The legal counsel of former president Rodrigo Duterte denied that his client participated in destroying the evidence related to his brutal war on drugs campaign despite claims made by Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla.
Duterte had no hand in destroying drug war evidence—counsel
Former president Rodrigo Duterte and his lead counsel Nicholas Kaufman (Screengrab from ICC, ABS-CBN News videos)
In an interview, lawyer Nicholas Kaufman reiterated that the former president “had nothing to do” with claims that drug war evidence was destroyed.
“What I do know is that my client, Mr. Duterte, had nothing to do with destroying any evidence. Destroying evidence is a criminal offense. It was not done, and it was not done at his request on behalf of him. Let me make that very clear,” he said in a video posted on the Alvin & Tourism Facebook page.
Stressing that he doesn’t believe such claims, Kaufman refused to give details on the evidence presented by the prosecutor before the International Criminal Court (ICC), where the former chief executive will be tried for charges of crimes against humanity of murder for the thousands of extrajudicial killings during his administration.
“The former President did not destroy any evidence. No one on his behalf destroyed evidence. I'm not going to get into the argument as to who destroyed evidence, but destroying evidence is a criminal offense. My client did not commit criminal offenses,” the lawyer said.
“He's here facing charges that he did commit criminal offenses, that he was responsible for an illegal drug sale. That is not the case,” he added.
Last week, Remulla claimed that the government decided not to pursue the drug case against the former president and allowed the ICC to take over because “everything that could be erased was erased so that the cases would not push through.”
But despite these claims, the ICC Prosecutor has disclosed an additional 1,062 pieces of evidence to be considered for Duterte’s case. The evidence that will be used in the former chief executive’s trial has reached more than 100,000 items, including written testimonials and video recordings.
The former president has been detained in The Hague, Netherlands since March 12, a day after he was arrested in the Philippines on March 11.
He will face the ICC’s Pre-Trial Chamber I on Sept. 23 for the confirmation of charges, but his defense team has also filed a jurisdiction challenge and an application for interim release in hopes of his complete or temporary freedom from detention.