P’sinan gov seeks ouster of prov’l police chief
The province of Pangasinan led by Gov. Amado T. Espino, Jr. today (May 24) filed a motion for a temporary restraining order a...
https://policeheadlines.blogspot.com/2013/05/psinan-gov-seeks-ouster-of-provl-police.html
The province of
Pangasinan led by Gov. Amado T. Espino, Jr. today (May 24) filed a motion for a temporary
restraining order against the appointment of Police Sr. Supt. Marlou Chan as the Philippine
National Police (PNP) provincial director of Pangasinan.
In the motion
filed at the Regional Trial Court in Lingayen, the petitioners asked that the
TRO and preliminary injunction be eventually made permanent, saying Chan’s appointment should be declared unlawful, and
that he should be ousted from the position.
Chan’s designation as
officer-in-charge of the Pangasinan police office last December should have
expired last May 10.
The petitioners noted
that Chan was secretly appointed in full capacity as police provincial director
“in gross violation” of the PNP laws and Commission on Elections (Comelec)
rules.
The complaint filed
under civil case 19270 states that several complaints were raised by local
leaders regarding Chan’s inefficiency and alleged obvious bias towards specific
candidates shown during the recent elections.
A
manifesto for a change in the PNP leadership was signed earlier by majority of
the Pangasinan mayors and provincial board members, citing 23 documented
shooting incidents in the province as of last March. The petitioners claimed
that most of shooting incidents remained unsolved.
Records also showed
that at present, there were already 80 shooting incidents that remain unsolved.
The complaint also
alleged that majority of the municipal police chiefs in the province were
relieved for no justifiable reasons, and without prior notices or advisories to
the affected mayors.
During the May 13
elections, Chan was criticized apparent bias in handling election-related issues owing
to his alleged kinship with a mayoralty candidate in Eastern Pangasinan, and alliances
with some other candidates in the province.
Espino filed his
petition for TRO pursuant to Section 51 of Republic Act 6975, otherwise known as
the Department of the Interior and Local Government Act of 1990, the incumbent
governor is granted the right to choose among three eligible officers
recommended, to the position of PNP police provincial director.