departure record.

On July 7, 1995, then-NBI Director Mariano Mison asked the US Embassy to look into the background of Alex del Toro, husband of Rose Manlapit, Hubert’s relative.

Del Toro had testified that Hubert worked for him in his pest-control company from June 11 to July 10, 1991.

In his letter to Mison on July 17, 1995, Heafner said the FBI field office in Los Angeles, California, verified that del Toro owned the Environment First Termite Control company in South Laguna Beach, California.

Hubert, the FBI noted, worked for the company starting in June 1991 on an “as-needed” basis.

As proof, del Toro produced the company payroll showing that it issued Hubert a check for $150 on June 10, 1991, and another for $290.25 on June 16, 1991.

Heafner told Mison that del Toro also issued Hubert work orders on different dates in June 1991 including the 28th.

To verify who cashed the checks, the FBI got copies of del Toro’s documents and found that Hubert endorsed the checks and cashed them.

Another crucial evidence was the testimony of John Pavlisin, owner of Orange Cycle, a bicycle store in Orange City, California. A check on Pavlisin’s records showed that he sold a Cannondale bicycle to Hubert on June 30, 1991.

Heafner said Pavlisin “advised he has been in business for 26 years and maintains all his records of bicycle sales.” Heafner said the duplicate receipt issued to Hubert “was verified as legitimate.” The original copy was issued to Elizabeth Webb, Hubert’s mother.

The FBI also interviewed other persons who had verified Hubert’s presence and employment in the US.

On July 25, 1995, Heafner wrote to then-Justice Secretary Teofisto Guingona in response to requests by government officials to clarify the words “US Government Records” Heafner had used in previous letters.

Heafner reiterated that according to FBI files, Moreen Auyeung, supervisory clerk of the US INS in San Francisco, said that on January 16, 1992, she verified that Hubert arrived  on March 9, 1991, under the Nonimmigrant Information System.

A check by the FBI Washington Field Office also showed that Hubert entered the US on that date. US Customs also verified Hubert’s arrival in the US.

Authenticated copies of documents from the California Department of Motor Vehicles also showed Hubert bought a car on July 5, 1991.

On August 30, 1995, the Philippine Embassy in Washington, D.C., asked the US State Department to verify Hubert’s arrival in and departure from the US.

On September 1 the State Department issued a diplomatic note saying that the US INS and a computer printout verified that Hubert entered the US on March 9, 1991, and left on October 26, 1992. The documents were authenticated by US Attorney General Janet Reno and US State Secretary Warren Christopher.

On January 24, 1997, Steven Bucher, acting chief of the Records Services Branch of the US INS, wrote to Phillip Antweiler of the State Department reiterating that official records showed that Hubert arrived in the US on March 9, 1991, and left on October 26, 1992.

Hubert’s departure was certified on June 29, 1995, by the Bureau of Immigration and Deportation, which said that he arrived in Manila from the US on October 27, 1992, on Philippine Airlines flight PR 103 together with his mother Elizabeth and brother Michael.

Agnes Tabuena of PAL also testified that Hubert boarded the PAL flight from Los Angeles to Manila on that date. Hubert’s PAL ticket indicated the departure date as October 26. The Bureau of Immigration also stamped October 27 on Hubert’s passport as his date of arrival in Manila.

Defense demands Tolentino’s recusal from the case

Webb, Lejano, Fernandez, Rodriguez, Estrada and Gatchalian were arraigned on September 4, 1995, and then filed motions for bail.

Even before  and during the trial, Hubert filed several motions to recuse Judge Tolentino from the case, accusing her of bias.

Supreme Court documents showed that Hubert and Biong tried to disqualify Tolentino by filing a petition before her court on August 21, 1995. Hubert alleged that Tolentino told reporters that “failure of the accused to surrender following the issuance of the warrant for his arrest is an indication of guilt.” Tolentino dismissed the petition.

Two days later Hubert filed a second motion to disqualify Tolentino. Biong also filed a similar motion. The judge dismissed both motions. 

Hubert’s difficulties were compounded by his skin asthma; Judge Tolentino was no help in his case. On September 21, 1995, he filed an urgent motion to be hospitalized, complaining that poor conditions at the Parañaque municipal jail were aggravating his skin disease. Tolentino denied the motion on October 16.

The suspects sought bail although their crime was nonbailable. The bail hearing started on October 9, 1995.

Alfaro as state witness

The prosecution presented Jessica Alfaro as its star witness. The defense tried to destroy her credibility by questioning her first affidavit, made at the NBI on April 28, 1995.

The defense said Alfaro lied by making two inconsistent affidavits, thus her credibility as the principal witness was dubious.

The prosecution objected and asked that Alfaro’s first affidavit be stricken off the court records because it was inadmissible evidence. Tolentino agreed, noting that the document had been signed without the assistance of a lawyer.

The defense also questioned Alfaro’s motive for testifying. It asked about Alfaro’s brother, Patrick, said to be a drug addict who had been arrested by the NBI for possession of illegal drugs. The prosecution objected, saying Patrick’s arrest was irrelevant to the case. Tolentino sustained the objection.

Feeling that Tolentino had a deep-seated bias against them, Hubert and his coaccused again filed a motion on November 9, 1995, to recuse Tolentino from the case. She denied it for lack of merit on November 28.

On November 15, 1995, the suspects filed two petitions with the Supreme Court. Hubert, Lejano, Fernandez and Biong petitioned for certiorari to overturn Tolentino’s decision prohibiting Hubert from seeking hospitalization and disallowing Alfaro’s first affidavit.

Gatchalian and Estrada also filed a petition for certiorari, prohibition and mandamus with the High Court questioning Tolentino’s decision to bar the defense from cross-examining Alfaro about her first affidavit.

On December 8 the defense filed another petition with the Court questioning Tolentino’s November 8 decision denying its motion for her recusal.

Mila Gaviola, former maid of the Webbs, then testified that she saw Hubert at home on June 30, 1991.

Despite the objection of the defense, Tolentino ordered an inspection of the Webbs’ house because Gaviola had testified that there was a secret door “through which she peeped to see” Hubert.

On January 12, 1996, Hubert filed a motion with the Parañaque Regional Trial Court asking that his witnesses in the US be allowed to give their depositions for use in the trial. The witnesses were Steven Bucher and Debora Farmer of the US INS, Jaci Alston and Ami Smalley of the US Department of Motor Vehicles, and John Pavlisin, a resident of Orange City, California. Tolentino denied the motion on February 6.

At the end of the hearings for bail the accused filed a formal offer of evidence to which the prosecution filed its objection.

On October 1, 1996, Tolentino admitted only 10 of the 142 pieces of evidence, the defense presented. On October 11 she denied bail to the accused.

The defense won a partial victory in the Court of Appeals on June 21, 1996, when the court allowed Alfaro’s first affidavit to be used in the trial but denied all other matters in the petition.

On December 12, 1996, the accused filed with the Supreme Court a motion questioning the appellate court’s denial of matters in their petition.

The accused said the appellate court erred when it ruled that there was no basis for recusing Tolentino from the case. They said Tolentino had consistently shown bias against and hostility toward them.

They alleged that by rejecting 132 of the 142 pieces of evidence, Tolentino had set the tone for their conviction. They also protested Tolentino’s visit to the Vizconde house.

On July 24, 1997, the Supreme Court dismissed the petition of the accused for lack of merit and allowed Tolentino to continue hearing the case. The Court said the accused failed to show that Tolentino had been biased against them.

The Court noted, however, that Tolentino erred when she refused to admit the 132 pieces of evidence presented by the defense, although these were later admitted in court through an order issued by the judge. The Court also refused to disqualify Tolentino, saying “the trial of the petitioners is about to end and to assign a new judge to determine the guilt or innocence of petitioners will not be in the best interest of justice.”

The Court reminded Tolen­tino “that our ability to dispense impartial justice is an issue in every trial, and in every criminal prosecution the judiciary always stands as a silent accused. More than convicting the guilty and acquitting the innocent, the business of the judiciary is to assure fulfillment of the promise that justice shall be done and is done, and that is the only way for the judiciary to get an acquittal from the bar of public opinion.”

On August 17, 1999, the Supreme Court overturned the decision of the Court of Appeals and ruled that Judge Tolentino did not commit error when she barred the depositions of Bucher, Farmer, Alston, Smalley and Pavlisin.

On February 6, 1998, the appellate court’s Fourth Division had allowed the five witnesses to make their testimonies before a consular officer in the US.

The Supreme Court said the trial court need not get the testimony of the five witnesses regarding the documents they presented, because these had already been admitted as evidence to bolster Webb’s stay in the US.

Conviction

The Vizconde trial became a celebrated case in the country because it had the elements of a soap opera.

On January 6, 2000, or nine years after the murders of the Vizconde family, Judge Tolentino rendered her decision.

Early in the morning, hundreds of people were already cramming Branch 274 of the Parañaque Regional Trial Court.

The families of the accused attended to hear the judgment. Among them were Freddie and Elizabeth Webb. Lauro Vizconde was already there.

Television, radio and newspaper reporters were on hand to cover the proceedings. The press was represented in huge number.

At 8:30 a.m. a clerk of court started reading the 186-page decision. It would take another clerk of court to finish reading the verdict, which took almost five hours.

Tolentino sentenced to life imprisonment Hubert Webb, Peter Estrada, Hospicio Fernandez, Michael Gatchalian, Antonio Lejano II and Miguel Rodriguez and ordered them to indemnify the Vizconde family P3 million for the murders of Estrellita, Carmela and Anna Marie Jennifer.

Gerardo Biong, the Parañaque policeman, was found guilty of burning bed sheets and other evidence in the crime and was sentenced, to 11 years in prison.

Joey Filart and Artemio “Dong” Ventura were not sentenced because they were not arraigned and escaped prosecution. They remain at large.

Webb cried on hearing the verdict. His parents and siblings were inconsolable. The other suspects also reacted the same way.

Case review: Victory for Lauro or Hubert?

Lauro Vizconde told The Manila Times that when the verdict was handed, he felt he had “partially gained justice.”

Since then he has immersed himself in a crusade against crime. He is active in the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption, an organization that helps victims of crimes and monitors cases in courts. He is also a director in the government-owned Intercontinental Broadcasting Corp.

Hubert is a ranking officer of the Sigue Sigue Sputnik gang at the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City. Senator Webb said the family visits Hubert every Sunday and celebrates with him all occasions, including birthdays, in his cell.

Vizconde visits the graves of his family once or twice a month. He also visits them on their birthdays or on Christmas.

He is apprehensive about the Supreme Court’s decision directing the appellate court to review the case, saying times are different now.

“My greatest fear is the time element,” Vizconde said.

He said the appellate court has six months to decide the case.

And if the appellate court affirms the conviction, the case goes automatically to the Supreme Court for review. Vizconde estimates it would take another two years for the High Court to issue a decision.

He fears that he may not live to see the final outcome of the review.

It’s been 14 years since the gruesome murders of his family, and Vizconde has learned to pardon Webb and the rest of the group.

“I was able to forgive them but it doesn’t mean that I’ve already forgotten [what they did],” he said.

Will Vizconde end up victorious as he did five years ago or will Hubert Webb walk free and reclaim his freedom?

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Francis Andaya, Judee Perculeza, Marizhen Doctora, Shey Silayan
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