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Senior superintendent Isagani Nerez working his magic, "Now you see your relative" . . . piff, "Now you don't." ...

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If you have a run-in with Isagani Nerez or his friend Nathaniel Villegas ((Two criminals wearing police uniforms)) you're gonna to need much good luck, mates!

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On this page the CIDG National Capital Region chief, Senior Superintendent Isagani Nerez is caught attempting to "Disappear" a man.

Watch him squirm on this page. He has "murdered and disappeared" many men and women!

This whoremonging man, Nerez, has for a wife one of the fattest and ugliest women in the P.I.! However to her credit she is rich because of a daddy that is a plunderer, murderer, case fixer and close to the woman Prez of their backwater country!

Isagani Nerez, chief of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) in National Capital Region is an amoral beast without a heart or any humanity!

((Jan 25 09)) We have come to discover that some of our links to news about the crimes of Isagani nerez have been taken off of the news media websites that they were originally published on. This was done by Nerez in an attempt to discredit us. From today onwards when someone sends us information we will publish the link and what is on the link!

When the murderer forces the Philipino news agency to take down the information we will already have the complete story published on these pages! How do you like that you brown M.F.?

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In our opinion Senior Superintendent Isagani Nerez, chief of the National Capital Regional Investigation and Detection Group (NCR-CIDG), is a lying, murdering, dirt-bag, twirp. A twirp is a man that quickly runs up to smell the bicycle seats of young girls who have just gotten off of their bicycles.

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Police disappearances are too common in The Philippine Islands

In the article Isagani Nerez is caught red-handed trying to make a person disappear, hide where he is from family members, the news media and human right organizations! We make a few comments in the article by Nikko Dizon and use double parenthesis to enclose and close our statements. (( .........)) We defend the rights of any person to voice freely their opinions no matter their religious affiliation!

The CHR is the "Commission on Human Rights". More people have been murdered, more news-media people have been murdered, more people tortured, and more people disappeared under the presidency of gloria Arroyo than under the dictator Ferdinand Marcos! These are the facts of life!

This story was sent to us by a friend. We took the liberty of copying the story and making comments below. If you like you can visit the original story.

Cops, soldiers make suspects untraceable
By Nikko Dizon
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 20:58:00 01/08/2009

Filed Under: Human Rights, Military, Police, Judiciary (system of justice)

MANILA, Philippines -- It appears that there is practically no way of tracing a missing person arrested by state agents because the military and police do not document custody turnovers nor do they inform the families of the suspects, an investigation by the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) showed.((The police said they do not document, but we know they do. they simply fell back on a pre planned answer in case they were caught and they were caught, indeed!))

At Thursday's public hearing to look into the five-day disappearance of activist Mohammad Diya Hamja in 2008, CHR chair Leila de Lima said the lack of proper documentation for arrests and turnovers could lead to cases of enforced disappearances.

Had it not been for Hamja's sandal, which his son Ahmad saw by chance inside an office in Camp Crame, he might not have been found.

Police said Hamja was turned over to their custody by the Naval Intelligence and Security Force (NISF) on December 2 after he was arrested in a joint military and police operation last November 28 in Maharlika Village in Taguig City.

Police Senior Superintendent Isagani Nerez, chief of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group-National Capital Region (CIDG) office, testified that Hamja was a suspected "terrorist" and alleged member of the Abu Sayyaf group facing a string of kidnapping charges in Basilan.

Hamja's family reported him as missing and later sought the help of the CHR and the human rights group Karapatan (Alliance for the Advancement of People's Rights) after he was forcibly taken by armed men while on his way home after praying at the Blue Mosque.

An earlier Karapatan report described Hamja, who is in his late 40s, as a "human rights defender" and member of Hustisya!, an organization of relatives and human rights victims under the Arroyo administration, and the Moro Christian People's Alliance (MCPA).

According to Karapatan, Hamja advocated human rights issues after he was wrongfully charged by authorities of being an Abu Sayyaf member involved in the high profile kidnapping cases, including the Dos Palmas kidnappings.

He was detained for four years at Camp Bagong Diwa after the case was dismissed because, according to De Lima, none of some 60 witnesses presented by prosecutors identified Hamja as their kidnapper.

On Thursday, Isagani Nerez said Hamja's arrest was legal as the operatives had a warrant issued by a trial court judge in Basilan after he was charged with new with kidnapping cases, something De Lima said the CHR would have to verify with the Basilan courts.

However, Isagani Nerez admitted that his office did not have any documentary proof that Hamja was turned over by the NISF to the CIDG-NCR.

Isagani Nerez, also a lawyer, surmised that one of his officers received a phone call from the NISF that it would be turning over Hamja to the CIDG-NCR.

"What kind of system are we dealing with here? I'm sorry to say that we find it appalling. We wouldn't know how many cases there are of suspects turned over with no proper documentation...No wonder we are unable to locate many of the disappeared," De Lima said at the hearing, as CHR commissioners Ma. Victoria Cardona and Norberto de la Cruz shook their heads in disbelief.

De Lima described Hamja's turnover as a "lapse in procedure" as indicated in the Philippine National Police rules of engagement.

She further told Nerez: "We hope you understand that we are voicing out our frustration. We have many cases of the disappeared. If they [Hamja's family] did not approach the CHR, who knows what might have happened to him? We are not saying that you planned to do something to him but that opens the door to this [enforced disappearance]."

Nerez replied: "I fully understand your reaction. It was never our intention to do violate the rights of Mr. Hamja and make him disappear that's why we made a report to our superiors informing them of his arrest."

Nonetheless, Isagani Nerez agreed with the CHR en banc that the procedure being followed by the police and the military when it came to turning over custody of suspects should be reviewed and improved.

Cardona told Nerez: "This is not just for the protection of the victims but also for the protection of police officers. You have to be very careful with the procedures because a victim can also accuse you of human rights violations even if you didn't do anything to him."

The CHR also ordered the CIDG to present Hamjas at Thursday's hearing so he can testify on what happened to him during his detention but was told that Hamjas had been turned over to the Basilan Provincial Jail shortly before Christmas by virtue of a commitment order from the judge.

The police did not inform Hamjas' family or the CHR of the transfer, but presented on Thursday the documents to the CHR en banc.

Ahmad Hamja said he, along with Karapatan, looked for his father at the Southern Police District Office, the Taguig City jail, the PNP Custodial Center, and in the Police Anti-Crime Emergency Response (PACER) office in Camp Crame.

It was only on December 4 that Ahmad and the CHR team found him by chance in Camp Crame, at the office of superintendent Wilfredo Sy of the CIDG-NCR operations group.((This horses' ass has a face that looks like warmed-over turds. He is a ruthless and completely amoral person just as Isagani Nerez is. CIDG policeman, Wilfredo Sy has been on our radar before and has been involved in more than one money anomalies, which means to say, he is a thief of taxpayers monies.))

Sy testified that he was part of the joint operating team that arrested Hamja on November 28.

((The torture of a person who does not agree with the President's ways of arrests, disappearances, torture and murder of people who voice their opinions))

"I saw a sandal on the floor and I immediately recognized it as my father's. And then I saw him. I became hysterical because he was so thin, his eyes were very red, and he had bruises all over his body. When I tried to embrace him, I felt a bump on his back. He said it hurt," Ahmad recounted in Filipino as he broke down in tears.

Ahmad said his father told him that after he was forcibly taken by men he did not know, he was blindfolded, beaten up, and subjected to electric shocks. Somebody also hit him with a steel bar on the back.

His father, Ahmad said, did not know who beat him up because he was blindfolded all throughout and was unaware where he was. Hamjas had also lost track of time, according to Ahmad.

"The little towel that he used whenever he prayed at the mosque was already torn because my father said it was also used during the torture," Ahmad said.

Dr. Joseph Andrew Jimenez of the CHR forensic division testified that he examined Hamja and discovered that the blood vessels in his eyes had ruptured and he had contusions and abrasions near his throat, both wrists, and behind his right ear. The doctor also found a wound on Hamjas' right ear.

"[Hamja] said he was tightly blindfolded and that tape was applied over the blindfold. He was blindfolded from the time of his arrest and it was removed only while on the way to CIDG. He also had a bruise on his back and said he could have fallen while handcuffed to the chair," Jimenez said.

Jimenez added that Hamja told him he was made to sit on a bench with his hands cuffed while he was being interrogated.

CIDG-National Capital Region chief Senior Superintendent Isagani Nerez stressed that Hamja was turned over by the NISF bruised and wounded. He also acknowledged that "we failed to submit Hamja to a medical examination" but gave him some medicine.

Isagani Nerez said Hamjas was examined by a doctor before he was turned over by the CIDG to the PNP Custodial Center. He recalled that he had to convince the PNP Custodial Center to take in Hamja during the Christmas break because the CIDG did not have a proper detention facility.

De Lima said the CHR would set another public hearing and would request the Basilan judge to allow Hamjas to testify.

She added that team leaders of the arresting team and custodians of Hamjas from the NISF, the CIDG-NCR, the Naval Intelligence Security Group-NCR, and the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) to appear in the next hearing. ((National Intelligence Coordinating Agency was founded by the American Central Intelligence Agency in the late 1950s. It is often referred to as NICA and has basically ended up being a spy organization that the party in power uses to spy on their opposition.))

Isagani Nerez later told reporters that "in reality," suspects have been frequently turned over by the military to the police (and vice versa) but stressed that the state agents have been working together "for the common good." ((Sure, you lying S.O.B.))

((Isagani Nerez also said,)) "We are also fighting for the rights of victims to find justice. We turned him [Hamjas] over to the Basilan jail because the wheels of justice must go on. That's part of the effort why we are here, to give justice to the victims," he said. ((You lying motherf$$er))

Isagani Nerez also defended the blindfolding of a suspect like Hamjas as a way to prevent him escaping.((And so he could not identify who beat him too, eh?))

He said authorities were not obliged to inform the families of suspects of their arrests. He stressed their arrests were covered by valid arrest warrants issued by the courts. ((So if we understand this correctly, you have a man in custody and do not want anyone to know where he is, right?))

But De Lima, in a separate interview, said that authorities should remember to properly follow arrest and custodial turnover procedures.

"These are people we are talking about, not merchandise," de Lima said.

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We may be contacted if you have information you want to have placed here. We may be a few days late in answering you.

We are interested in you typing up your story of how the police, judges and attorneys extorted or planted anything incriminating on or made up crimes against you.

We want you to send photographs of criminals and/or criminal activities, affidavits and such.

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NEWS DATE


"Disappearing people" under orders from CIDG-National Capital Region head, Senior Superintendent Isagani Nerez

Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (C.I.D.G.) A police group that are to perform certain duties, but often used to disappear people and whose leaders demand monies from criminal ops run by the group to be shared and passed up the line to the leadership!

The CIDG was formerly called "CIS" until the CIS gained such a bad name for torture and human disappearances. they simply kept the same old dog, but gave him a new name, C.I.D.G.!



NEWS DATE

((Mar 5 09)) The Baguio drug pimp, senior superintendent Isagani Nerez is assigned to an area the murder rate always skyrockets. Same when he was moved into Pangasinan province. ReD ON,

In another front, the PNP in Pangasinan seems to be getting the unlucky breaks of late. Tough luck indeed for Police Provincial Director Isagani Nerez as killings remain unabated and occurring with deadly frequency even in hitherto "peaceful, remote" areas like Agno.

Saturday evening, during a heavy downpour, Mayor Arthur Cabantac, Jr. of that idyllic western Pangasinan town was killed right in the poblacion by the familiar "still unknown killers." He joins the mourned ranks of local executives that include mayors, vice mayors, councilors and barangay officials who met violent deaths in the hands of hired killers and whose souls are still seeking justice in their graves.

As always, Isagani Raquinio Nerez has formed a task force to go after the killers of Cabantac. With so many task forces already formed for every high-profile murder committed in the province, some people are concerned the PNP might run out of officers to assign for each new killing.

Some are even wondering, as in the case of San Carlos City mayor Julier 'Ayoy" Resuello, whose own father, the late beloved former mayor Julian "Jolly" Resuello was killed by hired guns, if these police task forces are "co-terminus" with each new tropical depression that passes thru Pangasinan - all sound and fury at first but dissipating after several hours.

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