Lawmaker flags 'bogus' documents in OVP's P23.8-M receipts | ABS-CBN

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Lawmaker flags 'bogus' documents in OVP's P23.8-M receipts

Lawmaker flags 'bogus' documents in OVP's P23.8-M receipts

ABS-CBN News

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Vice President Sara Duterte and 1-Rider Party-list Rep. Rodge Gutierrez. Composite/fileVice President Sara Duterte and 1-Rider Party-list Rep. Rodge Gutierrez. Composite/file

The Office of Vice President under Sara Duterte apparently hastened to fix liquidation papers, to the point of “over-liquidating” the P23.8 million confidential funds through alleged 158 “bogus and spurious” receipts, a lawmaker said.

“So, what you’re saying is they (OVP) exceeded in their liquidation reports?” Rep. Joel Chua, panel chairman of the House of Representatives’ Committee on Good Government and Public Accountability, asked 1-Rider Party-list Rep. Rodge Gutierrez regarding his discovery on the 158 lapses in documentation.

“Your guess is as good as ours. It could also be that these ARs (acknowledgment receipts) were belatedly prepared,” said Gutierrez.  

The 1Rider party-list congressman noted that the liquidation papers bore a December 2023 date when no confidential fund was disbursed in this period.

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All in all, the OVP submitted 158 acknowledgment receipts to COA, involving various transactions.  

“For 158 people to make the same mistake, is that something that would be acceptable? Is that an acceptable margin of error for COA?” asked Gutierrez. 

“These are clear red flags in relation to the ARs submitted by the OVP, and this is something that we should consider (legislating).”

Commission on Audit official Gloria Camora admitted before the House committee that there may have been “inadvertence and typographical mistakes” committed by OVP personnel, where she also confirmed there was no CIF released in the third quarter of 2023, negating the need for ARs.

“One of the findings under the COA notice of suspension is that some ARs were dated December 2023, and some were even undated. They (OVP) said they inadvertently contained clerical or typographical errors indicating 2023 instead of 2022,” she conceded.

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However, Gutierrez was not convinced citing the “red flags” it raised as they found the ARs to be “spurious and bogus.” “Didn’t you find it strange? Not really strange – it’s outright false for it to justify an expense for 2022 but the date is 2023,” he said.

The lawmaker showed ARs dated November 2022, when confidential and intelligence funds were only disbursed a month later (December 2022) where the OVP spent P125 million in just 11 days.

There were also ARs bearing not just similar handwritings, same color of ballpens in a common pattern, but also having the same set of signatories like a certain “AAS” and “JOV” who received a total of P280,000 and P920,000 “purchase of information,” respectively, allegedly in December 2022.

There were a total of 776 ARs, 302 of which bore “unreadable names” with five “repeated names.”

House Quad Comm senior Vice Chairman Romeo Acop of Antipolo City’s second district asked Camora, who heads COA’s intelligence and confidential funds audit office (ICFAO), if she was aware of a reputable restaurant named “Mary Grace” and a potato chip “Piattos,” since one AR bore the same name, with Piattos as its surname.

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For breakdown, AAS received a total of P280,000 – P60,000 in December 2022, P150,000 in February 2023 and P70,000 in the third quarter of the same year.

But JOV was way, way much luckier with nearly a million pesos (P920,000) as his first AR for “reward payment” indicated P170,000, followed by P250,000 for vague “supplies” and the last was most substantial, P500,000 for “medical and food aid.”

“More likely, this was the same mistake committed by perhaps a few persons. Which raises the question: Are these ARs spurious? Are they bogus? Are they false?” Gutierrez asked. 

“We want to make sure that this doesn’t happen again. Accountability should be had on this.” 

Vice President Sara Duterte has yet to reply to the lawmaker's allegations, while a subpoena ad testificandum has been issued against seven OVP officers for their continued refusal to attend their Congressional inquiry related to the OVP's alleged fund misuse.

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