TUESDAY, April 16, 2024
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Marcos corruption verdict proves there’s still life in the law

Marcos corruption verdict proves there’s still life in the law

Filipinos who fought the Marcos regime and rejoiced over its overthrow in 1986 will surely welcome Imelda Marcos’s conviction for corruption and order she serve time behind bars.

They have waited a long time for this. Despite repeated disappointments over the failure of our legal system to deliver a clear judgement on the numerous cases filed against the Marcoses, Friday’s decision affirms the moral and political verdict that had long been passed on the Marcos regime.
Still, many have greeted the ruling with great reservation, if not scepticism. They know that the decision will be promptly appealed – that Marcos’s battery of well-paid lawyers will exhaust all avenues in the winding maze of litigation to secure a reversal of the decision. In a previous case, her lawyers did succeed in persuading the Supreme Court to reverse a court ruling.
The final resolution of these cases could be quick, or it could take another decade.
In the meantime, the durable 89-year-old Imelda – former first lady and former minister in her husband’s regime, incumbent Ilocos Norte representative, and candidate for Ilocos governor in the 2019 elections – need not spend a single day in prison. She will be allowed to post bail. And while the court ruling is being appealed, she will almost certainly continue her candidacy, win, and assume the governorship presently held by her daughter Imee. As though nothing happened.
Even if the Supreme Court affirms her conviction within the next three years, President Rodrigo Duterte, whose election campaign was financed with Marcos money, can be relied upon to grant her a pardon – for “humanitarian reasons” in view of her advanced age, or in consideration of her family’s “service” to the nation.
Because this turn of events has occurred many times before, it has eroded – though not erased – our belief in the courts as dispensers of justice.  Yet, while public officials seem to do it almost as a matter of routine, no one will say that stealing from the public coffers is okay. Many in government service brazenly did so not too long ago with the expert assistance of disgraced businesswoman Janet Lim Napoles, secure in the thought that no one really cared. But the law, with its long memory and prospective orientation, eventually caught up with them.
If not perfect justice, our legal system does maintain normative expectations across changing mores and practices in society.
In truth, people (and that includes lawyers and judges) will always have differing notions of what justice entails in every given case. What’s important is the consistency that the legal system aspires to achieve and express when it defines what is legal and illegal across countless cases. If we can learn to see Friday’s ruling in this light, perhaps we would not be so cynical.
It is this legal normativity that we refer to when we say that ours is a government of laws and not of men. This is the normative bedrock on which all the other domains of society depend when their engagement with the rest of society requires specifying the boundaries of legal rights and obligations. Without this bedrock, political rule would be arbitrary, economic transactions would be purely private agreements, schools and teachers would teach and treat their students as they please, religious preachers and the clergy would have total freedom over their congregations, and husbands could do anything they want to their wives and offspring, etc.
Law serves this function best when it is autonomous from all the other domains of society – that is to say, when its code and its operations are not directed from outside. The word “autopoietic” – meaning self-creating and self-reproducing – might be a better term to use to describe this ideal.
To be sure, we may expect political leaders and business groups to try to influence legal interpretation. This poses no real problem so long as it is done using the language of the law and within the parameters of legal procedure. For then, it can be countered within the system, using the same vocabulary, procedures and jurisprudence. It is another matter when court decisions are ignored or set aside capriciously, judges are strong-armed or intimidated, or bought, or, worse, killed.
The creation of a just society is, in the last analysis, the task of politics. We cannot expect the courts to do for us what we ourselves cannot summon enough memory and will to pursue in the realm of politics. And that is: to actively participate in crafting or protesting the policies that affect us all, to choose leaders who can best represent our people’s highest aspirations, and to persist in holding these officials answerable for the actions they take in our name.
We are thankful to the government prosecutors who pursued the cases against the Marcoses after all these years – cases that were filed long before many of these young lawyers had even entered law school. The legal system bound them to their duty, and they delivered. Present and future leaders are thus forewarned: The law doesn’t forget.

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