Sure ka bay.. kay ang akong nahibaw.an c echagaray raman. pwedi ka ka name names kung kinsa kinsa nang gipang electricute ud na lethal injection dris Pilipinas kay basin wa nku kaabot nana kay aFAIK wa kalapas sa number sa aqong tudlo ang nasulod sa death row... ECHAGARAY ra jud aq nahibaw.an basin dagahan kag nabaw.an
Kani bay oh! basaha unya IPHA pila kabook ang napatay nas CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
Ato nlng sad iapil ang panahon ni MARCOS...
ingon ka 120+ na ha .. dara oh
The Marcos Years (1965-1986)
“Deterrence” became the official justification for the imposition of the death penalty. This is the same justification used for the declaration of Martial Law in 1972.
The number of capital crimes increased to a total of 24. Some crimes which were made punishable by death through laws and decrees during the Marcos period were subversion, possession of firearms, arson, hijacking, embezzlement, drug-related offenses, unlawful possession of firearms, illegal fishing and cattle rustling.
Jaime Jose, Basilio Pineda, and Edgardo Aquino were executed for the gang rape of movie star Maggie dela Riva in 1972. Despite prohibitions against public executions, the execution of the three was done in full view of the public.
Nineteen executions took place during the Pre-Martial Law period. Twelve were executed during Martial Law.
Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. was sentenced to die by firing squad for charges of murder, subversion and illegal possession of firearm in 1977.
The last judicial execution under the Marcos years was in October 1976 when Marcelo San Jose was executed by electrocution.
Similar to the reasons for the imposition of capital punishment during the Colonial Periods, the death penalty during the Marcos Regime was imposed to quell rebellion and social unrest.
President Corazon Cojuangco Aquino (1986-1992)
The Death Penalty was “abolished” under the 1987 Constitution.
The Philippines became the first Asian country to abolish the death penalty for all crimes.
All death sentences were reduced to reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment.
In 1988, the military started lobbying for the imposition of the death penalty for crimes committed by the CPP-NPA.
President Fidel Valdez Ramos (1993-199
A series of high profile crimes during this period, including the murder of Eileen Sarmenta and Allan Gomez, created public impression that heinous crimes were on the rise.
The Ramos administration reimposed the death penalty by virtue of Republic Act No. 7659 in December 1993 to address the rising criminality and incidence of heinous crimes.
The Death Penalty Law lists a total of 46 crimes punishable by death; 25 of these are death mandatory while 21 are death eligible.
Republic Act No. 8177 mandates that a death sentence shall be carried out through lethal injection.
President Joseph Ejercito Estrada (1998-2001)
Leo Echegaray was executed in February 1999 and was followed by six other executions for various heinous crimes.
In 1999, the bumper year for executions, the national crime volume, instead of abating, ironically increased by 15.3 percent or a total of 82,538 (from 71,527 crimes in the previous year).
Estrada issued a de facto moratorium on executions in the face of church-led campaigns to abolish the death penalty and in observance of the Jubilee Year.
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (2001-present)
Arroyo publicly stated that she is not in favor of executions.
Due to the rise in crimes related to drugs and kidnappings that targeted the Filipino-Chinese community, she announced that she would resume executions “to sow fear into the hearts of criminals.”
Arroyo lifted the de facto moratorium issued by Estrada on December 5, 2003.
Even as executions were set to resume on January 2004, this did not push through by virtue of a Supreme Court decision to reopen the Lara-Licayan case.
Since then, the administration has been issuing reprieves on scheduled executions without actually issuing a moratorium.
With the amendment of Republic Act No. 8353 (Anti-Rape Law of 1997) and Republic Act No. 9165 (Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs act of 2002), there are now 52 capital offenses, 30 of which are death mandatory and 22 are death eligible.
Ayaw nag iapil tong during WW2.. ug ang MARTIAL LAW time kay chaotic kaayu ang pinas adto tungod sa DICTATORSHIP ug sobra rasad ang patakaran adto. mao MAG ihap ka starting from CORY's admin to present
Mao nang bisag kanus.a di jud q mutoo aning @cliff_drew cguro lider nis syndicato ang anemel
Ang death penalty sa Pilipinas kay nagsugod panahon pa sa mga Espanyol.
Spanish Period (1521-1898 ) - 46 executions which include Magat Salamat (1587), 3 clergies known as GomBurZa (1872) and Dr. Jose Rizal (1896)
American Period (1898-1934) - Macario Sakay and company; executed by public hanging
Japanese Occupation (1941-1945) - no recorded executions
Post-World War II - 35 executions which includes Julio Gullien, Marcial "Baby" Ama (1961)
Marcos Years (1965-1986) -
> Pre-Martial Law - 19 executions which include Jaime Jose, Basilio Pineda, and Edgardo Aquino (for the gang rape of movie star Maggie dela Riva)
> Under Martial Law - 12 executions which includes Marcelo San Jose (1976)
President Corazon Cojuangco Aquino (1986-1992) - no executions; death penalty was abolished under the 1987 constitution. All death sentences were reduced to reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment.
President Fidel Valdez Ramos (1993-1998 ) - reimposed death penalty but no actual executions
President Joseph Ejercito Estrada (1998-2001) - 7 executions which include Leo Echegaray (1999)
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (2001-2010) - no executions; death was repealed (2006)
Pilipinas man kaha ato giistoryahan. Masuko man diay iapil prior WW2. LOL
Paghuwat oi. LOL
Last edited by cliff_drew; 07-10-2014 at 10:46 PM.
hahahaha c'mon @cliff_drew imung apilon tong panahon sa TABONMAN ug CRO-MAGNON, AETAS ug NEGRITOS? iapil nlng sad si HESU CRISTO kay gi death penalty man sad to xa?
hahahaha walay utok ang buang... BUGOA jud uy!
naa nata gapuyos saktong civilisasyon... hahay! bahala ka uy! pangita didtog kaistorya nga magkasinabot mu or kanang SCHOOLMATE nimu kay para parehas ug LEVEL sa imung PANGUTOK
Hahaha. Ngita man kag statistics, i quote nato balik ha
unya dili iapil ang spanish period to present? LOL
Post2 kag history sa death penalty sa Pilipinas unya masuko diay kung apilon nako sa akong reply. Panahon ni Hesu Cristo, apil nas history sa Pilipinas? LOL nimo @mang kulas este @timoyans
120+ kay niagi nag proseso korte ang nihukom ana. okay @timoyans ?
Last edited by cliff_drew; 07-10-2014 at 11:14 PM.
Paeta di jud ko ka get-over sa iyang reply.. di q kaimagine naay taw ug ingon anig pangutok...
1)Spanish Period (1521-1898 )American Period (1898-1934)Japanese Occupation,Post-World War II
nka fix na ba ang Gobyerno sa pilipinas ana? pag chure kinsa man ang nag kupot sa gobyerno ana diba SPANISH, AMERICAN, JAPANESE?
2) wala pay sa presidente,senador,congressman Mayor ug wa pasay NAPOLES anang panahona.
3)Gubat nang panahona. so halos kada oras naay pinatyanay
4)Wala pay Philippine constitution anang panahona buradz
5) wala pay NBI, PNP,AFP,DOJ anang Panahona
Yay! pasayloa tawn q Lucifer!!!! di matabang ning tawhana.. mabuang kog imagine nganung naay pangutok na ning exist nga ingon ani
kana ha aq na gi usa usa nimu, dapat sa Grade 1 raman na dapat iexplain nganung way labot ang prior sa Marcos Administration
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Ug si kinsa man sad nas noykulas? @cliffdrew?
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