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Forensic DNA evidence and the death penalty in the Philippines
Authors:MCA De Ungria  MS Sagum  GC Calacal  FC Delfin  KA Tabbada  MRM Dalet  TO Te  JI Diokno  MSI Diokno  CA Asplen
Institution:aDNA Analysis Laboratory, Natural Sciences Research Institute, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines;bFree Legal Assistance Group, Cabrera II Building, Timog Avenue, Quezon City, Philippines;cCollege of Law, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines;dGordon Thomas Honeywell Governmental Affairs, 122 C Street NW Suite 220 Washington, DC, USA
Abstract:The death penalty remains a contentious issue even though it has been abolished in countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Canada, European Union member nations and some Asian countries such as Cambodia, East Timor and Nepal. Many argue that the irrevocability of the death penalty, in the face of potential erroneous convictions, can never justify its imposition. The Philippines, the first Asian country that abolished the death penalty in 1987, held the record for the most number of mandatory death offenses (30 offenses) and death eligible offenses (22 offenses) after it was re-imposed in 1994. Majority of death penalty convictions were decided based on testimonial evidence. While such cases undergo automatic review by the Supreme Court, the appellate process in the Philippines is not structured to accept post-conviction evidence, including DNA evidence.Because of the compelling nature of post-conviction DNA evidence in overturning death penalty convictions in the United States, different groups advocated its use in the Philippines. In one such case, People v Reynaldo de Villa, the defendant was charged with raping his 13-year-old niece that supposedly led to birth of a female child, a situation commonly known as ‘criminal paternity’. This paper reports the results of the first post-conviction DNA test using 16 Short Tandem Repeat (STR) DNA markers in a criminal paternity case (People v Reynaldo de Villa) and discusses the implications of these results in the Philippine criminal justice system.
Keywords:DNA  Death penalty  Post-conviction  Criminal paternity  STR
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