North Cotabato Gov. Emmanuel Piñol, chairman of the Provincial Peace and Order Council, said a team led by North Cotabatos police director, Supt. Odelon Ramoneda, sent to Kabacan to investigate on the killing of Rico Sumatra inside Kabacans municipal government compound, seized from Mayor Luzviminda Tan and her husband, Jojo Tan, a .380 pistol and a customized cal. 40 S&W handgun, respectively, in a surprise inspection the other day.
"Initially, it appeared that these firearms were not covered by an exemption for the firearm ban imposed by the Commission on Elections in connection with the forthcoming synchronized barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections," Piñol told Catholic station dxMS here yesterday.
Ramoneda and his men were dispatched by the PPOC to Kabacan, locked in political tension since the May 11, 2001 polls, to probe deeper into the alleged shootout in the premises of the town hall between Tans group and partisans identified with the towns former mayor, Wilfredo Bataga, which resulted in the death of Sumatra.
An earlier peace covenant between Tan and Batagas camp restrains the lady mayor from entering Kabacans municipal compound pending the resolution of the electoral case between her and the former mayor.
The poll body had invalidated its earlier proclamation of Bataga as Kabacans elected mayor, ruling that the May 11, 2001 race was rigged in his favor.
The Comelec installed Tan as Batagas replacement late last year, a move strongly opposed by the ousted mayor and his followers.
Batagas camp have been displaying since Wednesday Sumatras remains at the middle of a national highway traversing Kabacans town proper in protest of his death.
The Tans have denied any involvement in the killing of Sumatra.