Enrile v. Amin
Enrile v. Amin
Enrile v. Amin
D 2015
Criminal Law 2
Prof. I. Gutierrez III
the Department of Justice resolution there is only one crime of rebellion complexed with murder and
multiple frustrated murder but there could be 101 separate and independent prosecutions for harboring
and concealing" Honasan and 100 other armed rebels under PD No. 1829. The splitting of component
elements is readily apparent.
- Necessarily, being in conspiracy with Honasan, petitioners alleged act of harboring or concealing was
for no other purpose but in furtherance of the crime of rebellion thus constitute a component thereof. it
was motivated by the single intent or resolution to commit the crime of rebellion. As held in People v.
Hernandez, supra:
In short, political crimes are those directly aimed against the political order, as well as such
common crimes as may be committed to achieve a political purpose. The decisive factor is the
intent or motive.
- The crime of rebellion consists of many acts. It is described as a vast movement of men and a complex
net of intrigues and plots. Jurisprudence tells us that acts committed in furtherance of the rebellion
though crimes in themselves are deemed absorbed in the one single crime of rebellion. In this case, the
act of harboring or concealing Col. Honasan is clearly a mere component or ingredient of rebellion or
an act done in furtherance of the rebellion. It cannot therefore be made the basis of a separate charge.
- Re: argument of Judge Amin that PD No. 1829 is a special law and rebellion is under RPC/general law:
All crimes, whether punishable under a special law or general law, which are mere components or
ingredients, or committed in furtherance thereof, become absorbed in the crime of rebellion and can not
be isolated and charged as separate crimes in themselves.
- Hernandez and other related cases mention common crimes as absorbed in the crime of rebellion.
These common crimes refer to all acts of violence such as murder, arson, robbery, kidnapping etc. as
provided in the Revised Penal Code. The attendant circumstances in the instant case, however,
constrain us to rule that the theory of absorption in rebellion cases must not confine itself to
common crimes but also to offenses under special laws which are perpetrated in furtherance of the
political offense.
- The prosecution must make up its mind whether to charge Senator Ponce Enrile with rebellion alone or
to drop the rebellion case and charge him with murder and multiple frustrated murder and also violation
of P.D. 1829. It cannot complex the rebellion with murder and multiple frustrated murder.
- As earlier mentioned, the intent or motive is a decisive factor. If Senator Ponce Enrile is not charged
with rebellion and he harbored or concealed Colonel Honasan simply because the latter is a friend and
former associate, the motive for the act is completely different. But if the act is committed with
political or social motives, that is in furtherance of rebellion, then it should be deemed to form
part of the crime of rebellion instead of being punished separately.
DISPOSITIVE:
- Petition GRANTED. Information is QUASHED.