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Pinay denied bail for alleged peanuts theft

Posted on 10 September 2019 No comments
No bail for Pinay accused of stealing peanuts, says Eastern court magistrate

A Filipina accused of stealing a can of roasted peanuts worth about $150 in a shop in North Point has been refused bail by a magistrate in Eastern Court.

The accused, Estrellita Lo, appeared on Tuesday, Sept 10, before Magistrate Bina Chainrai to apply for bail for her provisional release, but the prosecution opposed the defendant’s request.
The defense lawyer said the defendant was offering to put up bail of $1,000 and abide by the court’s bail conditions.  He said the defendant’s offense was simply taking a can of peanuts from the shop.

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No other details of the case were mentioned in court. But the prosecution said further investigation was ongoing and sought a four-week adjournment of the case.
Chainrai adjourned the case until Oct 15. In the meantime, she ordered Lo remanded in custody, saying her bail application had been refused because of the nature of her offense.

But she said the defendant can still apply for bail in the High Court. – Vir B. Lumicao
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Filipina whose cause of death remains unknown to be flown home Sept 13

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Image may contain: 1 person, standing
Only an autopsy could shed light on
why Mylin died


Mylin Delizo, one of three Filipino domestic workers who died last month, will be flown home on Sept 13, as her relatives anxiously await an autopsy report that could pinpoint the cause of her death.

Danny Baldon of the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section said the 48-year-old Delizo’s remains were autopsied on Friday, Sept 6, after her relatives sent a letter-request the coroner’s office.

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Baldon also informed Delizo’s nephew, Jonathan, that the deceased’s employers would be shipping her remains to Manila aboard a Cebu Pacific flight.

Jonathan and Delizo’s estranged husband, Michael Ramos, will fetch the casket at the Clark International Airport. 


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Baldon and welfare officer Virsie Tamayao of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration initially met with the helper’s employers at the Consulate but failed to get any more information that could shed light on why she died.

Delizo’s employers for the past seven years said they found her dead in the living room of their Lai Chi Kok flat around 7am on Aug 19 as they were about to go to work.
They reportedly tried to rouse Delizo but that she was no longer breathing. They dialed 999 and responding officers called an ambulance that took her body to a public mortuary.

They in turn called ATN to report the death, and also found a way to inform her relatives by calling the last dialed number in her mobile phone. The number belonged to her niece in Singapore.

Nobody could say for sure if Delizo had suffered from any health problems.

Delizo was the third Filipina domestic worker to have died in Hong Kong within 10 days in August.

On Aug 12, Milagrosa M. Aligaen, 63, who had worked in Hong Kong for 29 years, was found dead on her bed in her employer’s house in Shaukeiwan, apparently due to heatstroke.

On Aug 22, Imelda Bartolome, 50, who worked in Mei Foo, died in hospital of a heart attack. She came from Naguilian, Isabela.

Delizo came to Hong Kong in 1998 and had been supporting her mother, said her nephew. She was married but had no children.  Vir B. Lumicao
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Pinoy tourist in US$943 billion fake deposit scam pleads not guilty

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District Court

By Vir B.Lumicao
 
An elderly Filipino tourist insisted to see HSBC’s regional head after being told a deposit slip for US$943 billion that he and an unidentified accomplice had presented was fake. But they left hurriedly when they heard police were coming.
 
This was revealed by the first witness in the three-day trial of Brudencio J. Bolaños which got underway in District Court in Wanchai on Sept 9.
 
Bolaños, 62, pleaded not guilty to a charge of using a false instrument before Judge Stanley Chan.

The first witness against him was identified as as HSBC bank executive Cheung Wan-yuet.
 
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Bolaños was arrested on Apr 9, 2018 after he and his companion went to the fifth-floor counters of the HSBC head offices on 1 Queensway, Central, and presented to staff the deposit slip purportedly issued by the bank on Jul 25, 1983

Cheung said she invited Bolaños and his unidentified companion, who she said looked like a Malaysian and spoke Cantonese and English, to the interview room after the counter staff passed the spurious document to her.
 
When told the deposit slip was fake, the defendant allegedly insisted he talk to the regional head of global banking, a certain Ms Chen, who, he said, was “more knowledgeable and capable” than Cheung.
 
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But when the two men heard the police were coming, they left the room and headed for the lower floors. Cheung said she told the officers the man with the fake document was already on the fourth floor. The police collared Bolaños but his companion escaped.
 
Judge Chan was visibly disappointed at the first prosecution witness, saying the bank executive was “able to give only few details of the case” as she was mostly replying “Sorry, I can’t remember” or “I am not sure.”
 
When Judge Chan queried whether she asked the two men for their name cards, she replied “No.” 


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But, when asked about whether she asked for their passports, she said, “Yes. Both of them.” Asked if she photocopied the passports, she said “No.”
 
Defense counsel Elizabeth Herbert asked Cheung only one question, if she asked Bolaños what the documents were. The defendant reportedly answered that the deposit slip was given by his mother to him after depositing the money in his account.
 
Cheung said the bank’s records showed Bolaños had no HSBC account.
 
The second witness, officer Deng Tsz-teng, said when he arrested Bolaños, the defendant had 10,000 Japanese yen and PhP240.25 in his possession. The defendant had no mobile phone and was in a black business suit and a blue shirt.
 
The officer said he did not handcuff the defendant.
 
Judge Chan adjourned the trial until Sept 11 when told by the prosecutor that his third witness, government psychiatrist Dr Chan, was on a holiday and would be available only on that day. The court will also hear an HSBC document expert’s report.
 
In the meantime, Bolaños was remanded in custody.
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Protests play havoc with LET review classes

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 By Vir B. Lumicao

Overseas Filipino workers who are registered to take the licensure examination for teachers on Sept 29 are seeing their preparations for the big day being disrupted by the mass protests rocking the city.
 
This year, 467 education graduates have registered to take the exam. Of these 237 are taking the elementary-level, and 230 the secondary-level, test.
Gemma A. Lauraya
 
According to Gemma A. Lauraya, president of the National Organization of Professional Teachers in Hong Kong, the final review of Dr. Carl Balita had to be cut short to allow the reviewees to go home early and avoid getting caught in protest-related violence. 

“Sometimes we needed to cut short or dismiss our classes earlier so reviewees can go home safely,” Lauraya said via messenger.

In addition, many of those who registered were either absent or could attend only part of the sessions.


“Some were not allowed to leave by their employers for safety reasons, others were allowed to go out only for half a day,” Lauraya said.
 
She said the reviewees are also distracted by the protests when they are outside.

Four NOPT-arranged revew sessions have been held. All of the August classes were shortened, and one replaced with a virtual session.


“Generally, maayos naman ang review kaya lang may mga times na nagkaroon kami ng virtual o online class thru Facebook because of the unrest,” Lauraya said.
 
That meant double time in reviewing because the exam date is approaching, she added.
 
Lauraya said the reviewees have online accounts with the Carl Balita Review Centre where they can answer drill tests and exercises online.
 

The Philippine Overseas Labor Office is coordinating the holding of the LET in Hong Kong with the Professional Regulation Commission as part of the government’s SPIMS or “Sa Pinas Ikaw ang Ma’am, Sir” program.
 
SPIMS aims to attract back teachers who had gone abroad to work as domestic helpers to fill the tens of thousands of vacancies in the public school system, mostly created by the country’s shift to the K-12 program.
 
With the exam just days away, another problem looms: the chosen venue, the Delia Memorial School-Hip Wo in Kwuntong has yet to confirm its availability.

The school was chosen as the venue for the previous two LET exams because of its adequate facilities. Previously they were held at the Bayanihan Centre in Kennedy Town. 
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