House panel lifts detention order for 4 OVP officials cited in contempt

Office of the Vice President (OVP) Assistant Chief of Staff Lemuel Ortonio, former Department of Education (DepEd) Assistant Secretary Sunshine Fajarda, OVP special disbursing officer Gina Acosta and former DepEd special disbursing officer Edward Fajarda attend the House Committee on Good Government and Public Accountability's hearing on the alleged misuse of confidential funds on Monday, Nov. 25, 2024. This is their first time appearing at the House probe after skipping the past six hearings.

MANILA, Philippines — The House Committee on Good Government and Public Accountability granted furlough to four of Vice President Sara Duterte's officials who were previously ordered detained for skipping six hearings.

After the Office of the Vice President's (OVP) officials finally appeared at the seventh hearing on alleged misuse of confidential funds on Monday, November 25, Rep. Joseph Stephen Paduano (Abang Lingkod Partylist) moved to grant them furlough.

“Mr. Chairman, because they voluntarily appeared in today’s hearing, may I move to grant Mr. Lemuel Ortonio, Ms. Sunshine Fajarda, Ms. Gina F. Acosta and Mr. Edward Fajarda … a furlough. So moved, Mr. Chairman,” he said.

Ortonio serves as the OVP's assistant chief of staff, while Acosta is the agency's special disbursing officer responsible for managing the P500 million in confidential funds spent between December 2022 and the third quarter of 2023.

Meanwhile, spouses Edward and Sunshine Fajarda are former officials of the Department of Education (DepEd). Edward, as a special disbursing officer, handled P112.5 million in confidential funds, while Sunshine, an assistant secretary, was allegedly involved in distributing cash envelopes to high-ranking DepEd officials under Duterte's instructions.

The motion, duly seconded, was unanimously approved by the members present when the contempt citations were issued during previous hearings.

However, Paduano clarified that despite their attendance, the earlier violations remain unresolved. The four OVP officials had been cited in contempt for violating Section 11 of the House rules on inquiries, which refers to the “refusal without legal excuse to obey summons.”

In a text message to Philstar.com, Paduano said the furlough does not lift the contempt orders against the four officials. It merely exempts them from detention, which had been ordered alongside the contempt citations.

“[The] contempt order is still in effect. Furlough was given with the commitment for them to be present at the next succeeding hearings. They can go home and not [be] in the custody of the sergeant-at-arms,” he said. 

Ortonio expressed gratitude on behalf of the four OVP officials for the furlough extended to them. 

“We would like to extend our gratitude to this one. Part of this would be the commitment to be attending the succeeding hearings,” he added.

While the good government panel has finally secured the OVP officials whose names were repeatedly mentioned in previous hearings, the actual spending of the confidential funds remains unclear.

Acosta and Fajarda, who were reportedly responsible for distributing rewards and covering expenses related to confidential activities, said they only "disbursed" the funds to designated security officers.

RELATED: DepEd, OVP disbursing officers: 'Security officers' handled confidential funds

This, however, was under the vice president’s instructions as well, they said. 

The committee has invited the security officers, colonels Dennis Nolasco and Raymund Lachica to attend the next hearing.

Show comments