A.M. No. 12-11-2-SC
GUIDELINES
FOR DECONGESTING
HOLDING
JAILS BY ENFORCING THE RIGHTS OF
ACCUSED
PERSONS TO BAIL AND TO SPEEDY TRIAL
Whereas, the Constitution provides in
Section 13, Article III, that all persons, except those charged with offenses
punishable by reclusion perpetua when
evidence of guilt is strong, shall before conviction be bailable by sufficient
sureties or released on recognizance as the law may provide and further, that
excessive bail shall not be required;
Whereas, the Supreme Court has allowed the
summary hearing of applications for bail of persons charged with offenses
punishable by death, reclusion perpetua, or life imprisonment;
Whereas, there is a need to effectively
implement existing policies laid down by the Constitution, the laws and the
rules respecting the accused's rights to bail and to speedy trial in the
context of decongesting our detention jails and humanizing the conditions of
detained persons pending the hearing of their cases;
Whereas, the Supreme Court Committee for the
Decongestion of Provincial, City, and Municipal Jails has recommended for the
adoption of guidelines for decongesting holding jails by enforcing the rights
of accused persons to bail and to speedy trial; and
Whereas, the Supreme Court En Banc, finds
merit in the recommendation;
Now, therefore, all trial courts, public
prosecutors, public attorneys, private practitioners, and other persons
involved in protecting and ensuring the grant to the accused of his rights to
bail and to speedy trial are enjoined as follows:
A. THE RlGHT TO BAIL
Sec. l. Duty of the court to fix the appropriate
bail. - (a) The court shall, after finding sufficient cause to hold the
accused for trial, fix the amount of bail that the latter may post for his
provisional release, taking into account the public prosecutor's recommendation
and any relevant data that the court may find from the criminal information and
the supporting documents submitted with it, regarding the following:
(1)
Financial ability of the accused to give bail;
(2)
Nature and circumstances of the offense;
(3)
Penalty for the offense charged;
(4)
Character and reputation of the accused;
(5)
Age and health of the accused;
(6)
Weight of the evidence against the accused;
(7)
Probability of the accused appearing in trial;
(8)
Forfeiture of other bonds;
(9)
Fact that accused was a fugitive from justice when arrested; and
(10)
Pendency of cases in which the accused is under bond.
The
Department of Justice's Bail Bond Guide shall be considered but shall not be
controlling. In no case shall the court require excessive bail.
Sec. 2. Fixing of the amount of bail. -
Pending the raffle of the case to a regular branch of the court, the accused
may move for the fixing of the amount of bail, in which event, the Executive
Judge shall cause the immediate raffle of the case for assignment and the
hearing of the motion.
Sec. 3. When amount of bail may be reduced.
- If the accused does not have the financial ability to post the amount of bail
that the court initially fixed, he may move for its reduction, submitting for
that purpose such documents or affidavits as may warrant the reduction he
seeks. The hearing of this motion shall enjoy priority in the hearing of cases.
Sec. 4. Order fixing the amount of bail
inappealable. - The order fixing the amount of the bail shall not be
subject to appeal.
Sec. 5. Release after service of minimum imposable
penalty. - The accused who has been detained for a period at least
equal to the minimum of the penalty for the offense charged against him shall
be ordered released, motu proprio or
on motion and after notice and hearing, on his own recognizance without
prejudice to the continuation of the proceedings against him. [Sec. 16, Rule
114 of the Rules of Court and Sec. 5 (b) of R.A. l0389]
Sec. 6. Bail in offenses punishable by death,
reclusion perpetua or l[fe imprisonment. - a) The hearing of the
accused's motion for bail in offenses punishable by death, reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment shall be summary, with the
prosecution bearing the burden of showing that the evidence of guilt is strong.
The accused may at his option, if he wants the court to consider his evidence
as well, submit in support of his motion the affidavits of his witnesses
attesting to his innocence.
b) At
the hearing of the accused's motion for bail, the prosecution shall present its
witnesses with the option of examining them on direct or adopting the
affidavits they executed during the preliminary investigation as their direct
testimonies.
c)
The court shall examine the witnesses on their direct testimonies or affidavits
to ascertain if the evidence of guilt of the accused is strong. The court's
questions need not follow any particular order and may shift from one witness
to another. The court shall then allow counsels from both sides to examine the
witnesses as well. The court shall afterwards hear the oral arguments of the
parties on whether or not the evidence of guilt is strong.
d)
Within forty-eight (48) hours after hearing, the court shall issue an order
containing a brief summary of the evidence adduced before it, followed by its
conclusion of whether or not the evidence of guilt is strong. Such conclusion
shall not be regarded as a pre-judgment on the merits of the case that is to be
determined only after a full-blown trial.
Sec. 7. Frivolous complaints against judges.
- A party or a lawyer who is guilty of filing a frivolous administrative complaint
or a petition for inhibition against a judge arising from the latter's action
on the application for bail may be appropriately sanctioned.
B. THE RIGHT TO SPEEDY TRIAL
Sec. 8. Observance of time limits. - It
shall be the duty of the trial court, the public or private prosecutor, and the
defense counsel to ensure, subject to the excluded delays specified in Rule 119
of the Rules of Court and the Speedy Trial Act of 1998, compliance with the
following time limits in the prosecution of the case against a detained
accused:
(a)
The case of the accused shall be raffled and referred to the trial court to
which it is assigned within three days from the filing of the information;
(b)
The court shall arraign the accused within ten (10) clays from the date of the
raffle;
(c)
The court shall hold the pre-trial conference within thirty (30) clays after
arraignment or within ten (10) clays if the accused is under preventive detention;
provided, however, that where the direct testimonies of the witnesses arc to be
presented through judicial affidavits, the court shall give the prosecution not
more than twenty (20) clays from arraignment within which to prepare and submit
their judicial affidavits in time for the pre-trial conference;
(d)
After the pre-trial conference, the court shall set the trial of the case in
the pre-trial order not later than thirty (30) days from the termination of the
pre-trial conference; and
(e)
The court shall terminate the regular trial within one hundred eighty (180)
days, or the trial by judicial affidavits within sixty (60) days, reckoned from
the elate trial begins, minus the excluded delays or postponements specified in
Rule 119 of the Rules of Court and the Speedy Trial Act of 1998.
Sec. 9. Dismissal on ground of denial of
the right to speedy trial. - The case against the detained accused may
be dismissed on ground of denial of the right to speedy trial in the event of
failure to observe the above time limits.
Sec. 10. Provisional dismissal. -
(a) When the delays are due to the absence of an essential witness whose
whereabouts are unknown or cannot be determined and, therefore, are subject to
exclusion in determining if, compliance with the prescribed time limits which
caused the trial to exceed one hundred eighty (180) days, the court shall
provisionally dismiss the action with the express consent of the detained
accused.
(b)
When the delays are due to the absence of an essential witness whose presence
cannot be obtained by due diligence though his whereabouts are known, the court
shall provisionally dismiss the action with the express consent of the detained
accused provided:
(1) the hearing in the case has been
previously twice postponed clue to the non-appearance of the essential witness
and both the witness and the offended party, if they are two different persons,
have been given notice of the setting of the case for third hearing, which
notice contains a warning that the case would be dismissed if the essential
witness continues to be absent; and
(2) there is proof of service of the
pertinent notices of hearings or subpoenas upon the essential witness and the
offended party at their last known postal or e-mail addresses or mobile phone
numbers.
(c) For the above purpose, the public
or private prosecutor shall first present during the trial the essential
witness or witnesses to the case before anyone else. An essential witness is
one whose testimony dwells on the presence of some or all of the elements of
the crime and whose testimony is indispensable to the conviction of the
accused.
Sec. 11. Service of subpoena and notices
through electronic mail or rnobile phones. -Subpoena and notices may be
served by the court to parties and witnesses through electronic mails (e-mail)
or through mobile phone either through phone calls or through short messaging
service (SMS).
Sec. 12. Proof of service of notice of hearing or
subpoena. - To ascertain the proper service of notice of hearing or
subpoena:
(a)
The public prosecutor shall, during inquest or preliminary investigation,
require the complainant and his witnesses and, in proper cases, the police
officers who witnessed the commission of the crime subject of the
investigation, to leave with him their postal and e-mail addresses and mobile
phone numbers for use in summoning them when they need to appear at the
hearings of the case.
(b)
When requesting the court to issue a subpoena or subpoena duces tecum for their witnesses, the parties shall provide the
court with the postal and e-mail addresses and mobile phone numbers of such
witnesses.
(c)
The service of notice of hearing or subpoena at the postal address, e-mail
address, or through mobile phone number shall be proved by any of the
following:
(1) an officer's return or affidavit
of service if done by personal service, or by registry return card;
(2) printouts of sent e-mail and the
acknowledgment by the recipient;
(3) printouts of electronic messages
transmitted through the court's equipment or device and the acknowledgment by
the recipient; or
( 4) reports of phone calls made by
the court.
(d)
The postal and e-mail addresses as well as the mobile phone numbers supplied by
the parties and their witnesses incident to court cases shall be regarded as
part of the judicial processes in those cases. Consequently, any person who
uses the same without proper authority or for purposes other than sending of
court notices shall be deemed guilty of indirect contempt and accordingly
punished.
(e)
In cases of police officers whose testimonies are essential to the prosecution
of the case, service of the notice of hearing or subpoena on them shall be made
through the police unit responsible for the arrest and prosecution of the
accused, copy furnished the Personnel Department of the Philippine National
Police. It shall be the responsibility of the head of that police unit to
ensure the transmission of the notice or subpoena to the addressee. Service
upon the police unit shall be deemed service upon such police officers.
(1)
The court shall cause the service of a copy of the order of provisional
dismissal upon the offended party in the manner provided above.
Sec. 13. Report of government expert witnesses.-
A certified copy of the report of a government medical, chemical, or laboratory
expert relating to a criminal case shall be admissible as prima facie evidence of the truth of its contents. The personal
appearance in court of a witness who prepared the report shall be unnecessary
unless demanded by the accused for the purpose of cross-examination.
Sec. 14. Revival of cases provisionally dismissed.-
The one or two year period allowed for reviving a criminal case that has been provisionally
dismissed shall be reckoned from the issuance of the order of dismissal. The
dismissal shall become automatically permanent if the case is not revived
within the required period. Such permanent dismissal shall amount to an
adjudication of the case on the merits.
Sec. 15. Local Task Force Katarungan at Kalayaan.
- (a) The Court shall establish a Task Force Katarungan at Kalayaan in
appropriate places for the purpose of eliminating unnecessary detention. It
shall be chaired by a Regional Trial Court (RTC) Judge, with a Metropolitan or
Municipal Trial Court Judge as vice-chairman, both to be appointed for a term
of two years by the Executive Judge of the place. The city or provincial
prosecutor of the place or his representative and the local head of the Public
Attorney's Office or his representative shall be members of the Task Force. The
assistance of the local Bureau of Jail Management and Penology and the Office
of the Provincial Governor may be enlisted.
(b)
The Task Force shall track and keep a record of the progress of the criminal
cases of all detained persons within their jurisdiction and ensure that such
persons are accorded the rights and privileges provided by law, the rules, and
these guidelines.
(c)
Each court shall maintain a "Detainees Notebook," that shall be
supplied free by the Office of the Court Administrator and shall contain (i)
the full name of the accused; (ii) the docket number and title of the case'
(iii) the kind of crime charged; (iv) the date his detention began; (v) the date
when his detention becomes equal to the minimum of the imposable penalty; (vi)
the date when his detention becomes equal to the maximum imposable penalty;
(vii) the date of arraignment; (viii) the date of pre-trial hearing or
conference; (ix) the first day of trial; (x) the statutory last day of trial if
no excluded delays or postponements are incurred; (xi) sufficient space for
entering the progress of the hearing of the case; and (xii) such other data as
may be essential to the monitoring of his or her case. One (1) copy of the
notebook shall be attached to the record of the case and other copy kept by the
jail warden which copy shall be brought with the accused at the hearing. The
branch clerk of court shall update the two copies of the notebook at every
hearing by stating what action the court has taken in it, the next scheduled
hearing, and what action the court will further take on the case.
(d)
The Task Force shall have access to all case records and information relating
to detained persons and shall advise the judges hearing their cases, when
warranted, of the need for them to act on any incident or situation that
adversely affects the rights of detained persons or subject them to undue or
harsh treatment.
(e)
The Office of the Chief Justice shall exercise direct supervision over all such
Task Forces.
These
guidelines shall take effect on May l, 2014 after publication in a newspaper of
general circulation in the Philippines and shall apply to all accused persons
under preventive detention.
Manila,
Philippines, March 18, 2014.
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