The police on Sunday seized 142
kilos of marijuana valued at over P700,000 after the drugs were discovered by
accident at a bus station on Edsa, Quezon City.
The dried marijuana bricks which had
been packed into six large boxes were addressed to Ma. Dolores Pakay and Renato
Peralta, said Inspector Manuel Laderas, Quezon City Police District (QCPD)
Kamuning traffic sector head.
According to him, the drugs were
discovered at 9 a.m. after one of the boxes fell apart as it was being
unloaded from a Victory Liner bus that had just arrived from Tabuk City in
Kalinga province.
“Several dried leaves fell [from]
the box which made the bus terminal personnel suspicious. They discovered the
marijuana bricks when they opened the boxes,” the traffic sector chief told the
Inquirer, adding that the cargo had not been brought to Metro Manila by a
bus passenger.
Last minute addition
According to Victory bus dispatcher
Henry Marpa, the six boxes were loaded onto the bus shortly as it was leaving
the Victory Liner terminal in Kalinga.
He said that the bus conductor was
asked by a man, who had introduced himself as an employee of a shipping company
in Tabuk City, to bring the boxes to Manila where these would be picked up by
one of the persons whose names were written on the boxes. The man was charged a
fee of P200 to have the cargo transported, Marpa added.
After authorities were informed
about the find, a police team was sent to the bus terminal at the corner of Edsa
and East Avenue where for several hours, its members waited for anyone to claim
the boxes. However, no one came to pick up the drugs, the QCPD police official
said.
Senior Insp. Robert Razon, head of
the QCPD District Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operations Task Group, said it was
likely that the names on the boxes were fictitious. He said that two months
ago, the same modus operandi was used to transport marijuana on a Metro
Manila-bound bus.
Same modus operandi
“The cargo of marijuana also came
from Northern Luzon. The boxes were also marked with the name of the consignee
which was fictitious,” Razon told the Inquirer, adding that marijuana dealers
often transported their wares on passenger buses.
He said that sometimes, the illegal
drug which sells at P5,000 per kilo goes undetected by terminal employees.
“The bus companies cannot be held
criminally liable because its employees can always say that they did not know
about the illegal cargo. But they have a responsibility to make sure that their
passengers are safe by avoiding accepting cargo which has not been properly
inspected,” he added.
Razon said that an investigation was
underway to determine the group behind the transport of the illegal cargo.
By Jeannette I. Andrade / Philippine Daily Inquirer
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