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CCTV footage leads to ‘lookout,’ Baptist bishop in Cagayan de Oro murder case
Documents show that a key witness identified an associate of Bishop Dimver Andales as the alleged lookout in CCTV footage obtained by the police.....»»
Injection attacks: Police to check CCTV around mall to verify alarming posts
CEBU CITY, Philippines – Incidents of alleged “injection attacks” in Cebu City over the past two weeks are now being looked into by the police. Police Lieutenant Colonel Janette Rafter, deputy director for operations of the Cebu City Police Office (CCPO), told reporters that they will be checking the closed-circuit television (CCTV) footage in areas.....»»
OTS on fire anew as passenger loses $300
As a video of two US-TSA screening officers taking things from bags in trays lined up at the x-ray machine went viral over the weekend, another episode of theft at Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 1 has allegedly included the Office for Transportation Security. A press release from the OTS only came out on Monday afternoon, confirming the incident involving one of their Security Screening Officers at NAIA. But the issue began circulating in social media group chats as early as last week. Notably, the press release was also issued after a member of the Airport Press Club confirmed with the OTS public information office that such information was true. The said release did not contain vital details of the incident, referring to when, where, and how the alleged theft happened. Information revealed that the incident happened as early as 8 a.m., at Terminal 1 of NAIA. After going through the final security check, a departing passenger who is a foreign national, reportedly complained of having lost $300 in cash and was creating a commotion about the incident. The alleged theft was reportedly committed by one of the OTS SSO at that time, a female, while the passenger was passing through the final security check on the said terminal. It can be recalled that six months ago (22 February 2023), five personnel of the OTS assigned at the NAIA Terminal 2 were suspended after two videos of them went viral on social media, taking money from a transiting Thai tourist identified as Kitja Thabthim. The amount involved was 40,000 yen. A few days later, another screening officer was caught on CCTV stealing a watch of a Chinese passenger at the NAIA Terminal 1. Passenger Sun Yuhong complained that his watch was missing in his bag after he was screened by Valeriano Ricaplaza Jr., 31. Ricaplaza was later nabbed by members of the Philippine National Police Aviation Security Group. Closed-circuit television footage at NAIA Terminal 1 reveals a female personnel from the OTS swallowing the $300 taken from a departing Chinese passenger in what appears to be an effort to get rid of the evidence after the passenger complained about losing his money shortly after his bag had passed through at the final security checkpoint. Records from the airport authorities, which identified the involved OTS personnel as a female SSO and stated that an x-ray operator and her supervisor also had a part to play in the incident, provided evidence to support this. The post OTS on fire anew as passenger loses $300 appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
OTS on fire anew as another theft incident uncovered at NAIA-1
As a video of two US-TSA screening officers taking things from bags in trays lined up at the x-ray machine went viral over the weekend, another theft incident at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Terminal 1 has been uncovered. A press release from the Office for Transportation Security (OTS) came out on Monday afternoon, confirming the incident involving one of their security screening officers (SSO) at NAIA. But the issue began circulating in social media group chats as early as last week. Notably, the press release was also issued after a member of the Airport Press Club (APC) confirmed with the OTS public information office that such information was true. The said release did not contain vital details of the incident, referring to when, where, and how the alleged theft happened. Information revealed that the incident happened as early as 8 September 2023 at the NAIA Terminal 1. After going through the final security check, a departing passenger who is a foreign national reportedly complained of having lost US$300 in cash and was creating a commotion about the incident. The alleged theft was reportedly committed by one of the OTS security screening officers at that time, a female, while the passenger was passing through the final security check at the said terminal. It can be recalled that six months ago 22 February 2023), five personnel of the OTS assigned at the NAIA Terminal 2 were suspended after two videos of them went viral on social media, as they were shown taking money from a transiting Thai tourist identified as Kitja Thabthim. The amount involved was 40,000 yen. A few days later, another screening officer was caught on CCTV stealing a watch of a Chinese passenger at the NAIA Terminal 1. Passenger Sun Yuhong complained that his watch was missing from his bag after he was screened by Valeriano Ricaplaza Jr., age 31. Ricaplaza was later nabbed by members of the Philippine National Police Aviation Security Group. The post OTS on fire anew as another theft incident uncovered at NAIA-1 appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Another photo journo slay suspect nabbed
Another suspect in the Abiad family shooting incident last 29 June was collared by operatives of the Quezon City Police District Criminal Investigation and Detection Unit at a provincial bus station in Cubao on Thursday afternoon. QCPD Director, Brig. Gen. Nicolas Torre III, said suspect Jomari dela Cruz, 24, of Southville 3, Poblacion, Muntinlupa City, was nabbed at around 4:30 p.m. of 13 July at the Solid North Transit Bus Terminal on EDSA. Torre said QCPD-CIDU operatives under Maj. Don Don Llapitan received a tip from an informant that Dela Cruz would be arriving at the bus terminal from Pangasinan where he had been hiding. Torre said the cops were waiting and at 4:30 p.m., Dela Cruz, alias “Mata” and “Alexis,” was spotted walking in front of the terminal. The suspect was the one seen on CCTV riding the pink motorcycle that was tailing the vehicle of the Abiad family before the ambush. Recovered from him was a 9mm pistol with eight rounds in a gray sling bag. Dela Cruz is under the custody of the CIDU along with Eduardo Legazpi II, alias “Bingbong,” the alleged gunman who was arrested on 7 July. Torre said a case of violating RA 10591, or the Comprehensive Firearms and Ammunition Regulation Act, is being prepared against Dela Cruz and will be filed before the Quezon City Prosecutor’s Office. Aside from the photojournalist, members of Abiad’s family and Jeffrey Ngo Cao, a bystander and resident of Barangay Apolonio Samson, Quezon City, were also wounded during the ambush. Abiad’s four-year-old niece who was hit in the head succumbed to injuries last weeken. A manhunt is continuing for the other suspects, including a former Pasay City barangay chairman known as “Nadnad.” As this developed, Philippine National Police chief, Gen. Benjamin Acorda Jr., said they are looking at lowering the fees for the “Permit-To-Carry” to encourage gun owners to regularly renew their firearm licenses and documents. Acorda made the comment on the sidelines of the 1st PNP Press Corps Invitational Shootfest held at Camp Karingal, Sikatuna Village, Quezon City which started Friday until 16 July. With Glen Jacob Jose The post Another photo journo slay suspect nabbed appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Neglected elephant touches down in Thai homeland after flight
A Thai elephant gifted to Sri Lanka two decades ago arrived back in its birth country Sunday, following a diplomatic spat over the animal's alleged mistreatment. Thai authorities had gifted the 29-year-old Muthu Raja -- also known back in its birthplace as Sak Surin -- to Sri Lanka in 2001. But they demanded the elephant back last year after allegations that it was tortured and neglected while kept at a Buddhist temple. The 4,000-kilogram (8,800-pound) mammal arrived in Thailand just after 2 pm (0800 GMT), having been transported inside a specially constructed giant steel crate onboard an Ilyushin Il-76 cargo plane. "He arrived in Chiang Mai perfectly," Thai environment minister Varawut Silpa-Archa said at the airport. "He traveled five hours and nothing is wrong, his condition is normal." "If everything goes well, we will move him," he added, referring to plans to quarantine the elephant at a nearby nature reserve. Varawut helped give the elephant a drink after Muthu Raja's decorated crate was removed from the plane, with the thirsty animal eagerly reached his trunk through a hole to accept the water. The elephant could be seen when officials briefly opened the crate's rear doors and it was sprayed. Muthu Raja was moved from its temporary home at a zoo in Sri Lanka's capital Colombo before dawn, accompanied by four Thai handlers and a Sri Lankan keeper, with two CCTV cameras monitoring its health in transit. It left Colombo at 7:40 am (0210 GMT) on a commercial reparation flight that Thai officials said cost $700,000. Muthu Raja was in pain and covered in abscesses when it was rescued from the Buddhist temple last year, the zoo's chief veterinarian, Madusha Perera, told AFP. Animal welfare groups said the elephant had been forced to work with a logging crew and that its wounds, some allegedly inflicted by its handler, had been neglected. The elephant will undergo hydrotherapy in Thailand to treat a remaining injury on its front left leg, Perera said. Return opposed Elephants are considered sacred in Sri Lanka and are protected by law. The organization Rally for Animal Rights and Environment, which led a campaign to rescue Muthu Raja from the temple, expressed its unhappiness over the animal's departure. RARE organized a Buddhist blessing for the elephant on Friday ahead of its journey and has petitioned authorities to prosecute those it says are responsible for neglecting the animal. Sri Lanka's wildlife minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi said Thailand was "adamant" in its demands for the elephant's return. Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena told parliament in June he had personally conveyed Sri Lanka's regrets to the Thai king over the elephant's condition. Thailand has stopped sending elephants abroad, Thai environment minister Varawut said, adding that Bangkok's diplomatic missions are checking the conditions of elephants already sent overseas. The post Neglected elephant touches down in Thai homeland after flight appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Unveiling the shabu bust scandal
On 13 June, Secretary Benhur Abalos of the Department of the Interior and Local Government announced that criminal charges have been filed against 50 police officers, including Gen. Benjamin Santos, former PNP-Drug Enforcement Group chief, and Brig. Gen. Narciso Domingo. The investigation leading to the charges was conducted jointly by the National Police Commission and the Philippine National Police’s Special Investigation Task Group which uncovered the officers’ alleged involvement in a coverup in the seizure of 990 kilograms of shabu worth around P6.7 billion in October 2022. They were charged with violating the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, the Dangerous Drugs Act, the Revised Penal Code (specifically, falsification, perjury, false testimony, and malversation of public property), and Presidential Decree 1829, which deals with obstruction of justice. Much of the evidence was obtained from closed-circuit television camera footage which captured the alleged involvement of police officers in the attempt to pilfer 42 kilograms from the total 990 kilograms of shabu seized at WPD Lending, a finance company owned by Master Sgt. Rodolfo Mayo. The CCTV footage taken on 8 October 2022 corresponded to the day Mayo was apprehended during a drug operation at WPD Lending which resulted in the seizure of the 990 kilograms of shabu. What appeared to be a momentous victory for the PNP, however, quickly turned into a massive scandal seemingly straight out of the big screen. On 10 April, Secretary Abalos stepped forward to unveil a complex syndicated coverup surrounding the shabu bust. For the first time in public, he presented the CCTV footage that revealed a stark disparity between the reports filed by the PNP regarding the arrest of Mayo. This revelation, coupled with multiple reports, prompted Abalos to issue a statement exposing the “massive attempt to cover up” Mayo’s arrest and implicating certain PNP officials in the process. Subsequently, the House of Representatives Committee on Dangerous Drugs and the Senate Committee on Public Order and Dangerous Drugs initiated separate inquiries into the anomalies surrounding the drug bust. Mayo and several PNP officials were summoned to shed light on the matter during these investigations. During the congressional hearings, Congressmen Barbers and Acop were able to spot several conflicting details from the PNP officials ranging from the date, time, and place of the arrests of Mayo and his alleged accomplice, Ney Atadero. Among those questioned about the conflicting details were Brig. Gen. Narcisco Domingo Jr., Lt. Col. Julius Olonan, and Capt. Jonathan Sosongco. The three officers were among the 10 ranking officers who were placed on leave after an alleged attempt to cover up Mayo’s arrest was uncovered by the National Police Commission’s fact-finding board. Olonan claimed that only Atadero was arrested at 1 p.m. at WPD Lending in Tondo, while Mayo was arrested in Bambang. Sosongco said both Mayo and Atadero were captured at around 4 p.m. at the Western Police District. The CCTV footage, however, showed that on or about 1:40 p.m. at WPD Lending, Mayo appeared in handcuffs as he alighted from a grey SUV while being escorted by the team of Sosongco who were followed by a black sedan from which Sosongco alighted. This was in stark contrast to what was reported by the PNP that Mayo was arrested by a Captain Piñon. The CCTV footage further showed several PNP officers entering and exiting WPD Lending, carrying suitcases that were loaded into vehicles and on a motorcycle. These vehicles and the motorcycle were then driven to a nearby establishment suspected to belong to another PNP official named Jimenez, where the suitcases were believed unloaded. This Jimenez was a subordinate of Colonel Ibañez of the PNP Drug Enforcement Group Special Operations Unit 4A, who was also listed in the Drug Watch list along with Mayo and Jimenez, whom Ibañez specifically asked to be part of his team. Domingo denied a coverup and said that the senior officers seen in the CCTV footage were discussing their next moves. He said efforts were being made to identify other cohorts of Mayo, recover the pilfered drugs, and cooperate with the Department of Justice in building a case against the suspects. The ramifications of these revelations led former president Rodrigo Duterte to accuse the PNP of being the “gatekeeper” of the illegal drug trade and challenged its personnel to resign. He expressed concern about the significant volume of drugs allegedly passing through the hands of the police, even reaching the level of the generals. Secretary Abalos assured Duterte and the public that they were taking action on the issue of alleged drug ties among police officers and that they were actively carrying out their responsibilities and conducting investigations into the matter. As we delve further into the shabu bust scandal, it is crucial that we remain focused on our ultimate objectives: purging the PNP of corruption, rebuilding public trust, and upholding the rule of law. He should be applauded for his courage in exposing the complicity of senior PNP officials, despite the potential risk to his personal safety from both internal and external syndicates. His unwavering resolve to root out drug connections in the PNP and restore its damaged reputation is truly commendable and deserving of our admiration. The post Unveiling the shabu bust scandal appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Cops in 990-kg shabu haul summoned
Officials and members of the Philippine National Police involved in the “anomaly-laden” seizure of 990 kilos of shabu in Tondo, Manila last year have been summoned before the House Committee on Dangerous Drugs to shed light on the scandal. The panel led by Surigao del Norte Representative Ace Barbers will conduct its third investigation on Tuesday to determine the accountability of the alleged “ninja cops” involved in the recycling or resale of drugs seized from their operations and into what appears to be a “double cover-up” surrounding the arrest of now-dismissed PMSgt. Rodolfo Mayo Jr., involving 49 PNP officials and personnel. Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos, Justice Secretary Crispin Remulla and newly-installed PNP chief Benjamin Acorda will also be present before the panel. The 990 kilos of shabu, estimated to be worth over P6.7 billion, seized on 8 October last year in the Mayo-owned WPD lending office, served as the impetus for the congressional investigation. Of the total seized contraband, at least 42 kilos worth over P285 million were allegedly pilfered by two PNP Drug Enforcement Group members. Mayo was an intelligence officer with the PNP’s Drug Enforcement Group who was detained and discharged after the operation. He currently faces administrative and criminal charges for illegal substances as a fallout of his arrest. Despite the murkiness of the PNP’s internal investigations, Barbers is intent on learning whether or not the 49 PNP officials involved in the bust — who attempted to cover up and recycle the seized shabu — were also charged in court. “As far as we know, only dismissed P/MSgt. Rodolfo Mayo Jr. had been charged in court. We have not heard or seen any details of his administrative and criminal cases. What about the other officers who we believe participated in the alleged double cover-up and double recycling attempts in said incident,” Barbers said. “And based on documents, police reports, video footages and TV interviews by police officers involved in the case, we have noticed irreconcilable inconsistencies on their narrative of the incident, particularly the narrative that Sgt. Mayo was arrested in a buy-bust operation at 9 p.m. of 8 October 2022 for possession of two kilos of shabu,” he added. Mayo was arrested but was set free by PDEG director P/Brig. Gen. Narciso Domingo and his men, purportedly to entrap his other cohorts. He was then later uncuffed as seen on the CCTV footage Barbers disclosed that the ongoing PNP investigations into the case have been deafeningly silent on Mayo’s shabu stockpile of more than 990 kilos. “Because it is very important and very urgent for the police agency to find out the surrounding circumstances behind this particular drug recycling activity,” Barbers said. The Mindanaoan lawmaker emphasized that tracking down the origins of the recycled drugs, how they were obtained, and who is involved in the criminal enterprise is crucial to resolve the scandal. Barber’s panel previously revealed that the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency has an alleged scheme of giving its police assets a portion of illegal drugs seized as a “reward” for successful operations. According to the agency’s informants, the “reward” came from drugs hauled, seized and confiscated that had been recycled over the past 20 years. The post Cops in 990-kg shabu haul summoned appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Another disgraceful police scandal
With too many whys, a clear-cut and independent full-blown investigation is imperative into the now infamous alleged police cover-up and pilferage of illegal drugs worth billions. But by any yardstick, the police can’t be a party to such an investigation. Not only because the investigation involves top police officers but also — and more damningly — because the police brass hasn’t been exactly forthright about their own promised probe of the disgraceful incident. In fact, Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos said that as early as February, his department had raised concerns to police brass about the slow pace of the police investigation into the arrest of Police Master Sergeant Rodolfo Mayo Jr., the seizure of illegal drugs worth P6.7 billion, and what happened to the drug haul afterward. Apparently, the concerns were ignored, forcing Mr. Abalos to launch another inquiry, this time with the National Police Commission in the lead. It was only after Mr. Abalos publicly disclosed what he described as a “massive attempt to cover up” Mayo’s arrest did the police brass divulge its investigation report that found a coterie of 49 Drug Enforcement Group officers and men liable for criminal and administrative charges amid irregularities in the illegal drug seizure. At the same time, police also officially divulged that some DEG officers speciously stole from the drug haul at least 42 kg of illegal drugs, that was found in an abandoned car near Camp Crame. Mr. Abalos wasn’t alone in raising suspicions about the slow pace of the official police probe into Mayo’s arrest last October, however. Last month, an evidently peeved Rep. Robert Ace Barbers, chairperson of the House Committee on Dangerous Drugs, lashed out, saying that after six months the police special investigation task group looking into the incident still had nothing to show for it. “Why is it said that the PNP SITG is foot-dragging or dilly-dallying on their probe? Are they covering up for something we don’t know or are they still trying to make up a different script about his arrest and involvement in shabu stockpiling and possibly for recycling?” Mr. Barbers furiously asked then. Aside from these damning cover-up allegations, a flurry of other questions surfaced about Mayo’s arrest. CCTV footage, for instance, purportedly showed that instead of immediately spiriting away a handcuffed Mayo following his arrest in Tondo, Manila, police officers entered a nearby building with him and then suspiciously transferred bags and luggage into several vehicles. The building in question, which Mayo allegedly owned, was where the illegal drugs were stored. Even more puzzling, Abalos said, the police apparently already had Mayo in their custody even before the raid. A DEG report claimed he was arrested after a hot pursuit operation the following day. Worse, Mayo was even listed as an arresting officer in a different operation on the day of the raid. In the aftermath, other serious issues surfaced, including revelations of the disgusting practice of drug operatives setting aside 30 percent of seized illegal drugs to pay off informants. Nonetheless, the latest police scandal ricochets into broader issues like if the police organization can still restore integrity and professionalism in the ranks amid the temptations of lucrative criminal activities. Particularly so since the police brass haven’t so far demonstrated political will for serious reforms. Outgoing PNP chief Gen. Adolfo Azurin Jr., who is set to retire tomorrow (24 April), for instance, was reticent about the Abalos exposè until last week, only to issue a lame blanket denial that senior police officers had covered up the Mayo case. Yet, something must urgently be done about the increasing police involvement in mafia-life criminal undertakings. We can’t take such urgency lightly. A recent report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Crime, for instance, predicts that emboldened Filipino mafia-style criminal groups, particularly state-embedded actors like the police, are going to step up their nefarious violent doings in the next few years. Not doing anything now therefore means we’ll end up paying a steep price later on. Email: nevqjr@yahoo.com.ph The post Another disgraceful police scandal appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Revilla seeks probe on PNP execs’ part in P6.7-B shabu haul
As the authorities are not letting their guard down on the possible involvement of more high-ranking cops in the P6.7-billion shabu haul last year, Senator Ramon Revilla Jr. called for a senate inquiry on the matter. Revilla filed Senate Resolution No. 564 earlier this week, directing the proper Senate committees to conduct a legislative inquiry against the alleged involvement of more Philippine National Police officials in operating illegal drugs. To recall, PNP Chief Rodolfo Azurin Jr. approved on 6 March the dismissal from the service of Master Sgt. Rodolfo Mayo Jr., a member of the PNP Drug Enforcement Group and was arrested along with nine others, in a buy-bust operation in Manila, which led to the seizure of 990 kilos of methamphetamine hydrochloride locally, known locally as shabu, in October last year. In developments, Interior Secretary Benjamin Abalos on 5 April revealed that more police high-level officials are linked to the illegal distribution of P6.7-billion worth of shabu. Abalos said there was a "massive attempt" from the PNP to cover up Mayo's arrest and the seizure of P6.7 billion worth of illegal drugs. Revilla said this incident could put a stain on the police organization's efforts against criminalities. He then cited in his resolution the need to further investigate the matter so that the authorities can lay down a system that would prevent a repeat of the same scenario wherein cops are being tagged in illegal trading activities, particularly drug operations. Based on the testimonies of several personalities and other pieces of evidence gathered by the fact-finding investigation of the National Police Commission, Revilla stressed that doubts come out on Mayo’s sole involvement. The report also suggested that he may not have acted alone. "Sec. Abalos thus far has risen to the occasion and stepped up to this big challenge," he added. In CCTV footage played during Abalo's recent press briefing, it showed that high-ranking PNP officials were present during the conduct of the buy-bust operation. Abalos claimed that video footage depicts way far from the reports and statements submitted by the PNP. Revilla, in response, said they must be put into proper interrogation and "let the criminal face the consequences." Among those seen in the footage identified as Lt. Gen. Benjamin Santos Jr., who was then Deputy Chief PNP for Operations; Brig. Gen. Narciso Domingo, PDEG director; Col. Julian Olonan, chief of PNP Drug Enforcement Group Special Operations Unit Region 4A; Capt. Jonathan Sosongco, head of the PDEG SOU 4A arresting team; Lt. Col. Arnulfo Ibañez, OIC of PDEG SOU National Capital Region; Maj. Michael Angelo Salmingo, deputy of PDEG SOU NCR; Lt. Col. Glenn Gonzales of Quezon City Police District; Lt. Ashrap Amerol, intelligence officer of PDEG Intelligence and Foreign Liaison Division; Lt. Col. Harry Lorenzo, Manila Police District Moriones Station Commander; and Captain Randolph Piñon, chief of PDEG SOU 4A Intelligence Section. The Senate Committee on Public Order and Dangerous Drugs previously cited two PNP-PDEG agents in contempt during a hearing on 15 March, “lying and causing confusion to the panel” during the discussion on the issue of sneaking out a portion of the seized 990 kilos of illegal drugs. The PNP PDEG officials and the buy-bust team were also present in the hearing. The post Revilla seeks probe on PNP execs’ part in P6.7-B shabu haul appeared first on Daily Tribune......»»
Danica Sotto reacts to alleged affair between husband Marc Pingris, Kim Rodriguez
Actress Danica Sotto responded to cheating allegations involving her husband Marc Pingris and actress Kim Rodriguez......»»
Suspek sa paglungkab sa meat shop mihimakak
Suspek sa paglungkab sa meat shop mihimakak.....»»
House leaves Quiboloy’s fate to Senate
The House of Representatives will no longer pursue and implement the warrant of arrest it issued against pastor Apollo Quiboloy after it approved on final reading the bill revoking the franchise of the evangelist’s alleged TV network......»»
DOJ charges 2 alleged NPA financiers with terrorism financing
According to the DOJ, the case stemmed after reports that Dumlao and Tolentino possessed firearms and ammunition without a clear source of income or apparent purpose......»»
Lessons from Shohei Ohtanis Interpreter Blame: The Daily Guardia
Los Angeles Angels pitcher and designated hitter Shohei Ohtani has found himself at the center of a scandal involving alleged sports betting activities and theft.....»»
Belmonte: No tolerance for corruption
Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte yesterday reiterated her zero-tolerance policy against corruption following the arrest of an official for alleged extortion......»»
From the Newsrooms: March 17 to 23, 2024
By: CMFR StaffPosted on: March 25, 2024, 8:00 amUpdated on: March 25, 2024, 1:00 am THIS WEEK, "From the Newsrooms" looks at the media coverage of two events. On March 20, a hearing in the House on the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) revealed that Chinese nationals were included in the Philippine Coast Guard Auxiliary (PCGA). On March 21, Arnolfo Teves, the alleged mastermind of the Pamplona.....»»
TikTok Shop Launches TikTok Shop Business School to Help Digitize Filipino Entrepreneurs
TikTok Shop launched TikTok Shop Business School, a comprehensive one-day program for Filipino entrepreneurs that aims to equip them with the skills to grow their businesses in the digital sphere. The full-day program, which 50 TikTok Shop entrepreneurs attended, was comprised of master classes on Corporate Strategy and Business Model with Kim Lato, Founder and […].....»»
Mayor orders probe on alleged consumption of confiscated fish by CLO Enforcement Team
Mayor orders probe on alleged consumption of confiscated fish by CLO Enforcement Team.....»»
Davao police clueless on Quiboloy’s whereabouts
DAVAO CITY (MindaNews / 24 March) — Police authorities in the Davao region claim they are still clueless on the whereabouts of Pastor Apollo C. Quiboloy. The Senate had earlier ordered the arrest of Quiboloy for his continued refusal to attend its investigation of alleged human trafficking and child abuse. Police major Catheine Dela Rey, Police […].....»»