For a mere US$0.50, the valedictorian of the prestigious Philippine Military Academy Class 2004, who was sent to the US for schooling as a reward for topping his class, was arrested and sent back to the country.
Army 2Lt. Rolly Joaquin, a student of the Infantry Officer Basic Course at Fort Benning, Georgia, was arrested for alleged theft by deception by US authorities after he was caught supposedly removing the 50-cent discount tag from a sale item and attaching it to a nonsale item that he purchased sometime in October.
The incident was reported by the Joint United States Military Assistance Group-Philippines to the Army on October 26.
Two days later, Joaquin arrived from the US and was turned over to the Army’s Headquarters Support Group for custody.
The incident happened as the Armed Forces is besieged by allegations of corruption as a result of the case of embattled Maj. Gen. Carlos Garcia, who was accused of pocketing millions of pesos of military funds.
Garcia is being tried by a general court-martial for allegedly violating the Articles of War.
Close on the heels of the Garcia case, the Armed Forces was again put in a bad light after a recruit accused another officer of ***ually molesting him and other recruits.
Maj. Ferdinand Ramos, Civil Military Operations commander of the Army’s Light Armor Brigade based in Camp O’Donnel in Capas, Tarlac, is now the subject of investigation after video footage of his alleged dalliance with trainees was shown on national television.
On the case of Joaquin, Army officials said he is now restricted to quarters and is undergoing investigation. If prima facie evidence is established, he will be subjected to court-martial proceedings just like Garcia for violation of Article of War 96 or conduct unbecoming of an officer and gentleman, and Article of War 97 or conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline.
“Independent of the court-martial proceedings, the subject officer can also be administratively charged under the Armed Forces’ Efficiency and Separation Board,” said Maj. Vicente Bartolome Bacarro, chief of the Army public information office.
“The Army leadership would like to take this opportunity to assure the public that these matters will be addressed accordingly and that appropriate punishment shall be meted out,” Bacarro added.
like he graduated at the top of his class, had a bunch of citations and awards, pero pag may kalawang ang morals ng isang tao, it will manifest itself in the smallest details. sayang nga, but it would have been much, much worse if he had advanced at the top in the future. baka magmukhang peanuts lang yung mga ginawa ni gen garcia.
oo nga nakakahiya talaga..lalo na yung valedictorian...kung ako yung sobrang mahihiya na ako parang hindi ko na kaya lumabas...pero sayang yung pagiging valedictorian niya..
the weird thing is, this kind of shoplifting happens all the time. when i was growing up, i heard many stories about classmates getting caught shoplifting at stores - standard teenage stupidity.
the thing is, no one was ever prosecuted. the parents were called, sometimes the cops got involved, but VERY RARELY did the shopkeeper press charges.
he's stupid to risk his career over a few bucks, but he's also unlucky that this somehow became the big deal that it is...with court martials and media coverage and whatnot.
Its not a full-blown shoplifting, I'd call it "TAG-LIFTING" The officer allegedly SWAPPED the price tag of the SALE item to a non-SALE item. Ang nakakahiya, $0.50 na lang, hindi nya pa binili ng buo yung non-sale item.