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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Ret. Army Lt. Col. George Rabusa: Military Budget

Retired Army Lt. Col. George Rabusa, a longtime budget officer at the deputy chief of staff for comptrollership (J6), faced indictment when six years ago he got named in the military scam where former comptroller Gen. Carlos Garcia amassed ill-gotten wealth amounting to P300 million. 

In a Senate hearing in January 2011, Rabusa named three former chief of staffs--Angelo Reyes, Diomedio Villanueva, and Roy Cimatu--to have benefitted illegally from a slush fund illegally setup in the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) under control of the Chief of Staff. Reyes himself got a least P50 million in going-away gift when he retired in 2001. These information came up during the Senate probe on the controversial plea bargain deal that Garcia and teh Ombudsman signed recently.  

When he testified in court in 2004, Rabusa was an impenitent witness and accused. This year, a new Rabusa faced the Senate inquiry--a willing witness that was ready to face his boss, knowing fully well that he merely received orders from his bosses then. His courage in facing up to his past and standing for justice and truth is exemplary.

The Department of Justice placed Rabusa under the Witness Protection Program (WPP).

Related Readings
Glenda M. Gloria: "Ex-AFP 'bagman' names bosses in fund scam," Newsbreak 27 January 2011

Heidi Mendoza: Audit

Assigned to the Office of the Ombudsman under Simeon Marcelo to help in investigating the unexplained wealthof then AFP comptroller General Carlos Garcia, Heide Mendoza headed a team of 11 auditors from the Commission on Audit (COA) that traced the paper trail of graft and corruption in the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).

But when ombudsman Simeon Marcelo resigned in 2005 because of ill-health, COA chief Guillermo Carague told Heide to abandon the case, and that no need of a report on their findings to be made as COA was not interested of it.

During the justice committee  hearing at the House of Representatives in February 2011, Heidi disclosed that she had a strong case against Garcia, accused of amassing P300 million in military funds while in service but later got out after signing a deal with the current Ombudsman, during the time of then Ombudsman Marcelo.

Out of work and pursuing a lone battle against a powerful and rich former general in the AFP, Heidi stood courageously on the ground in the name of truth and justice for the Filipino people.

The Department of Justice put her under the Witness Protection Program.

Related Readings
Gil Cabacungan, Jocelyn Uy &  Marlon Ramos: "Support for ex-auditor Heidi Mendoza snowballs," Philippine Daily Inquirer 02 February 2011