'Pastillas' scheme whistleblower under witness protection custody, says Guevarra

Immigration Officer I Allison Chiong sat as resource person at the Senate inquiry on February 20, 2020.
The STAR/Mong Pintolo

MANILA, Philippines — Immigration officer Allison Chiong, “

pastillas” scheme whistleblower, is now under the custody of Department of Justice’s Witness Protection Program, said Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra Friday.

“The whistleblower is under the custody of the WPP. We took him in upon the request of Sen. Risa Hontiveros and the Senate President [Vicente

“Tito”

Sotto III]

due to security concerns,” Guevarra told reporters in a message.

The Justice chief said that the WPP will

evaluate Chiong thoroughly before

he can be given full coverage of the state protection program.

The WPP is a program under the Justice department and created through Republic Act 6981, "to encourage a person who has witnessed or has knowledge of the commission of a crime to testify before a court or a quasi-judicial body, or before an investigating authority, by protecting him from reprisals and from economic dislocation."

Immigration Officer 

I Chiong narrated before the Senate panel Thursday that Bureau officers check arriving Chinese passengers against a list, provided by Chinese travel agencies and would 

be let in the country “without screening or profiling” for a fee.

Chiong also named BI officers who supposedly took part in the scheme: 

Totoy

Magbuhos, Deon Albao (alias “Nancy”), Paul Borja (alias “Lisa”), Anthony Lopez (alias “AL”) and Dennis Robles (alias “DR”), who occupy various

plantilla positions within the bureau.

He also identified Bien Guevarra, Glenn

Comia and Den

Binsol, chiefs of the Travel Control and Enforcement Unit of terminals at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport. They supposedly "took over" collecting fees from Chinese passengers for their "seamless" entry into the country.

'Undocumented' Chinese nationals to

be deported

Guevarra also said that Chinese nationals who entered the country without proper documentation through the “

pastillas” scheme will

be deported.

The Bureau of Immigration and the National Bureau of Investigation are conducting probes into the “

pastillas” scheme where “special privileges”

are given to Chinese passengers for a fee.

Guevarra told reporters: “If the Chinese nationals named in the list turn out to

be improperly documented, they will

be deported immediately.”

“But if they are legitimate, but

were merely extended ‘escort service’ by some BI personnel for a fee, then it’s the latter who will

be dealt with

 accordingly,” he added.

President Rodrigo Duterte sacked all the Immigration officers who may

be involved in the

scheme, which started in 2016 when the veto on the use of Express Lane Fund for overtime pay of employees took effect.

Immigration spokesperson Dana Sandoval

18 employees have been put under “floating status” following Duterte’s order and pending investigation. The list of

sacked officials may also expand as the probe continues, she added.

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