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Phone calls made on behalf of Batoyan PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Sunday, 26 April 2009 00:00
ON the second day of the bench trial against former Carl T.C. Gutierrez and former Guam Memorial Hospital administrator Dr. Davina Lujan, the court heard the history of processing of checks issued to Dr. Vivien Batoyan.
Last Updated on Sunday, 26 April 2009 14:26
 
Cover over actually $41.6M PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 11 July 2009 13:49
Only $17.2M was declared

The CNMI government actually received $41.6 million in cover over tax payment in Fiscal Year 2008, but the Fitial administration declared only $17.2 million, according to two House leaders.
“The question is, what happened to the rest of the money? This might potentially be an abuse of appropriation of public funds,” House Speaker Arnold I. Palacios told Saipan Tribune.

“I'm not saying there is foul play and whether something illegal was conducted. But the Legislature has been kept in the dark,” added House Ways and Means Committee chair Rep. Ray Yumul.

Press secretary Charles Reyes Jr. explained yesterday that, according to law, the amount must be returned to the rebate trust account.

“By law, these funds are not subject to appropriation. We received money that went into the rebate trust, according to 4 CMC section 17-14, the special rebate trust account,” Reyes said.

Yumul showed an audit report conducted by Deloitte and Touche for the year ending Sept. 30, 2008, which showed that the CNMI government received $41,611,260 in cover over funds.

Palacios said the issue needs some explanation as the Fitial administration has been saying all along that the $17.2 million that the Department of Finance received from the U.S. Treasury as final settlement on a longstanding cover-over issue saved the government from a deficit in FY 2008.

“Throughout that process, the chairman of Ways and Means.has been asking, 'Are you sure this is the total and you have to officially declare it,'” Palacios said.

“If the audit is saying or the record shows the cover over is $41 million for 2008 and only $17 million was declared, that's a lot of [difference],” the speaker said.

Palacios said House members have to discuss the issue with their legal counsel.

“In the midst of all this, during this fiscal year, the administration was trying to force the Legislature to choke or strangle the employees by declaring a 72-hour austerity.


With potentially $24 million somewhere, what the hell are we talking about here?” Palacios said.

Yumul said he double-checked the Deloitte report for FY 2007 and it showed no cover over funds received for that period.

Yumul said Gov. Beningo Fitial had informed the Legislature in December 2008 about receiving $17.2 million as a one-time payment of cover over taxes. However, the governor never updated the Legislature about any final payment of $41 million, he said, nor did then Finance Secretary Eloy Inos notify the Legislature about the actual payment received from the U.S. Treasury.

“How do you explain this claim of $17.2 million in the cover over but then the actual audit shows that $41 million came in. That's a big difference. Why did they choose to keep the information to themselves and it's only revealed through the audit?” Yumul said. (Saipantribune)

 
'History' of family violence: Police believe man killed girlfriend, teen PDF Print E-mail
Written by Guam PDN   
Saturday, 04 July 2009 14:25

<B>Family matters:</B> Family members gather yesterday at the backyard of the Dededo house where police found three dead bodies on Thursday. Police have classified the deaths as a The Dededo couple involved in what police now classify as a "double homicide-suicide" had a record of domestic violence during their relationship, according to the Guam Police Department.

GPD spokesman Officer Allan Guzman said in a news release yesterday that Anthony Blas Miner, 39, and his girlfriend, Rachel D. Babauta, 30, had "a long history of documented and unreported family violence."

Their bodies, along with that of Babauta's 13-year-old daughter, Teresita G. Chiguina, were found at their residence on Wusstig Road in Dededo Thursday morning.

It was the first and second homicide cases this year.

According to Guzman, police believe Miner killed Babauta and her daughter before turning on himself.

Guam Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Aurelio Espinola, who performed the autopsies on the body, said Thursday that Miner struck Babauta and the girl with a baseball bat before committing suicide by slitting his left wrist.

Yesterday, Espinola said Babauta and Chiguina may have died late afternoon or early evening of Wednesday. The two victims died of blunt force trauma to the head.

Miner died hours later, Espinola said.

The investigation began after police patrol officers and Guam Fire Department personnel responded to a phone call of an injured person at the Dededo home, Guzman said in the release. The responding officers found the three bodies in a bedroom of the house.

Investigators and forensic experts also responded to the scene. Family members, friends and acquaintances were interviewed throughout Thursday.

Guzman said the case is expected to be closed within the next couple of days.

According to Pacific Daily News files, Miner was arrested three years ago in connection with a disturbance at Micronesia Mall and illegal drug charges.

Family violence

The Dededo deaths shed light on family violence cases in Guam, many of which continue to go unreported, said Vangie Cavacar of Victim Advocates Reaching Out.

VARO is a nonprofit organization that provides crime victims with free and confidential services, including counseling, food, shelter, clothing, transportation and access to legal services.
 


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