Chiong murder case
The Chiong murder case was a trial regarding an incident on July 16, 1997 in Cebu, the Philippines. Francisco Juan \”Paco\” Larrañaga, a man of dual Filipino and Spanish citizenship was, along with six others, convicted of murder, and sentenced to death by lethal injection on February 3, 2004. Capital punishment in the Philippines has since been abolished.
About Chiong murder case in brief
The Chiong murder case was a trial regarding an incident on July 16, 1997 in Cebu, the Philippines. Francisco Juan \”Paco\” Larrañaga, a man of dual Filipino and Spanish citizenship was, along with six others, convicted of murder, and sentenced to death by lethal injection on February 3, 2004. Capital punishment in the Philippines has since been abolished. The trial court considered these testimonies irrelevant, rejecting these as coming from \”friends of the accused,\” and they were not admitted. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction of the seven co-defendants and sentenced them to death in February 2004. The seven were found guilty of the murder of two sisters, Marijoy and Jacqueline Chion g, who were kidnapped, raped, and murdered in 1997. The other sister was never found. The case centered on the testimony of a co-Defendant, Davidson Valiente Rusia, who testified in exchange for blanket immunity, he testified. Rusia fainted when confronted with this evidence.
The three organizations that expressed their interests in the case of Larraña were the Basque Bar Association, the Bar Council of Barcelona, and the Bar Association of Madrid. Larraño’s counsels urged the high court to admit the three organizations’ curiae curiae from the Barcelona Bar Council, noting that if a Filipino citizen is found guilty in Spain, no court would have imposed the death penalty, nor would the Spanish court have imposed it on him. The court ruled in favor of the three groups’ interests, and he was sentenced to die in prison in 2004, but not before serving a sentence of life in prison without parole. The sentence was later commuted to life without the possibility of parole, which was later overturned by the appeals court. The conviction was upheld on appeal in 2008, but the appeal was not quashed. The Supreme Court of the Philippines upheld the murder conviction and sentenced the accused to death on February 4, 2008, after a three-year appeal.
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This page is based on the article Chiong murder case published in Wikipedia (as of Jan. 10, 2021) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.