FRANKLIN JESUS B. BUCAYU Director Bureau of Corrections Bureau of Corrections New Bilibid Prison Reservation, Muntinlupa City

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

FRANKLIN JESUS B. BUCAYU Director Bureau of Corrections Bureau of Corrections New Bilibid Prison Reservation, Muntinlupa City NAME ADDRESS CONTACT NOS. FRANKLIN JESUS B. BUCAYU Bureau of Corrections 809-80-73 Director New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 850-32-82 Bureau of Corrections Muntinlupa City, 1776 809-97-75 TEODORA M. DIAZ Bureau of Corrections Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 807-70-35 Office of the Assistant Director for Admin and Rehab Muntinlupa City, 1776 SUPT. CELSO BRAVO Bureau of Corrections Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 772-38-77 Office of the Assistant Director for Prison and Security Muntinlupa City, 1776 ESTERLINA M. CARAOS Bureau of Corrections Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 850-00-43 Legal Office Muntinlupa City, 1776 TEODORA M. DIAZ Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 850-01-10 Administrative Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 Bureau of Corrections LIGAYA A. DADOR 659-19-28 Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 850-01-66 Accounting Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 MA. CIELO O. MONSALUD Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 809-89-56 Budget and Finance Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 Bureau of Corrections NORA CORAZON T. PADIERNOS 850-01-93 Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 478-00-83 Management Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 Bureau of Corrections LARRY A. HARI 772-27-18 Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 478-09-07 Procurement Supply Property Management Div. Muntinlupa City, 1776 ENGR. JUSTINO G. ROSARIO Bureau of Corrections Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 659-08-33 General Services Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 MARLON T. MORALES Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 807-23-68 Industry Development Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 CYNTHIA DE LARA, MD Bureau of Corrections Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 850-01-43 Medical and Dental Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 ELSA A. ALABADO Bureau of Corrections Officer-In-Charge New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 986-16-47 Reception and Diagnostic Center Muntinlupa City, 1776 RESURRECCION S. MORALES Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 401-38-19 Education Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 DALMACIO L. GONZALES JR. Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 772-24-96 IT Center Muntinlupa City, 1776 THEODORE R. PEREZ Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 822-96-07 Training Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 MSGR. ROBERTO A. OLAGUER Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 478-28-64 Moral and Spiritual Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 EMERENCIANA DIVINA Bureau of Corrections Chief New Bilibid Prison Reservation, 850-01-17 Inmate Documents and Processing Division Muntinlupa City, 1776 SUPT. ROBERTO R. RABO New Bilibid Prison Superintendent Brgy. Poblacion, New Bilibid Prison 809-85-88 New Bilibid Prison Reservation, Muntinlupa City ATTY. RACHEL D. RUELO Correctional Institution for Women Superintendent Brgy. Addition Hills Nueve de 532-17-36 Correctional Institution for Women Pebrero St., Mandaluyong City SUPT. VENANCIO J. TESORO Davao Prison and Penal Farm Officer-In-Charge Sitio Dapecol, Barangay Tanglaw, BE Davao Prison and Penal Farm Dujali, Davao Del Norte San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm MR. EMMANUEL N. NARVAEZ 062-982-02-92 Officer-In-Charge Sitio San Ramon, Brgy. Talisayan. 0916-225-08-38 San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm Zamboanga City SUPT. RESURRECCION PUNO Sablayan Prison and Penal Farm Superintendent Sitio Palbong, Barangay Ligaya, Sablayan Prison and Penal Farm Sablayan, Occidental Mindoro SUPT. RICHARD W. SCHWARZKOPF JR. Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm Superintendent Brgy. Iwahig, Puerto Princesa City 0926-707-41-52 Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm Palawan PIS GERALDO I. ARO Leyte Regional Prison Officer-In-Charge Brgy. Mahagna, Abuyog, Leyte Leyte Regional Prison .
Recommended publications
  • Asa350071998en.Pdf
    amnesty international PHILIPPINES Marlon Parazo, deaf and mute, faces execution August 1998 AI INDEX: ASA 35/07/98 DISTR: SC/CO/GR Marlon Parazo, aged 27, was born into poverty in the province of Nueva Ecija, Philippines. Profoundly deaf and mute since birth, he is effectively isolated from ordinary contact with society and is only able to communicate with his family through touch and gestures. He has never learned any official form of sign language and is unable to read or write, having received only two months’ schooling at the age of seven. In the Philippines, there is little or no provision for special schooling for the disabled. In March 1995 Marlon Parazo was convicted of rape and attempted homicide and was sentenced to death, despite the fact that the trial court made no attempt to ensure that he understood the proceedings against him. Article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which the Philippines is a party, states that the defendant has the right to be informed “in detail in a language which he understands of the nature and cause of the charge against him” and “to have the free assistance of an interpreter if he cannot understand or speak the language used in court”. During the trial no one - not even Marlon Parazo’s court-appointed defence lawyer - made any reference to his disabilities. Despite this violation of his right to a fair trial, the Supreme Court confirmed his death sentence in May 1997. Marlon Parazo’s case has now been taken up by the Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG), a leading association of human rights lawyers.
    [Show full text]
  • &Uprtmt Qeourt
    l\epublit of tbe tlbiltpptnes &uprtmt Qeourt :Manila THIRD DIVISION NOTICE Sirs/Mesdames: Please take notice that the Court, Third Division, issued a Resolution dated February 11, 2015, which reads as follows: "G.R. No. 208843, (People of the Philipfin es vs. Rolly Velasquez y Cobilla). - This is an appeal from the Decision dated May 22, 2013 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CR-H.C. No. 04385 which affirmed the conviction ofRolly Velasquezy Cobilla (accused-appellant) for the crime of Rape. An information2 was filed against the accused-appellant char~ing him for the commission of rape against AAA, 3 an intellectually disabled. During arraignment, the accused-appellant pleaded "not guilty". On pre-trial, the parties stipulated on AAA' s mental ailment; that she has an Intelligence Quotient of 41 though she was 43 years old; that she has a mental age of 17 years old and is positive for psychosis during the commission of the crime. Her mental retardation, schizophrenia, and psychosis, was medically certified by Dr. Imelda Escuadra (Dr. Escuadra), Medical Specialist II of the Bicol Medical Center in Naga City. 5 Trial on the merits ensued. The prosecution presented the testimonies of BBB, cousin of AAA, Chief Tanod Dante Boloy (Boloy) and Dr. Raoul Alcantara (Dr. Alcantara) while the defense presented the lone testimony of the accused-appellant. 6 Penned by Associate Justice Myra V. Garcia-Femandez, with Associate Justices Normandie B. Pizarro and Stephen C. Cruz concurring; CA rol/o, pp. 122-140. 2 Id. at 54. 3 The real name of the victim, her personal circumstances and other information which tend to establish or compromise her identity, as well as those of her immediate family or household members, shall not be disclosed to protect her privacy and fictitious initials shall, instead, be used, in accordance with People v.
    [Show full text]
  • Economic and Social Council
    UNITED NATIONS E Economic and Social Distr. Council GENERAL E/C.12/PHL/4 7 September 2007 Original: ENGLISH Substantive session of 2007 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS Periodic reports submitted by States parties under articles 16 and 17 of the Covenant Combined second, third and fourth periodic reports of THE PHILIPPINES* ** *** [14 December 2006] * The initial report concerning rights covered by articles 6 to 9 of the Covenant (E/1978/8/Add.4), concerning rights covered by articles 10 to 12 of the Covenant (E/1986/3/Add.17), concerning rights covered by articles 13 to 15 of the Covenant (E/1988/5/Add.2) submitted by the Philippines were considered by the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights on 18 April 1980, on 8 May 1995 and 15 January 1990 respectively. The second periodic report was due on 30 June 1995, the third on 30 June 2000 and the fourth on 30 June 2005 respectively and submitted as the combined initial, second, third and fourth periodic reports on 14 December 2006. ** The information submitted by the Philippines in accordance with the guidelines concerning the initial part of reports of States parties is contained in the core document (HRI/CORE/1/Add.37). *** In accordance with the information transmitted to States parties regarding the processing of their reports, the present document was not edited before being sent to the United Nations translation services. GE.07-43948 (E) 061107 E/C.12/PHL/4 page 2 CONTENTS Paragraphs Page Introduction ................................................................................................ 1 - 4 3 I.
    [Show full text]
  • Pamahalaang Lungsod Ng Muntinlupa \
    REPUBLIKA NG PILIPINAS PAMAHALAANG LUNGSOD NG MUNTINLUPA KALAKHANG MAYNILA Sangguniang Panglungsod g RESOLUTION NO. 14.092 -L\ A RESOLUTION REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (DOJ) THRU HONORABLE SEGRETARY LEILA DE LIMA THE DIRECTOR OF THE + BUREAU OF CORRECTIONS TO ALLOCATE A PORTION OF THE SUNKEN GARDEN LOCATED AT THE NEW BILIBID PRISON (NBP) RESERVATION, BARANGAY POBLACION, s MUNTINLUPA CITY AS SITE FOR A MODERN FOOTBALL FIELD WHICH SHALL BE DEVELOPED AND FUNDED BY CORPORATE AND INDIVIDUAL DONORS TO PROPAGATE THE SPORTS OF FOOTBALL IN THE CITY FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE PEOPLE OF If.YllIIl*Hl,.=,.,.:l-FSll:."-JllF-"Y9.Y-'.T;*************,r**************************** Sponsored by: Hon. Coun. Atty. Raut R. Corro Hon. Coun. Atty. Patricio L. Boncayao, Hon. Coun. Stephanie G. Ieves Hon. Coun. Louisito A. Arciaga Hon. Coun. Ringo A. Teves Hon. Coun. Alexander B. Diaz Hon. Coun. Ma. Dhesiree G. Arevalo Hon. Coun. Luvi P. Constantino Hon. Coun. Elmer S. Espe/efa Hon. Coun. Rafael T. Sevilla Hon. Coun. Vergel C. Ulanday Hon. Coun. Robert A. Abas Hon. Coun. Robert P. Baes * ** ** * *** * * * * ** * ** * * * * * ** ** ** * * *** * * * * ** ** * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * *** * ** * ***** * * * * *rt * * ** ** WHEREAS, one of the priority programs of the city Government of Muntinlupa is youth and sports development to enhance their skills and promote their good health and overall well being; J WHEREAS, football is one of the sports where the Filipinos can excel V Qiven the available of faculties and professional training; WHEREAS, the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) Reservation located in Barangay Poblacion, Muntinlupa City has wide open spaces ideal for the d'evelopment of a modern football field; $- WHEREAS, in particular, the NtsP Reservation has an area called the Sunken Garden which has already an existing football field where students and inmates play football;' $ \ REPUBLIKA NG PILIPINAS PAMAHALAANG LUNGSOD NG MUNTINLUPA KALAKHANG MAYNILA Sangguniang Panglungsod Page 2 Resolufion No.
    [Show full text]
  • REPUBLIC of the PHILIPPINES Pasay City
    REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES Pasay City Journal SESSION NO. 32 Tuesday, October 11, 2016 SEVENTEENTH CONGRESS FIRST REGULAR SESSION SESSION NO. 32 T uesday, October 11,2016 CALL TO ORDER Secretary of the Senate, Atty. Lutgardo B. Barbo, called the roll, to which the following senators At 3:18 p.m. the Senate President, Hon. Aquilino responded: “Koko” Pimentel III, called the session to order. Angara, S. Lacson, P. M. PRAYER Aquino, P. B. IV B. Pacquiao, E. M. D. Binay, M. L. N. S. Pangilinan, F. N. Sen. Richard J. Gordon led the prayer, to wit: Cayetano, A. P. C. S. Pimentel III, A. K. De Lima, L. M. Poe, G. Heavenly Father, our Creator, we praise Drilon, F. M. Recto, R. G. and thank You for the dawn of this day that Ejercito, J. V. G. Sotto 111, V. C. is the beginning of another new day of hope Escudero, F. J. G. Trillanes IV, A. F. and accomplishment for our country. Gatchalian, W. Villanueva, E. J. Lord, thank You for our hearts, our Gordon, R. J. Villar, C. A. minds and our five senses. Allow us to see Honasan, G. B. Zubiri, J. M. F. with our minds, to hear with discernment Hontiveros, R. and touch others with our hearts. Please give us the gift of unity so we can work in With 23 senators present, the Chair declared the harmony and altogether smell the air of presence of a quorum. success of the nation. Senator Legarda arrived after the roll call. All these we ask through Your Son Jesus Christ, our Redeemer.
    [Show full text]
  • Philippines 2019 Human Rights Report
    PHILIPPINES 2019 HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Philippines is a multiparty, constitutional republic with a bicameral legislature. President Rodrigo Roa Duterte, elected in May 2016, began his constitutionally limited six-year term in June 2016. Midterm elections in May for 12 (of 24 total) senators, all congressional representatives, and local government leaders were seen as generally free and fair, despite reports of violence and vote buying. The ruling party and allies won all 12 Senate seats and maintained a roughly two-thirds majority in the 306-seat House of Representatives. Barangay (village) and youth council elections originally scheduled for 2021 were rescheduled for December 5, 2022 so that local and national elections will occur in the same year. The Philippine National Police (PNP) is charged with maintaining internal security in most of the country and reports to the Department of the Interior. The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), which reports to the Department of National Defense, is responsible for external security but also carries out domestic security functions in regions with a high incidence of conflict, particularly the Mindanao region. The two agencies share responsibility for counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations. The PNP Special Action Force is responsible for urban counterterrorism operations. President Duterte’s May 2017 declaration of martial law for the entire region of Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago was extended until the end of the year, giving the military expanded powers in the area. Governors, mayors, and other local officials have considerable influence over local police units, including appointment of top departmental and municipal police officers and the provision of resources.
    [Show full text]
  • Treatment of Female Inmates at Correctional Institutions for Women
    TREATMENT OF FEMALE INMATES AT CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS FOR WOMEN Celso S. Bravo I. HISTORY OF BUCOR The Bureau of Corrections, formerly known as the Bureau of Prisons, was created under the Reorganization Act.No 1407 dated 1 November 1905.The Prison Law which is its underlying formal and legal support is found in sections 1705 to 1751 of the Revised Administrative Code of the Philippines. The Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) is an agency under the Department of Justice tasked to effectively safe-keep and rehabilitate national prisoners ― those sentenced to three (3)years and one (1)day and above.It is composed of seven (7)operating institutions strategically located all over the country to accept national prisoners from the nearest region. The country’s penal institutions started during the Spanish regime when Spanish penal laws, contained in royal decrees,ordinances,rules and regulations,were extended to the country.The main insular penitentiary was the Old Bilibid Prison in Manila constructed in 1874 and formally opened by a Royal Decree in 1865. The San Ramon Prison in Zamboanga City was next established in 1869, originally to confine Muslim rebels,but was closed during the Spanish-American War,and reopened in 1898.Under the American Regime,the Iwahig Penal Colony(formerly called Iuhit Penal Colony)in Puerto Princesa,Palawan was established in 1904. Eventually, the Bureau of Prisons was created under the Reorganization Act of 1905, effective 1 November 1905, under the Department of Commerce & Police, and was then transferred to the Department of Public Instruction.The prison law,which was enacted pursuant to the provisions of Sec.
    [Show full text]
  • Pangkat: Inmate Gangs at the New Bilibid Prison Maximum Security Compound
    FILOMIN CANDALIZA-GUTIERREZ Pangkat: Inmate Gangs at the New Bilibid Prison Maximum Security Compound This is a study of inmate gangs (pangkats) at the New Bilibid Prison Maximum Security Compound. Through focus group discussions (FGDs) with pangkatmembers and review of documents, the study found that pangkats formed around the 1950s around ethno-linguistic divisions between Tagalog (Sigue Sigue) and non-Tagalog speaking inmates (OXO). Inadequate provisions, strained inmate-guard relationship and restrictive visiting policies incited escapes and violent riots between rival gangs in those years. Since the 1980s the pangkats transitioned into units of local self-governance with mechanisms for leadership, dispute arbitration, control of antisocial behavior, and cooperation with other pangkats and the Bureau of Corrections. The combination of relaxed visiting policies, including conjugal visits and family stay-ins, and the increased entry of civil society groups (CSGs) boosted a local economy,”normalized” the all-male population and presented opportunities for inmates to regain lost “moral status” by occupying respected positions. When the barriers that isolated the compound were lowered, the pangkat society increased its social capital, expanded its social network, bridged gaps between other gangs, the Bureau of Corrections and the free society (taga- laya) and functioned less as parochial defense and conflict groups and more as organizations of self-local governance. Key words: inmate gangs, New Bilibid Prison, incarceration, self- governance, social capital Philippine Sociological Review (2012) • Vol. 60 • pp. 193-238 193 A satellite view of the Maximum Security Compound of the New Bilbid Prison in Muntinlupa City. (Source: Google Earth) 194 INTRODUCTION Public Perception of Prisons he confinement of criminal offenders in a well supervised yet Spartan prison that enables them to ponder on past mistakes T and change encapsulates the rehabilitative discourse of modern penology.
    [Show full text]
  • The Defense of Yamashita
    Wyoming Law Journal Volume 4 Number 3 Article 1 December 2019 The Defense of Yamashita George F. Guy Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.uwyo.edu/wlj Recommended Citation George F. Guy, The Defense of Yamashita, 4 WYO. L.J. 153 (1950) Available at: https://scholarship.law.uwyo.edu/wlj/vol4/iss3/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Law Archive of Wyoming Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Wyoming Law Journal by an authorized editor of Law Archive of Wyoming Scholarship. THE DEFENSE OF YAMASHITA THE DEFENSE OF YAMASHITA GEORGE F. GuY* After four years, I still remember the blazing headlines of Febru- ary 23, 1946; those big black headlines announcing: "YAMASHITA DIES ON GALLOWS" ... "YAMASHITA HANGS LIKE COMMON CROOK" ... "THE TIGER HANGS" etc., etc. All across the nation they screamed, yes even across the world press they shouted the ex- ultant and triumphant message ... "YAMASHITA DIES" .. But for those of us who had been assigned the task of defending Tomoyuki Yamashita, General, Imperial Japanese Army, for "violation of the laws of war" for "failing to control his troops" and for "permitting them to commit atrocities" . .February 23, 1946 was no day of triumph or exultation. It was the final climax to the international drama that had its opening scene in the mountains north of Baguio, Luzon, Philippines, on September 3, 1945, when General Yamashita, pursuant to the orders of his government, surrendered himself and his remaining troops to the American Army. The front cover of YANK FAR EAST, the American Army news- paper, carried a full length picture of Yamashita striding down the mountain trail, followed by his staff and flanked by the American doughboys against whom he had fought so long and so bitterly.
    [Show full text]
  • September 17, 2016 Hawaii Filipino Chronicle  1
    septeMBer 17, 2016 HAWAii FilipinO cHrOnicle 1 ♦ SEPTEMBER 17, 2016 ♦ OP-ED CANDID PERSPECTIVES PHILIPPINE NEWS DevelOper's On Duterte, Hitler yAsAy On u.s.: AgenDA tHreAtens & resOlving A HerO's DOn't lecture us cOMMunity BuriAl FOr MArcOs On HuMAn rigHts PRESORTED HAWAII FILIPINO CHRONICLE STANDARD 94-356 WAIPAHU DEPOT RD., 2ND FLR. U.S. POSTAGE WAIPAHU, HI 96797 PAID HONOLULU, HI PERMIT NO. 9661 2 HAWAii FilipinO cHrOnicle septeMBer 17, 2016 EDITORIAL FROM THE PUBLISHER Publisher & Executive Editor he hepatitis A outbreak just does- Charlie Y. Sonido, M.D. Philippines’ Fast n’t seem to end. The latest case Publisher & Managing Editor involves a Sam’s Club-Pearl City Chona A. Montesines-Sonido Growing Medical seafood handler who tested pos- Associate Editors Dennis Galolo | Edwin Quinabo itive for the disease, bringing the T Contributing Editor Tourism Industry total number of cases to 271 Belinda Aquino, Ph.D. since the outbreak began several months ago. Creative Designer he Philippines’ fabled hospitality, pristine beaches and According to the State Department of Junggoi Peralta world-class shopping malls have long attracted visitors Health, more cases may be confirmed through at least early Oc- Photography to its shores. However, a new kind of tourist has been Tim Llena tober due to the long incubation period for hepatitis A. In the flocking to the land of 7,107 islands of late. These are Administrative Assistant people seeking high quality and affordable medical meantime, let’s continue taking preventative measures against Shalimar Pagulayan T this disease. Columnists procedures such as plastic surgery, organ transplants, Carlota Hufana Ader hip and knee replacements, eye operations and dental care—to name Our cover story for this issue delves into the Philippines’ Emil Guillermo just a few.
    [Show full text]
  • Philippines` Dark Fascism Hole-Leila De Lima at Bottom (In- Depth)
    3/17/2018 Philippines` Dark Fascism Hole-Leila de Lima at Bottom (in-depth) ~ RINJ Press Feminine Perspective. RINJ.Press The RINJ Foundation This Story First Published 25 February, 2017 Today: 17 March, 2018 in Toronto Canada Contact ‣Latest News ‣RINJ.org Search Philippines` Dark Fascism Hole-Leila de Lima at Bottom (in- depth) [Updated] https://rinj.press/index.php/news-rinj-press/february-2017/fascist-duterte-vs-imprisoned-leila-de-lima/ 1/29 3/17/2018 Philippines` Dark Fascism Hole-Leila de Lima at Bottom (in-depth) ~ RINJ Press “Bye, bye!” De Lima headed for years in prison? Read de Lima’s full statement at bottom of this in-depth article. The presumption of innocence until proven guilty must prevail but alas it does not. Leila de Lima will never get a fair trial and must therefore be acquitted. Thirty innocent Filipinos per day have been murdered on Duterte’s instructions. https://rinj.press/index.php/news-rinj-press/february-2017/fascist-duterte-vs-imprisoned-leila-de-lima/ 2/29 3/17/2018 Philippines` Dark Fascism Hole-Leila de Lima at Bottom (in-depth) ~ RINJ Press There is no nobler cause than stopping Duterte’s systematic murder of poor women, children and their families. Two of RINJ ‘s 2016 Women Heroes are in big trouble as the (Republic?) of The Philippines sinks into a fear-filled hole of fascist terror and political persecution. RINJ exists in fascist Duterte’s world & in Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s world & can see no difference in the two fascist styles: rule by fear and terror and either brutally kill or imprison opponents.
    [Show full text]
  • DOJ ANNUAL REPORT 2018 Latest Edit 30-09-2020 Final
    DOJ ANNUAL REPORT 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS Note from the Secretary 2 Quotes from the Secretary’s Speeches 3 The Secretary Reorganizes the Justice Department 5 DOJAC: The Time has come for its Institutionalization 8 DMS: Document Management System 9 The Law Enforcement Cluster Undersecretary Adrian Ferdinand S. Sugay 10 Outstanding Prosecution Offices 11 Senior Deputy State Prosecutor Richard Anthony Fadullon 14 National Bureau of Investigation 15 The Legal Cluster Undersecretary Emmeline Aglipay-Villar 17 IACAT and Human Trafficking 18 Inter-Agency Cooperation 19 The Priority Initiatives and Special Concerns Cluster Undersecretary Markk L. Perete 20 Unified Systems 21 Bureau of Immigration 23 Office of Cybercrime 25 The Corrections Cluster Undersecretary Deo L. Marco 27 Proposed Transfer of the New Bilibid Prison 28 Change for the Better 29 Prisons Congestion 31 The Board of Claims Administers the Victim’s Compensation Program 32 Starting anew Outside of Prison 33 The Year in Review 34 Our Resources Our People The Awardees 39 Profile of DOJ-OSEC Employees 41 Our Facilities History of the Justice Complex 49 Historical Markers 52 The Future of our Justice Complex 53 Our Current Location 54 Our Offices Directory of Officials 58 Attached Agencies 61 The Workforce 62 01 | ANNUAL REPORT 2018 Message of the Secretary Justice Secretary MENARDO I. GUEVARRA When I took the helm of leading the men and women of this Department, I asked them to work with me hand in hand in “restoring the dignified and respectable image” of this prestigious institution. Months into, I was astounded to witness their dedication, the fervor to see to the end the responsibility they were charged with, Providing justice to fellow countrymen in their own way is undeniably a duty they all took to heart.
    [Show full text]