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Joash Normie Duldulao their posts yesterday after they allegedly pocketed the money recovered from

two robbery suspects last month.


Grade 10-SSC Director Oscar Albayalde, chief of the National Capital Region Police
Office (NCRPO), said the policemen were reassigned to the holding center of
the Southern Police District under Chief Superintendent Tomas Apolinario.
PCP 3 head Chief Inspector Remedios Terte will be transferred to the
Local News NCRPO Regional Personnel Holding Administrative Unit, Albayalde said.
“They were relieved to prevent them from influencing the outcome of the
investigation. Once cleared of the charges, they will be reassigned to another
‘Teen found in Bulacan precinct of the Pasay police,” Albayalde said.
Investigation showed that a Chinese man sought police help after losing

killed in drunken brawl’ 10,000 euros, $7,000 and P26,000 to five teenagers during a “salisi” operation
in August.
By Rey Galupo (The Philippine Star) | Updated September 19, 2017 - Two of the suspects were arrested by police.
12:00am Nation ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
The mother of one of the suspects returned $1,000 and thousands of pesos
to the PCP 3.
The Chinese complainant alleged that the police officers pocketed the
missing euros and cash, prompting Albayalde to relieve the entire police unit.
Apolinario said Terte would be replaced by Chief Inspector Marvin Oloan
as PCP 3 head.
Apolinario tapped 34 personnel of the SPD public safety battalion to replace
the relieved police officers.
Last week, Albayalde ordered the relief of the entire Caloocan police force
amid public outrage over the killings of Kian Loyd delos Santos and Carl
Angelo Arnaiz.
The last complaint before Albayalde’s order was against 13 Caloocan
policemen who illegally raided a house and took cash, cell phones and watches.
The incident was caught on closed-circuit television camera.
At least 100 police officers from the NCRPO are willing to be deployed in
Caloocan City to fill the vacancies in three police precincts, according to
Albayalde.
He is confident they can gather at least 1,000 policemen to replace the
sacked Caloocan operatives.
“The policemen to be reassigned to the Caloocan police will undergo
MANILA, Philippines — The teenager who was reported missing in
background investigation while others were highly recommended by their
Caloocan since last month and found dead in San Jose del Monte, Bulacan last
superiors. We expect to fill the vacancies in all seven PCPs and other units of
week was slain in a drunken brawl, police said yesterday.
the city police force this week,” Albayalde said.
“We have under our custody a suspect and a witness…We cannot give the
He added the first 100 would be assigned to PCP 2, 4 and 7. – With
details because…one…is a minor,” Superintendent Fitz Macariola, San Jose
Robertzon Ramirez
del Monte police chief, told The STAR yesterday.
Macariola said the San Jose del Monte and Caloocan police would file the
case even though two other suspects – a certain Mamo and alias Jonel – remain
National News
at large.
The minor was accompanied by his mother when he went to the police and
narrated the incident that led to the death of Michael Angelo Remicio, 16.
With this development, police declared the case solved.
The boy earlier told police he saw Remicio Obando in Bulacan on Sept. 1.
Ryanair under pressure after
Nation ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
Macariola said the boy told probers he and his friends were drinking liquor messing up pilots' holidays
in Barangay 176 Bagong Silang, Caloocan at around 4 a.m. on Aug. 27 when
Remicio hurled a bottle. (Associated Press) | Updated September 19, 2017 - 7:02am
“The boy said they did not mind Remicio, but he continued badgering
them…They…ganged up on him, stabbed him several times and covered his LONDON — Irish budget airline Ryanair was under pressure
body with garbage,” Macariola said.
yesterday to provide more information to travelers after canceling up
The boy said Remicio’s body was stuffed in a sack and thrown into the
river. to 50 flights a day over the next six weeks because it "messed up" its
pilots' holiday schedules.
Alexander Sinugay, 22, who is under the custody of the Caloocan police,
claimed the minor killed Remicio. Ryanair, Europe's biggest airline by passenger numbers, canceled
Remicio’s decomposing body was discovered in a creek in Barangay Gaya-
the flights because it had "messed up in the planning of pilot holidays,"
Gaya in San Jose del Monte on Sept. 13. its chief marketing officer, Kenny Jacobs, said Saturday.
The parents of the teenager had earlier told police their son was not involved
The company promised to publish a full list of the canceled flights
in illegal drugs. by Tuesday, but as of yesterday there were only details on canceled
Entire Pasay police
flights through Wednesday.
Travelers with flights after Wednesday remained in a limbo and

precinct sacked took to social media to vent their anger.


"How the hell do you know if you can get back. Publish full list
By Non Alquitran (The Philippine Star) | Updated September 19, 2017 now!" Carole Schofield tweeted.
- 12:00am The company offered to refund travelers for their canceled flights,
in accordance with EU law, or to allow them to change their flight for
free.
World ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
Shares in the airline fell 1.9 percent to 16.76 euros in Dublin in an
otherwise higher market.
Analysts said Ryanair's scheduling problems stemmed from having
to harmonize Irish rules with European Union rules on how many hours
pilots can fly in a certain period of time.
"The impact in terms of adverse publicity and frustration to
customers is large," said Loizos Heracleous, professor of strategy at
the Warwick Business School. He does not, however, expect it to have
a durable financial impact on the company, which is expanding and is
MANILA, Philippines — All 35 members of the Police Community adept at controlling costs and finding new sources of revenue.
Precinct (PCP) 3 in Pasay City, including its commander, were relieved from
Angela Jane Vicente
Grade 10-SSC
National News

US immigrants sue over


Local News
Trump's end of
4 suspects slain in drug war deportation protection
(The Philippine Star) | Updated September 19, 2017 - 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines — Four suspected drug pushers were killed By Amy Taxin (Associated Press) | Updated September 19, 2017 -
in Bulacan, Cagayan, Nueva Ecija and Sorsogon as the government 8:45am
continued its campaign against illegal drugs on Sunday.
Alfredo Carpio, alias Pulutan, and Nepomuceno Esquerra
reportedly drew their guns when they sensed they had sold shabu to
policemen who posed as buyers in Barangay Lourdes, Cabanatuan
City.
Superintendent Amador Corpus, Central Luzon police director, said
the fatalities were on the barangay drug watchlist.
Marcelino Javier, alias Welang, fired at anti-narco-tics agents in
Barangay Batia, Bocaue, Bulacan, police said.
”High-value” drug pusher Crisanto Bautista, a resident of Barangay
Pang-Pang, Legazpi, Albay, also allegedly shot it out with policemen
in a sting.
The fatalities yielded sachets of shabu and guns, police said.
Nation ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
3 found dead
Meanwhile, a woman and two men who have yet to be identified
were found dead in Bulacan, Pampanga and Cagayan also on Sunday. IRVINE, Calif. — Six immigrants brought to the United States as children
The woman’s body, which bore multiple stab wounds, was found along who became teachers, graduate students and a lawyer sued the Trump
a riverbank in Barangay 2, Enrile, Cagayan. Her head was wrapped administration on Monday over its decision to end a program shielding them
with packing tape. from deportation.
The bodies of the two men were found in a cemetery in San Rafael, The lawsuit filed in federal court in San Francisco alleged the move
Bulacan and in a grassy area in Mabalacat, Pampanga. – Ramon Efren violated the constitutional rights of immigrants who lack legal status and
provided information about themselves to the U.S. government so they could
Lazaro, Raymund Catindig, Celso Amo, Ric Sapnu
participate in the program.
"The consequences are potentially catastrophic," said Jesse Gabriel, a
lawyer for the plaintiffs. "These people can very powerfully and very clearly

CHR to unveil Diokno communicate the extent to which they organized their lives around this
program."

monument
The lawsuit joins others filed over President Donald Trump's decision to
end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program which has allowed
nearly 800,000 immigrants to obtain work permits and deportation protection
By Janvic Mateo (The Philippine Star) | Updated September 19, 2017 since 2012.
- 12:00am More than a dozen states from Maine to California have sued over the
administration's decision to phase out the program, alleging similar
constitutional violations. So has the University of California system.
The impact of Trump's decision directly weighs on plaintiffs' personal lives
and decisions they made to advance their careers in the U.S.
World ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
Viridiana Chabolla, a 26-year-old law student at University of California
Irvine, said she does not know how she would repay a loan she took out to
cover living costs or how she would afford books or food if her protection from
the program known as DACA is rescinded.
"I imagined in the years to come I'd be able to get a job and would be able
to pay it back," said Chabolla, whose parents brought her illegally to the U.S.
from Mexico when she was 2. "I imagined I'd at least have DACA."
The lawsuit claimed that the administration's decision violates the immigrants'
rights to equal protection and due process.
The plaintiffs — who are from Mexico and Thailand — include teachers, a
medical student and 34-year-old lawyer Dulce Garcia, who recently signed a
lease for an office and hired employees believing she could stay and work in
the U.S. under the program, said Gabriel, an attorney for the law firm Gibson,
Dunn & Crutcher.
MANILA, Philippines — The Commission on Human Rights Trump's announcement on Sept. 5 came after 10 Republican attorneys
(CHR) will unveil a monument of the late human rights and democracy general threatened to sue in an attempt to halt the program. Under Trump's
plan, those already enrolled remain covered until their two-year work permits
icon, former senator Jose Diokno, on Sept. 21, coinciding with the 45th
expire, and some renewals are being allowed. But there will be no new
anniversary of the declaration of martial law, an official said yesterday. applications.
CHR Chairman Chito Gascon said members of the Diokno family are Department of Justice spokesman Devin O'Malley blamed the Obama
expected to attend the event to be held at the CHR main office in administration for starting the program and said the agency will defend
Quezon City. Trump's decision.
Diokno headed the presidential committee on human rights created "It was the previous administration's arbitrary circumvention of Congress
by former president Corazon Aquino in 1986. that got us to this point," he said. "The Department of Justice looks forward to
The committee was replaced by the CHR following the passage of defending this Administration's position and restoring respect for the rule of
the 1987 Constitution. law."
Immigrant advocates praise the program for protecting immigrants who
Diokno established the Free Legal Assistance Group to provide
were raised and educated in the U.S. despite their lack of legal immigration
assistance to victims of human rights abuses during the dictatorship. papers. The program's opponents criticize it as too broad and said major
Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno is expected to deliver the keynote changes to immigration laws need to go through Congress and cannot be
address. enacted by the U.S. president alone.

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