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3 Pinoys in shark fins smuggling case deny charges

Posted on 07 January 2020 No comments

Three Filipino tourists are set to deny a charge of violating Hong Kong’s law on the protection of endangered species by allegedly bringing in a huge amount of dried shark fins and seahorses last August.
 
The shark fins seized at HK airport . They're a popular delicacy among the Chinese
Jomar Goron, Aldrin Jay Lacuesta and Michael Roy Marcelino, aged between 21 and 36 years old, appeared before District Court Judge K. Kwok on Jan 7.

Their lawyer said the three would plead not guilty and proposed a four-day trial of the case starting Apr 20, which the court approved.
The prosecution said it will present 10 witnesses including a civilian expert and the officers who arrested the three and investigated the case.

The three defendants applied for bail backed by surety from a local man and a Filipina resident.

Judge Kwok granted bail to the defendants and told them to return to the court for their trial.
Goron, Lacuesta and Marcelino were arrested on arrival from Manila at Hong Kong International Airport on Aug 23 last year after Customs officers found 180 kilos of dried shark fins and 500 grams in their check-in baggage.

The Customs and Excise Department estimated the market value of the seized goods at about $50,000. 
Sea horses are a popular item in Chinese traditional medicine

The three were charged in West Kowloon Court shortly after their arrests, but their case was moved to District Court on Dec 17.
 
Goron and Lacuesta were charged with “importing specimens of Appendix II species otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the ordinance”, referring to the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance.
Marcelino was charged with “importing specimens of Appendix II species otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of section 11 of Cap.586”.

Under the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance, any person found guilty of importing or exporting an endangered species without a license is liable to a maximum fine of $10 million and imprisonment for 10 years.

The case is being prosecuted by the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department. – Vir B. Lumicao


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Sickly 68-yr-old Pinoy to be tried for US$100b fake check case

Posted on No comments
By Vir B. Lumicao
 
Tiñana has pleaded not guilty to a a charge of passing off the fake check as genuine

A 68-year-old Filipino accused of trying to pass off as genuine a check for US$100 billion, has finally appeared in District Court on Jan. 7, after his ill health prevented him from attending several hearings of his case earlier.

Wheelchair-bound Celerino L. Tiñana, who looked pale and sickly, appeared before Judge K. Kwok accompanied by a female relative. He failed to show up in court several times in the past, stalling his trial on a charge of using a false instrument.

Judge Kwok reset the trial to May 11-15 and extended Tiñana’s bail.
Prosecutor Kamlesh Sadhwani said he will call four or five witnesses, while defense lawyer Andrew Bullett said he will secure a medical report on his client that will hopefully be ready by May 11.

In a previous hearing, Bullett said that the defendant’s heart condition had prevented him from attending court at least five times.

Tiñana, who will be 69 next month, was arrested in November 2017 when he went to a branch of Bank of China in Kowloon and presented a fake check for US$100 billion for verification, according to the prosecution.
Bank staff who found out that the check was bogus called police.

Tiñana, a native of Pagbilao, Quezon, is one of eight elderly Filipinos who were arrested in recent years for presenting false documents with incredibly huge amounts to Hong Kong banks.

Just last Dec 30, Brudencio Bolaños, 70, was convicted by District Judge Stanley Chan of using a false instrument for presenting a spurious US$943 billion bank deposit slip to staff at the HSBC headquarters in Central. He was sentenced to four years in jail after trial.
Bolaños was the fourth Filipino tourist jailed for trying to scam Hong Kong banks using false instruments.

However, at least three other Filipinos arrested over a similar case were acquitted for insufficiency of evidence in 2018, while charges were dropped against an elderly woman in February last year because of her ill health. 
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Pinay maid jailed 2 months for taking employers’ unused items

Posted on No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao

The helper said she thought the items she took without permission were no longer used

A 43-year-old Filipina helper who had earlier terminated her work contract has been jailed two months by a Kwun Tong magistrate for taking several items she thought her employers in Lohas Park, Tseung Kwan O no longer used.

Rosemarie Villon was sentenced by Magistrate Ivy Chui on Tuesday, Jan 7, after she pleaded guilty to one count of theft.

The stolen properties worth more than $4,300 comprised of a waistbag, a gold tie clip, three USB flash drives, four T-shirts, a bottle opener, power bank and wristband, 15 pieces of hair accessories, a yellow cosmetic bag containing one liquid foundation, a box of pressed powder, two eyebrow pencils, one lip pencil and one necklace valued at $1,000.
All items were recovered, except for four T-shirts and hair accessories.

Villon was arrested on Nov 30, the same day her employers in Le Prestige, Lohas Park, were looking for a missing black waistbag. They found the bag in her rucksack when they searched her bedroom with her consent.

They reported to the police, who searched the room and her belongings and found the other items, except for the tie clip and hair accessories.
During investigation, she admitted under caution that she began taking the items on her second week with the family. She said she took other items in storage that she thought were no longer used and kept them in a drawer under her bed.    

Her lawyer asked for leniency, saying the items were of low or no value, but Chui brushed this aside, saying Villon had breached her employer’s trust by taking them without permission.

The magistrate said that even if some belongings are no longer used, families store them for sentimental reasons.

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Villon was arrested just eight days before she was to leave for home after resigning from her job of less than four months.  She began working for the family in August last year but on Nov 3, gave notice that she was resigning, saying she wanted to go home and take care of her four children.

She said she would leave on Nov 17 but her employers asked her to stay until Dec 7.
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Her rice-cooker cake goes viral

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One of the joys of joining a cooking group on Facebook is seeing members getting all excited about dishes they cooked - or those shared by others, and then trying their best to replicate them.

For Filipino migrant workers in Hong Kong, no other cooking group could possibly be as fun and as educational than the Facebook page, ‘Domestic Workers’ Corner It’s All About Food’.
This group started by Rodelia P. Villar just two years ago was meant to make it easier for newly arrived Filipino domestic worker to cope with the cooking requirements of their employers, especially if they’re Chinese and prefer to eat their own food at home.

DWC’s food page became such a big hit that in no time, Villar and her fellow administrators had to open two other accounts to serve the other needs of their growing number of members.
But it is the Food page that remains as the happy place for members – where they get quick help from others when faced with the dilemma of what to cook for the day, how to cook a strange ingredient that their employer just handed them, or even just to gripe on how hard it is to cook several dishes on a tight budget.

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Many members also use the page to poke fun at themselves whenever their cooking turns into a disaster, or share a dish that only a fellow Pinoy would love.

To the latter belongs Madel Reyes, a bubbly 31-year-old single mother of a 12-year-old girl who avidly loves to cook, and does not think twice about sharing not just her recipes, but also dishes that she whips up furtively because her Chinese employers are not inclined to eat them.

“Hilig ko po talaga magluto. Nanonood lang ako ng video sa YouTube then ginagaya ko. Patago lang ang pagluluto ko kapag wala ang amo ko, then binibigay ko sa mga kapitbahay kong maid din dito,” Madel says.

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One dish she gladly shared with her Pinay neighbors and the recipe, with her fellow DWC members, is her no-bake glutinous rice cake. The cake which she cooked in a rice cooker and was made from just six easy-to-get ingredients, became such a hit with her fellow Pinays that her post immediately garnered 1,300 likes within their secret group.

In no time, several members began doing their own versions of Madel’s sweet glutinous rice cake. Some who didn’t want it too sweet substituted coconut milk for the condensed milk, others said they used the entire eggs and not just the yolk.

Others decided to take the challenge farther by adding ube flavor, carrots, nuts and other ingredients they fancied. Many were happy with how their cake ended up, while others reported disastrous results, but happily posted their creations anyway.

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Madel was so amused by the interest generated by her easy-to-do cake that she offered to give a reward to those who could give a new twist to her recipe, and gets to show proof that their employer liked the result.

So far, there has been no taker, most likely because the helpers who made their own cake preferred to keep it for themselves.

Madel herself says she does not eat many of the dishes she cooks for herself in her free time.
“Most of the time hindi ko kinakain ang niluluto ko kasi ayaw kong tumaba pero happy ako kapag ang luto ko na pinapakain ko sa iba ay pinupuri nila,” she says.

That includes the praise and comments that have come her way since she posted her highly popular and much-copied glutinous rice cake recipe.

Here’s Madel’s recipe:


Rice-cooker cake 

Ingredients:
1 can evaporated milk
1 can condensed milk
3 tablespoon melted butter
1/2 cup of sugar (optional)
4 egg yolks
1 cup glutinous rice

Procedure:
1. Mix everything together, then strain.
2. Pour ingredients into a rice cooker.
3. Cook for about 35 minutes or more, depending on your cooker.
4. Put grated cheese on top for a yummier taste.

(Note: No need to add water as that will make your cake too soft)


Royal Bibingka 

(Ube-flavored spin-off)
By Daneth Obbania Casibang

Daneth said she decided to cook her version of the viral cake as she was feeling stressed and wanted to do something to take her mind off her problems. She thanked the one “who shared this recipe,” then added, “Hindi mo alam kung paano mo ako napasaya ngayon.”

Ingredients: 
2 cups glutinous rice flour
2 eggs
½ cup coconut milk or gata
½ can evaporated milk
½ can condensed milk
2 tbsp melted butter
4 tsp sugar
grated cheese
ube flavor (optional)

Procedure
as given by Madel


Carrot rice-cooker cake

By Jenny Vieve

Ingredients: 
1 pcs medium sized carrot
2 cups flour
1 tbsp baking powder
2 tbsps sugar (add more if you want it sweeter)
2 tbsp cooking oil (naubusan lola mo ng butter)
2 eggs
Milk (tantiya lang or according to taste)

Procedure:
1. Mix all ingredients together (make sure the batter is not watery)
2. Cook in the rice cooker for at least an hour

And.... Why not try?

Not all succeeded in replicating Madel Reyes’s rice cooker cake, but it was all a good baking lesson learned

Some of those whose efforts were worth mentioning are lined up on the right.

Among the not-so-successful, the one below still had something positive to say about the result of her effort: “... pero masarap din.”

At least, she was not disappointed enough to not try again.



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