The Philippine appellate court has filed many flood-related lawsuits for flood control

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. He said the court of appeals issued many accounts covering bank accounts, as he dragged the suspects accused of controlling the floods, as he pushed for the main suspects to be sentenced before Christmas.
In a video statement on Facebook, Mr. Marcos said the snow covered the construction equipment of Silverwolves Construction Corp. and Sky Yard Aviation Corp., and your accounts in Benguet Rep. Edvic G. Yap and several others under investigation.
More than P16 billion in past transactions from 2022 to 2025, especially the arrest of the Department of Public Works and Floods (DPWH) flood control agreements, he said. The authorities also seized 280 bank accounts, 22 insurance policies, three security accounts and eight aircraft linked to Sky Yard Aviation.
Mr. Marcos said the Freeze Orders prevent possible waste of assets and strengthen efforts to recover public funds. “We need these frihre orders to stop the sale of goods and ensure that all the pesos that are suspected of being stolen can be returned to our fellow citizens,” said Philippi.
He also added that eight DPWH employees in Davao Occidental expressed their intention to surrender to the National Bureau of Investigation.
On the same day, Cezara Rowena “Sarah” C. Dispayal herself entered the National Bureau of Settlement Hearing after the announcement of the investigation after the announcement of Mr. Marcos in the upcoming Arrest War against him.
“The investigation will continue,” he said. “Accountability will continue. And the government will ensure that public money is returned to the public.”
A member of the rep. Employees of Edvic Yap said that the law did not comment now. Benguet rep. Yap’s chief of staff, Kevin See, did not immediately respond to texts seeking comment.
The Benguet lawmaker, who headed the House Committee on Anti-Representatives under former President Rodrigo R. Duterter, refused to get involved after his name was mentioned in the Senate hearing in September.
Ombudsman Jesus Crispin C. Rulla In October identified him as a “person of interest” in the flood control projects in La Union that were fully paid for but abandoned. The contracts involved a company that had previously played for him.
Mr. Remulla also said that the Congressman and Buracan Rep. Salvador A. Pleleto received money through a bank transfer from the dispaya couple. Mr Pheleto previously denied the allegations.
Authorities are investigating a series of botched attacks on public works projects that have involved law enforcement, contractors and business owners.
To date, the government has P13 billion in monthly assets, including 283 insurance policies, 255 vehicles, 178 real estate accounts and three security accounts.
The earthquake erupted after weeks of heavy flooding that caused widespread damage across the country. Mr. Marcos later unveiled the plan during his State of the Union address in July and created an Independent Commission on Infrastructure (ICI) to lead the investigation.
His public exposure also led to the resignation of several top officials, including his cousin, who had stepped down as speaker, and Secretary General Lucas P. BESENAH F. Pangandaman.
Senator Panfilo “Ping” M. Lacson last week the loss from “Ghost” or non-flood control projects of P180 billion since 2016.
“If we extrapolate based on previous findings that more than 600 of the 10,000 projects were projects, we estimated that 6% of the projects would mean projects of P180 or more that went to paper projects,” the statement said.
The senator noted that the estimate is based on the evaluation of 10,000 projects, about 600 of which were found to be unavailable. “Just think, we may have lost P180 billion in the projects managed by Ghost, and we have not qualified for the ground projects,” he added.
Mr. Lacson said the number of projects reviewed by the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee so far is “minuscule” compared to the will.
The Committee is ready to assist organizations such as ICI, the Department of Justice and the Office of the Ombudsman in pursuing cases against those involved if new information emerges, he said. – Chloe Mari A. Hufana



