MANILA, Philippines — A Manila court is set to rule on the government’s cyber libel case against Rappler and its CEO Maria Ressa on April 3.
Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 46 Presiding Judge Rainelda Estacio-Montesa set the promulgation on the morning of April 3, eight months since the trial started in July 2019.
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Also charged in the case is Reynaldo Santos, Rappler’s former researcher. The case emanated from a complaint filed by businessman Wilfredo Keng assailing an article, first published in May 2012.
Case background
The Department of Justice indicted Rappler, Ressa and Santos on cyber libel charges, despite the
cybercrime law being signed four months after the publication of the story.
State prosecutors pointed out that the story
was updated on Feb. 19, 2014, which puts it under the “multiple publication rule.”
Ressa and Santos, however, raised that there was no substantial change made in the article when it
was updated in 2014, but the court said that their argument is “evidentiary
in nature which the defense should prove during trial.”
National Bureau of Investigation agents arrested Ressa at her office early night Feb. 13, 2019.
Her camp tried to post bail before a night court in Pasay but failed to do so.
Ressa spent the night in detention at the NBI then posted the bail bond of P100,000 at the Manila court the following day.
Ressa and Rappler
are also embroiled in a string of legal suits. They are facing charges of tax evasion, anti-dummy and violations of the Securities and Regulations code.
A Quezon City prosecutor junked Department of Agrarian Reform Secretary John
Castriciones’ libel complaint against Ressa and reporter Rambo
Talabong for lack of probable cause.