This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com).
Vol. VI, No. 39,
Nov. 5-11, 2006
STREETWISE
Subic Rape Case, a Year After
Will Nicole get justice? The U.S. government and the Arroyo administration have done all they can to deny her justice in a court of law. Perhaps only the court of public opinion and the triumph of the Filipino people's struggle against foreign, imperialist domination will eventually vindicate her and many more like her.
BY
CAROL PAGADUAN-ARAULLO
Posted by Bulatlat
Nicole is the pseudonym used by the
Filipino victim in the sensational rape case involving "visiting" U.S. troops
out for some "rest and recreation" in Subic, formerly the biggest U.S. naval
base outside the U.S. mainland. Almost a year after the incident, she appears to
be a normal, comely young woman, in the flush of life. But that life came to a
standstill close to a year ago when she came across six U.S. marines who jointly
took advantage of her vulnerability, abused her and then dumped her like a used
rag on the
sidewalk in full view of several witnesses.
In the beginning, Nicole's case appeared strong. The Filipino driver of the
hired van where the rape took place gave corroborating testimony. There were
witnesses to how she was lifted out of the van "like a pig" by the soldiers and
left on the pavement with her pants and panties down to her knees. They threw
out a used condom after her.
There were witnesses on how she was so drunk when the soldiers brought her out
of the Neptune Club she couldn't have given her consent to go along with them
much less engage in consensual sex as they claimed in their defense.
She was not a prostitute (not that prostitutes can't be raped). She had just
graduated from a reputable Catholic university and was managing a family-owned
canteen inside a Philippine military compound. She had come to Subic, Olongapo
City, with three of her siblings, one of them a minor, simply to have a good
time. They even had their strict mother's permission to travel thousands of
miles to Luzon from their hometown in Mindanao.
Nicole was warned that her story could be turned upside down. She would likely
be portrayed as a "loose woman" out to catch herself a handsome, white American
boy and easy passage to the U.S. of A, still the "land of milk and honey" for
many Filipinos. Against all odds, including the social stigma of being a rape
victim, Nicole decided to pursue her case.
But she hadn't calculated on the sole Superpower's latest jingoistic adventure
called the "war against terror" and what it meant for the Philippines. She
didn't know that Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the de facto president,
had taken on the role of number one bugle girl for U.S. imperialism in Southeast
Asia, in an astute bid to shore up her shaky hold on power.
She wasn't even aware that her case would get caught up in the long-running
debate on whether the continuing presence of thousands of U.S. soldiers in the
country courtesy of the RP-US Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) was good or bad
for the country and its people.
Trouble started to appear when Philippine authorities quite easily gave up
custody over the six accused soldiers to U.S. authorities. The VFA provisions
regarding criminal jurisdiction over erring U.S. soldiers became exposed as
inutile guarantees, especially in the hands of a politically servile and legally
inept government, that crimes committed by US servicemen in the country would be
dealt with under the Philippine criminal justice system.
A hallmark of any self-respecting sovereign country, its primordial right to
independently investigate, arrest, prosecute and punish any foreigner accused of
committing crimes inside its territory had been effectively ceded to the
country's former colonizer. Meanwhile, the presidential spokesperson warned
against "Leftists" whipping up anti-U.S. sentiment in the wake of an "isolated"
case.
Despite some noises from government quarters, notably the Senate, calling for a
review and even abrogation of the VFA, if it were found, in Nicole's case, to be
prejudicial to Philippine interests, the U.S. government got what it
wanted. Custody, the most seasoned Filipino trial lawyers money could buy, and a
mandatory one-year trial period during which time it could undertake a
well-oiled public relations campaign creating local public opinion favorable to
the accused.
The Filipino public would be reminded of how the U.S. armed forces are the
bulwark in the "global fight against terrorism" and that U.S. soldiers are
"trained to be disciplined ambassadors of good will, sensitive to local culture
and values" and could therefore not engage in such a heinous crime as gang rape
against a local girl.
Nicole was given the consuelo de bobo of government-provided high-profile
women lawyers who, truth be told, appeared to be more concerned about how they
looked rather than laying the ground for a successful prosecution of the case.
Until Nicole was able to obtain private lawyers willing to work pro bono,
whom she could trust, did the uphill struggle to get justice appear to have a
glimmer of hope.
The private prosecutors quickly realized however that the justice system could
not be relied upon to uphold their client's rights and legitimate concerns. One
legal setback came after another. Only four of the accused and the driver of the
van were eventually found by the first fiscal assigned to the case to be liable
for the crime of rape. However, the Olongapo City judge, in a highly
questionable ruling, dropped the driver from being co-accused by saying that the
decision to charge him was an afterthought and that this was motivated by the
driver's recantation of parts of his previous testimony favorable to the
accused.
Subsequently, Justice Secretary Raul Gonzalez ruled that three of the four
principal co-accused should have the charges against them downgraded. This
decision was met with disbelief by the fiscal who engaged Mr. Gonzalez in a
public argument but who was eventually forced to resign from the case for
disagreeing with his boss.
Mr. Gonzales clearly undermined the government's own case by stating that he
would not "bow to the mob" calling for more than one to be charged as part of
the conspiracy to commit the crime of rape. He lambasted the Makati City judge
who eventually took over the trial and rejected his decision to downgrade.
The new Makati City prosecutors also resigned, likely feeling the heat from the
Justice secretary who had made it crystal clear that he would be breathing down
their necks during the trial. In their stead, Mr. Gonzalez appointed a team
from the Justice Department itself headed by a certain State Prosecutor Emilie
de los Santos. In this way, Mr. Gonzalez acquired more direct supervision and
control of the public prosecutors and presumably how they would try to win – or
lose – the case.
The rest is of public knowledge: how the public prosecutors bungled the
cross-examination of Lance Corporal Daniel Smith who admitted to having
consensual sex with Nicole; how this provoked the victim and her mother to cry
foul and disclose unethical proposals by Prosecutor De los Santos that the
victim enter into an out-of-court settlement with the accused; how Ms. De los
Santos in turn badmouthed her client on national television as someone who could
not be trusted to tell the truth.
Pushed to the wall, Nicole and her mother demanded the replacement of the public
prosecution panel but Mr. Gonzalez refused. The public prosecutors proceeded to
undermine the case with several more highly questionable moves until the trial
ended in a climate of betrayal, recrimination and gloom for the victim.
Will Nicole get justice? The U.S. government and the Arroyo administration have
done all they can to deny her justice in a court of law. Perhaps only the court
of public opinion and the triumph of the Filipino people's struggle against
foreign, imperialist domination will eventually vindicate her and many more like
her. Business World / Posted by Bulatlat
*Published in Business World
27-28 October 2006
© 2006 Bulatlat ■ Alipato Media Center
Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.