(UPDATE) MANILA, Philippines — A former chief of the Philippine National Police Highway Patrol Group (PNP-HPG) Special Operations Division (SOD) is currently facing an administrative case following the complaint lodged by five officers over allegedly taking P7 million in bribes from an arrested suspect for “special treatment and for [fixing] the case.”
In a statement on Friday, Napolcom identified the official as former SOD head Col. Rommel Casanova Estolano.
According to Napolcom, the allegations stemmed from a June 13 operation resulting in the arrest of a certain “J.J. Javier” and his companion in Parañaque City.
Reportedly, the suspects were caught with a C4 explosive device, a pistol and live ammunition.
“Instead of upholding the case, however, the officers claimed Estolano engaged in ‘a series of illegal and corrupt acts’ designed to shield Javier from prosecution while punishing those who resisted his directives,” Napolcom said.

Ex-HPG officer faces P7M bribery probe
It added that the officers accused the HPG-SOD chief of asking P4 million from the suspect to weaken the charges, P2 million to get a Parañaque case dismissed and P1 million for special treatment while in detention., This news data comes from:http://jyxingfa.com
The complaint against Estolano indicates that he was “liable” for grave misconduct, dishonesty, dereliction of duty and conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service.
- Marcos urged to raise WPS resolution at UN
- Nepali court: Hindu holy men's nudity not obscene
- PNP chief supports lowering age of discernment
- Sen. Go files bills to push health, social, and labor reforms
- Dizon to order DPWH officials to submit courtesy resignation
- Corruption crackdown: VP Sara Duterte, lawmakers call for deeper probe into government
- Thailand set for vote on new PM after dissolution bid rejected
- A tale of two cities: San Mateo rejects Manila's trash; Rizal opens landfill to Malabon
- Iran says open to US nuclear talks, rejects missile curbs
- Malacañang hits back at VP Duterte's criticism on flood scam probe