People v. Del Rosario

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PEOPLE V.

DEL ROSARIO

FACTS: accused Del Rosario was charged as a co-principal in the crime of Robbery
with Homicide for having robbed certain Virginia Bernas and on the occasion
thereof shot and killed her.

Del Rosario, a tricycle driver, alleged that he was just hired by Virgilio Santos to
drive him to a cockpit. He was not aware of the plan of Santos and his two
companions to rob and kill the victim. He was not able to seek assistance because
Santos, one of the accused, threatened to shoot him if he did. He also failed to inform
the police authorities about the incident because the culprit threatened him and his
family.

In this incident, the police officers upon finding of the owner of the tricycle
proceeded to the house of the Barangay captain where the owner of the tricycle was
summoned and who in turn, revealed the driver's name and was invited for an
interview. The driver was accused del Rosario who volunteered to name his
passengers when the said incident happened.

On the way to the police station, accused informed them of the bag's location and
the place where the hold-uppers may be found. After lunch, they proceeded to Brgy.
Dicarma composed of 15 armed men where a shoot out transpired, and Marquez,
one of the co-accused, died.

It was further revealed that, during the encounter at Brgy, Dicarma, del Rosario was
handcuffed by the police because allegedly they had already gathered enough
evidence against him and they were afraid that he might attempt to escape.

The court then found the accused guilty as charged and sentenced him to death.

He further contends that there was a violation of his right to remain silent, right to
have competent and independent counsel preferably of his own choice, and right to
be informed of these rights as enshrined and guaranteed in the Bill of Rights.

ISSUE: Whether or not the invitation to the accused at the house of Barangay
captain for interview is a valid exercise of police power?

HELD: No.
A custodial investigation is a stage where the police investigation is no longer a
general inquiry into an unsolved crime but has begun to focus on a particular
suspect taken into custody by the police who carry out a process of interrogation
that lends itself to elicit incriminating statements.

It is well settled that it encompasses any question initiated by law enforcers after a
person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action
in any significant way.
This concept of custodial investigation has been broadened by RA 7438 to include
the practice of issuing an 'invitation' to a person who is investigated in connection
with an offense he is suspected to have committed.

In this case, Del Rosario was deprived of his rights during the custodial
investigation. From the time he was "invited" for questioning at the house of the
barangay captain, he was already under effective custodial investigation, but he was
not appraised nor made aware thereof by the investigating officers.

The police already knew the name of the tricycle driver and the latter was 'already'
a suspect in the robbing and senseless slaying of the victim. Since the prosecution
failed to establish that Del Rosario had waived his right to remain silent, his VERBAL
ADMISSIONS ON HIS PARTICIPATION IN THE CRIME even before his actual arrest
were INADMISSIBLE against him, as the same transgressed the safeguards provided
by law and the Bill of Rights.

Wherefore, the decision of the RTC convicting accused was reversed and set aside.
and the accused is acquitted of the crime charged.

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