Google
 
Latest | Home | Past Issues | Top Stories | Latest News | U.S. Briefs | Tech Updates | Hobbies
   
Filipino Recipe



    Other News
Thu Aug 21, 2008

Immigration Notes
 Battered spouses
 Naturalize now
 Sponsor?s income
 



    What's on the Mail
Home
 Top 10
 Past Issues
 Stories Archive
 Country_Codes
 U.S. Area Codes
 Phils. Area Codes
About Us
 About
 Contact_Us
 Our Staff
 SiteMap
Features
 Search Our Site
 Google Search
 AvantGo
 Google Guide
 Web Links
 More items
· The Holy Bible

Free Classifieds



   




   



   



   



   



   



   

The Mail RSS Feed.The Mail RSS Feed.
Subscribe Now


Subscribe in Rojo







   
Joost? the best of tv and the internet



   
Ship Any Box, At Forex size Doesn''t Matter.



   



U.S. News: Ray Aquino pleads guilty of espionage

NEW JERSEY - Michael Ray Aquino, a former Philippine police officer, recently pleaded guilty to two counts of espionage during the hearing before US District Court Judge William Walls.

Aquino, 40, admitted receiving classified US government documents from Filipino-American Leandro Aragoncillo, then an intelligence analyst of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, from January to September 2005.


Cool Gadgets      Kitchen Tools      Cool Cell phone and Deals      Notebook Deals

Aquino, a close aide of Sen. Panfilo Lacson who was then head of the Philippine National Police under President Joseph Estrada, has been linked to the Kuratong Baleleng massacre and also with the murder of publicist Salvador Bubby Dacer and his driver, Emmanuel Corbito. He and another co-accused fled the country when Estrada was deposed.

The US initially alleged that Aquino received US government documents from Aragoncillo, a Filipino American, which he later passed on to Philippine officials, including Sen. Panfilo Lacson, Estrada, former House Speaker Arnulfo Fuentebella and others.

“Aquino is now an admitted spy, who cultivated and used Aragoncillo, a willing accomplice, to transfer US intelligence secrets abroad,’ said US Attorney Christopher J. Christie.

“He [Aquino] did this at the behest of a high-level government official in the Philippine legislature. We view that as a grave intrusion on the integrity of our national security, and we will seek the longest prison sentence possible for Aquino," he added.

Having pleaded guilty, Aquino avoided a more serious charge of espionage and a possible life sentence. Legal experts said that with the plea bargain, Aquino could face a minimum term of three to six years.

The plea spared the US government a trial that would have detailed how classified documents were pilfered from the White House and the FBI.

Investigators said Aragoncillo passed on the documents to opposition politicians in the Philippines, including Estrada, Lacson, and Fuentebella.

The three were not indicted as co-conspirators in the espionage case.

The FBI arrested Aragoncillo and Aquino in September last year. Aragoncillo late last year pleaded guilty to the charges and will be sentenced soon. Aquino will be sentenced in October.

In Manila, meanwhile, the Philippine justice department, who has been seeking the extradition of Aquino, said the guilty plea will result in delay of the pending cases against him.

 

 

 

 

Justice Secretary Raul Gonzales said the Philippines will wait until Aquino completes his sentence in the United States.

 Lacson, reacting to Aquino’s admission of guilt, noted that the charges of conspiracy and acting as a foreign agent against Aquino had been dropped, meaning that there was no conspiracy to pass on information to foreign government officials.

In an interview with the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Lacson said this practically absolved himself and Estrada from charges of having conspired in the theft of the classified US documents.

“The charges of conspiracy and acting as a foreign agent were dropped, which means that no other persons will be charged any further in relation to him," Lacson told the Inquirer.

“It is now clearly established that there was no conspiracy and that nobody hired Aquino to act as a foreign agent,’’ he added.

In a later interview with reporters, Lacson stressed that the “receiving and keeping" of classified information was “personal” to Aquino.

Lacson also said he did not influence Aquino to make the guilty plea, stressing this was his “own personal decision.”

 
U.S. News: Ray Aquino pleads guilty of espionage
 
Posted on Saturday, July 29 @ 23:11:47 CDT by comicarts
 

    Related Links
· More about U.S. News
· News by comicarts


Most read story about U.S. News:
Filam CPA, brod indicted for fraud




    Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad




    Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly





Associated Topics

U.S. News


Home About US Contact Us Free Classifieds Search Downloads Topics Top Archives SiteMap
Search the Manila Mail Powered by Google