What a law!

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Wed, 04 Sep 2019 17:00:30 +0000

 

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NO wonder lawyers resort to their security blanket, “Dura lex, sed lex,” whenever they come across a law that is hard (dura) to carry out but because it is (sed) the law, it’s the law.

RA 10529 is such a law, if our lawmaking senators and the head of the Department of Justice are to be believed. Is that mindnumb­ing good conduct time allowance (GCTA) law hard to understand, hard to execute, or hard to clarify for nonlawyers due to its vague­ness, ambiguities, loopholes, and other infirmities? For one thing, the title of the law is such a blah that no one bothered to put in punctuation marks, at least to ask why there aren’t any.

Passed in 2015, RA 10529 is “three pages long” and features “no declaration of policy,” in the words of Justice Secretary Menar­do Guevarra, the new superstar on the lawyerly horizon who speaks clearly, in complete sentences and looks cool (or hot) enough to be the dean of a law school, postgrad level and who, just as important, knows whereof he speaks and whom he’s speaking to. The little I know about him, he’s not, ehem, from San Beda.

In addition, Secretary Guevarra informed the senators and his TV audience at Monday’s hearing, “It’s a law without a ‘whereas’ clause that states policy, intent, and pur­pose’.” That’s clear enough, isn’t it, clear as a bell? How did such a piece of legislation pass Congress’ verbose scrutiny?

Senator Ralph Recto asked, “What section authorizes BuCor to release prisoners?” The Secre­tary replied, clear
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