Shabu probe: Customs officer got ‘commission’ for magnetic lifter shipment

Rambo Talabong

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Shabu probe: Customs officer got ‘commission’ for magnetic lifter shipment

Rappler.com

(UPDATED) Customs intel officer Jimmy Guban admits receiving at least P10,000 in looking for the consignee-for-hire which received the magnetic lifters allegedly packed with one ton of shabu

MANILA, Philippines (UPDATED)  – Jimmy Guban, the embattled Bureau of Customs (BOC) intelligence officer in the search for the missing P6.8-billion shabu (methamphetamine), admitted on Thursday, September 27, that he accepted money to get SMYD Trading as a consignee-for-hire.

SMYD Trading was later used as the consignee to receive the shipment containing 4 magnetic lifters, which were allegedly used to be packed with the missing one ton of shabu. (TIMELINE: The search for P6.8-B shabu ‘smuggled’ into PH)

How did he admit? Under oath and before congressmen from the House of Representatives committee on dangerous drugs and committee on good government, Guban said he accepted P10,000-15,000 from dismissed policeman Eduardo Acierto for getting SMYD Trading to accept the shipment.

He said Acierto – then a police Senior Superintendent – this year asked him to look for a consignee and he obliged.

Guban claimed Acierto said it was for an “intelligence operation.”

Guban’s trust to Acierto Guban and Acierto go way back. They worked together in anti-drug operations when Acierto was still an active anti-drug cop with the Philippine National Police.

Acierto was a no-show in the shabu probe on Wednesday, despite the invitation of the committees.

Regular at Customs? Guban asserted that it was only “normal” for Customs employees to look for a consignee for people outside the bureau. As pointed out by congressmen in the hearing, it was “unusual”, even prohibited.

The money he accepted, Guban said, was just “commission” for his “personal” expenditure. He said he was just telling the “truth” when lawmakers questioned his action. – Rappler.com

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Rambo Talabong

Rambo Talabong covers the House of Representatives and local governments for Rappler. Prior to this, he covered security and crime. He was named Jaime V. Ongpin Fellow in 2019 for his reporting on President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs. In 2021, he was selected as a journalism fellow by the Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics.