Showing posts with label National Bilibid Prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Bilibid Prison. Show all posts

Saturday, January 3, 2015

‘Bilibid not the only source of Iloilo Dinagyang shabu’

"Making money is certainly the one addiction I cannot shake.” Felix Dennis

By Alex P. Vidal

MANY Ilonggos won’t buy the claims of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) that shabu supply for the Dinagyang Festival in Iloilo City this month will diminish after the raid conducted by the Department of Justice (DoJ) and National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) at the National Bilibid Prison (NBP) in Muntinlupa City on December 15 last year.
Bilibid drug lords could not be the only sources of shabu being distributed all over the country.
Shabu business is organized nationwide.
Drug syndicates have robust tentacles in places where they distribute shabu.
Money is the key.
Judging from their success in recent years, they operate fast, furiously and efficiently, thus they are able to outwit the lawmen.
Chinese chemists and their local contacts set aside a large amount to bribe corrupt law enforcers, thus it would be a disaster for their business if they make the NBP as their only focal point.
Somewhere around the country, there must be bigger, more sophisticated and highly-maintained laboratories aside from the one (the presence of a laboratory inside the NBP has not been officially confirmed as of this writing since the inspection and investigation were still ongoing) inside the NBP.

INDUSTRY

Shabu is a multi-billion cottage industry in the Philippines.
Filipinos are among the biggest users of this so-called “poor man’s cocaine” in Asia, thus syndicates don’t maintain a sloppy operation in this country.
The raid in the NBP, which happened after Justice Secretary Lila de Lima signed the implementing rules and regulations of Republic Act No. 10575 or the BuCor Modernization Law, busted the lavish lifestyle of prominent drug lords and gang leaders where several cash, shabu, and drug paraphernalia were seized inside state-of-the-art kubols.
The surprise attack also confirmed reports earlier that drug transactions were done right inside the country’s premier institution for convicted criminals, although authorities have yet to discover the rumored shabu laboratories.
PDEA-6 Regional Director Paul Ledesma revealed last month that local distributors of the illegal substance get their supplies from the NBP drug lords.
Once the earlier (meaning before the Bilibid raid) supplies have been consummated, Ledesma, whose agents operate in Iloilo, Bacolod, Capiz, Antique, Guimaras, and Aklan, including the Boracay Island, said the shabu famine will be felt in the succeeding weeks until the Dinagyang Festival set annually in the third week of January.

TRANSACTION

Drug transactions were reportedly normally done in metro Iloilo’s drive-in motels and budget hotels where foreign and local guests stayed for the week-long religious festival.
Last year, several kilos of shabu worth P8 million sent through a commercial courier, have been confiscated in Bacolod by alert PDEA operatives.
The contraband was believed to have come from the Bilibid drug lords.
Twenty drug lords previously living in comfort inside the Bilibid community have been transferred to the NBI headquarters in Manila, cutting their contacts with clients and partners all over the country, including Western Visayas, it was reported.
But sources said Bilibid could not be the only source of local shabu traffickers.
Past PDEA regional directors pointed to the northern ports of Iloilo as the entry points of shabu intended for Western Visayas.
So far, no arrest has been made here involving big time shabu traffickers, except small time or street-level pushers.
As of 2014, the PDEA regional office under Ledesma, has failed to manacle a single lord drug supposedly operating in Western Visayas although Ledesma claimed they have already identified some of them.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Shabu shipment via courier service

“If you're going to kick authority in the teeth, you might as well use two feet.” Keith Richards

By Alex P. Vidal

We were not surprised by the reported seizure of some P7-million worth of shabu (methamphetamine chloride) stuffed inside 20 pairs of shoes and sandals and shipped via LBC from Luzon to Bacolod last June 9.
The amount of the recovered illegal substances shows a big group is behind the deal, and it must have crippled their operations for this school opening.
If it is about a kilo, the target market could be not only in Bacolod City, but also in other component cities and municipalities in Negros Occidental. If the P7-million worth of shabu was not intercepted, God knows how much damage it would have inflicted on the youth in Negros and how many crimes would it have caused.
This trick by some drug traffickers of using private courier services is not new. We have heard of similar incidents in the past not only in Western Visayas, but also in Metro Manila.
Drugs were also kept inside toys, books, cloths, frames, etcetera. The system, for a while, has worked wonders for the syndicates as some private courier services don’t have special machine detectors to intercept illegal substances hidden in the declared stuffs.

DOOR-TO-DOOR

Drug transactions are also sometimes done via door-to-door; meaning the consignees get the illegal substance directly from the senders through private courier services that are not supposed to be detected by police authorities.
But the arrest of “drug distributor” (that’s what the PDEA calls the suspect) Edgardo Justo, 36, also known as Ray Roman of Brgy. Sta. Cruz, Murcia happened because, sources said, someone privy to the deal had tipped off the PDEA, which was still confirming reports that the syndicate also used other private service couriers in the past.
The rat could be part of the well-entrenched syndicate operating in Region 6 and he must now be working with the PDEA.
Justo was cornered not after receiving the sandals and shoes, but during the buy bust operation that followed later. This means that door-to-door shipment of illegal drugs could have been progressing also in other parts of the country even before Justo was busted.
The shabu bust, the biggest in Western Visayas in recent years, was traced to have originated in Muntinlupa’s New Bilibid Prison, police said.  

DRUG LORDS

If the report is true, this would confirm fears that some of the country’s most notorious drug lords continue to operate even if they are now detained in “Munti”.
And these transactions would not materialize without the backing of some influential characters in police and military. It was reported most recently that these detained drug lords live like kings and untouchables, and they receive special treatment from jail authorities. They could fake sickness and go to hospitals and stay there for an extended period, and hire high-profile prostitutes while in confinement.
It is common knowledge that some of the most active drug lords in Western Visayas also have links with their cohorts in “Munti”. They were able to establish contacts and forge camaraderie with their partners who are now behind bars because they were themselves former inmates in “Munti.”
PDEA Regional Director Paul Ledesma and his men were still trying to extract more information from Justo in a hope to trace his other accomplices.
We wish Director Ledesma luck.