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Enzo Pastor’s dad says Dalia in Indonesia under new identity, to use new evidence in CA case


Fugitive Dalia Guerrero-Pastor, the widow blamed for the killing of her husband international racing champ Enzo Pastor, is reportedly hiding in Indonesia under a new identity and had re-married a local.

In documents provided to GMA News Online by Enzo's father Tomas Pastor, Dalia was shown to have already assumed the new name "Amanda Maragit" after having married an Indonesian.

Dalia’s Indonesian resident card, bearing her new name, “Amanda Maragit.”

 

Tomas also said Dalia has been working as an executive assistant of the chairman and president of a Filipino company there called RR Resource Pte. Ltd., as proven by a copy of her business card.

Tomas said he went to the Indonesian Embassy to have the documents, which were provided by informants following the P1-million reward offer, verified and authenticated.

"Ipinakita ko sa kanila kung tama ba itong format ng mga documents kasi sila ang nakakaalam. And they said they were real. Mahirap daw makakuha niyan, especially kung one year ka pa lang doon," Tomas said.

Dalia has gone missing since the killing of her husband on June 12 last year, but her camp had repeatedly insisted she is in the country all this time. She has since been charged with parricide.

Quoting the Indonesian Embassy, Tomas said the only way Dalia could have secured the documents was by using "special connections" in Indonesia.

Among the documents shown by Tomas were Dalia's Indonesian resident card that bore her new name, a family report list showing she had remarried, her latest photo, her new business card, and a copy of the cancellation of her Philippine passport.

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

The family report list also indicated that Dalia had already changed the name of her two children with Enzo, which Tomas suspected could be Dalia's attempt to eventually take their kids to Indonesia.

The two boys are currently under the custody of their grandparents on Dalia's side, although Tomas and his wife Remy have a pending custody case over their grandchildren.

Tomas said they would be submitting, through a supplemental motion, the newly acquired documents to the Court of Appeals, which is currently hearing a petition from Dalia's camp seeking to quash a standing arrest warrant against her issued by a Quezon City court. The Pastors have earlier filed an opposition to Dalia's plea.

"We will be filing a supplemental motion sa CA. Gusto namin malaman ng public na niloloko [ni Dalia at ng kampo niya] ang justice at ang public. Flight is an indication of guilt. Tapos ang nag-notarize sa Davao ay hindi siya. Ang dami nilang illegal transactions," he said.

Tomas was referring to Dalia's petition with the CA, which her lawyer had earlier said Dalia herself had notarized in Davao. But with her Philippine passport canceled and her name already under the International Criminal Police (Interpol) "red list," Dalia could not have left Indonesia and returned to the Philippines for the notarization.

Tomas said the notary public who had notarized Dalia's petition had already admitted that it was not Dalia who appeared before her.

"Talagang may ibang nag-pose as Dalia. May kasama pa nga raw na three-year-old kid. Nag-flash kami ng iba't ibang pictures sa notary public at verbally inamin niya na hindi si Dalia [ang humarap sa kanya]," said Tomas.

Enzo's father also revealed that the notary public admitted to having notarized only a 10-page document for the CA. The document, however, that Dalia's lawyer filed with the appeals court had 48 pages. "Pinatungan pa nila [It seemed they padded the document]," he said.

Tomas said he hoped the new evidence would convince the CA justices to deny Dalia's petition against her arrest warrant.

"This week, baka sakali makita ng CA justices sa media ito at sabihin nila, 'Uy, may possibility pala na hindi totoo itong finile nila. 10-pager lang daw. Lokohan ba itong finile sa atin?' Para sana i-deny na nila iyong petition," said Tomas.

Tomas also suspected that Dalia's lawyers had decided to have their documents notarized in Mindanao "para hindi maabot ng media."

Tomas said they have already furnished the National Bureau of Investigation with copies of the documents showing Dalia's new identity. He said the NBI will forward the documents to the Bureau of Immigration for an eventual attempt to have her deported back to the Philippines.

Tomas said apart from the parricide charge she is facing here, Dalia is also in danger of being slapped with separate criminal charges in Indonesia for using fake documents.

Tomas said apart from the documents, the Philippine National Police's Criminal Investigation and Detection Group could also prove that Dalia is already in Indonesia.

Working on an informant's tip, the PNP-CIDG, Tomas said, had flown to Indonesia sometime last July to capture Dalia at her apartment. The widow, however, supposedly got wind of the impending police operation and was able to flee, Tomas added. —KG, GMA News