Friday, February 10, 2012
Supreme Court TRO is 2nd Envelope All Over Again
The Supreme Court ruling to issue a TRO on the opening of Corona's deposits is nothing less of the 2nd envelope issue during the impeachment trial of Joseph Estrada. In a desire to prevent the opening of possibly incriminating documents, the SC is preventing the impeachment court from finding out the truth.
Corona, I thought there's nothing to hide?
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Very Hot
I don’t know how I’ll get my linear bearing because of today’s hottest issues.
The Supreme Court is now under siege and I do not think that it’s undeserved. I’ve always hated plagiarism having been taught in school that it is a sin far worse than murder. However, our Supreme Court protected its own justice who was caught doing precisely that. To make matters worse, they threatened to sanction the lawyers who publicly complained.
Friday, February 3, 2012
Lousy Prosecutors?
My friend Jovi Tupaz, who's a realtor, will probably be better in court arguments compared to the lawyer and house prosecutor Niel Tupas.
However, what he lacks in eloquence, he is able to a bit compensate through end results. The skillful maneuvering of defense lawyer Serafin Cuevas made the procedure lengthy and made the prosecution lawyers look like grade schoolers. But still, the public now knows that Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona has continuously purchased prime real estate through the past couple of decades through installment payments that lasted for only a few months for every purchase. Let's see how Corona will defend this. Does he have enough money to finance those purchases?
Regarding the company where he allegedly borrowed some of the money from, the incorporators are wondering how they could have approved the loan and how did Corona ever paid for it.
Labels:
Chief Justice Renato Corona,
impeachment,
politics
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