the face

conf1.gif Photo right-clicked from www.supremecourt.gov.ph In an interview with ANC’s Mariton Pacheco a few minutes before the Supreme Court called for recess at today’s oral arguments (right after Justices Corona and Morales asked Attorneys Sixto Brillantes and Koko Pimentel to take to the podium to explain why they supposedly threatened the Supreme Court with street protests in interviews with ANC), pañero Atty. Brillantes in the noon interview said he never gave an interview to ANC after the canvassing had started and that he would never give such an interview.

I seem to recall that a day before Atty. Koko Pimentel gave his oral arguments, I saw pañero Atty. Brillantes’s face on tv, and he said that Koko was a brilliant lawyer, but he was worried that he might get emotional because it involved him personally and he should have let another lawyer handle the oral arguments, and when asked what might happen if the Supreme Court did not abate the “fraudulence”, he paused, then had this grim face, shook his head very slightly, and said almost softly, “huwag naman sana…ewan ko, huwag naman sana mangyari yan…” (“i hope not… i hope it doesn’t happen…) then he said something like “baka may masamang mangyayari…” (“something untoward might happen”) or something to that effect (I’m not sure about the last quote.)

I could’ve sworn I saw such a footage. Or maybe I’m imagining things. But usually when I imagine, it involves large landscapes and breathtaking cinematography and vast, aerial shots. But here, it was a tight shot. Of Atty. Brillante’s face, his mood switched when he answered the last question, he wore a brooding expression, like the FPJ-look when FPJ spoke softly and warned of dire consequences. But how can you cite a lawyer for indirect contempt for that? How would the citation read?

“For wearing a dark, melancholic face, that forebode of sinister tidings (the expression of the face, that is,) in the foreseeable future, you are hereby cited in indirect contempt, for impeding, degrading, and obstructing the orderly administration of justice, contrary to law, and are hereby ordered to pay a fine of P20,000. So ordered. And stop wearing that gloomy face! So ordered.”

brood.jpg[photo of a print, one of Van Gogh’s earliest works, “Peasant’s Head (Study for the Potato-eaters)”, 1885, The Essential Van Gogh by Cutts and Smith, Parragon 2002] What if the guy was just sad? thinking of what might happen? Or maybe he missed his lunch so he looked desolate. I look despondent when I’m hungry. Would that constitute a veiled threat?

Several years ago, pañero Leonard de Vera was cited by the same Court for indirect contempt for saying in an interview something like, “if the plunder law is declared unconstitutional, there will be massive street protests!” (I don’t know if he said “will” or “would”. “Would” would have sounded hypothetical), and ordered to pay a fine of P20,000. He filed an MR but I don’t know if he was able to lift the citation.

A couple of years ago, former Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima was cited for indirect contempt by the same Court; in an ambush interview, this was how it went, as I recall: “Reporter: And is it true that the President called up the justices to ask them to TRO the VAT?” and he said something like, “Naku, mahirap na, I might get into trouble if I answered that question…” Well, he didn’t really answer the question, but still got into trouble, (in some newspaper interviews, I think he also said something like, “the President told me that she was trying to find some legal way of having the VAT law suspended” etc.); and was asked to pay a fine of P20,000.oo.

sc-logo.pngPhoto right-clicked from www.supremecourt.gov.ph

I can’t say I agree with those decisions.

A few years ago,in an ANC interview I said something like: the order of the Sandiganbayan (allowing the accused in the plunder case to go abroad) was irregular (by that, I meant, i didn’t think it was in accord with the rules of court). I attended the hearing to find out if the ruling would go through (I have this standing notion that without make-up and with hair disheveled, I am invisible), I sat at the back, second to the last row, a channel 9 reporter sat beside me and talked about his surgery, so much for being invisible, and before I knew it, Atty. Flaminiano stood up and was repeating what was said on tv and said something like contempt then looked at our direction from across the room, then Justice Minita said, “where is she?”; I stood up, said good morning, said my name, said i wasn’t in court attire and politely said if they wished, i could go in front and argue; Justice Minita sort of waved her hand away, and said that they were ruling based on their best lights, and the rules of court, and the interest of justice, etc. etc.

A friend of mine was once arguing very loudly with opposing counsel (in an RTC in QC) and she sort of pushed the thick book Rules of Court that was on the table, she shoved it in the direction of pañero opposing counsel and said “why don’t you look it up in the rules of court, it’s all there, don’t you even read!!!” and the female judge said “Police! Police!” (I’m not kidding, this really happened), then a barong-clad male person came in and my lawyer-friend thought she would be dragged to city jail and the male person went up to the judge, he had a stethoscope and blood pressure gauge, and he took the judge’s blood pressure; then when the judge simmered down, she pointed at the clerk of court and said, “you, you take her to the staff room until she cools down”; and that was when I got the call from my friend she told me she had been detained and I said alright I’ll be there in ten minutes for your bail and said no, and she was laughing and said she wasn’t really detained, she was in the staff room of the court personnel, she was telling her story to everyone. After all, it wasn’t her blood pressure that shot up.