Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Trust me, I'm a liar.. a lawyer, I mean

Image from philstar.com
Perhaps it’s because I am not a lawyer that I don’t understand how a lawyer’s mind works.  Take the case of Attorney Lorna Kapunan, she with the close cropped hair, goth-inspired eyeliner and slow, drawling speech that reminds me of a carabao that has learned human speech, legalese at that, who in a recent exclusive interview with Karen Davila succeeded in convincing me that there are secret societies in the lawyers’ world composed of heroic, noble and idealistic attorneys in one corner, and a cabal of scheming, devious and cunning suits who use their encyclopedic knowledge of laws to muddle cases, malign personalities, and throw legal obstacles at pursuits of truth ruling the other; surrounding them are lawyers content to affix their signature on affidavits, interpret laws for corporations, or silently broker deals legal or otherwise. 

Of course, I may be wrong.  I’m not a lawyer and I don’t understand how a lawyer’s mind works.

Maybe law schools have secret parallel worlds that can only be breached by any law student willing to swap memorizing the Constitution over having a good movie date, or two that could land him a base, or two.  In this hidden world, law students are banged on the head by a gavel until they tread between consciousness and a possible homicide case, and would emerge from the stupor merrily choosing a house: Gryffindor! Or Slytherin! Or Notario!, which would ultimately seal their fate and mission once they pass the bar.

Kapunan spun a yarn, or at least tried to paint a scenario, of how Benhur Luy and Merlita Sunas, erstwhile right and left hands of her client Napoles, managed to dupe the entire nation including goodhearted but dimwitted senators and congressmen into parting with money that can’t even be counted without losing count.  And all these happened right under the nose of Napoles and her daughter Jean who were too preoccupied buying designer bags and exotic cars to know anything about how her trusted hands were besmirching her untarnished reputation.

I know Kapunan is supposed to do that as the defense attorney.  And that’s what I don’t understand.  How far can a defense lawyer go in defense of the indefensible?  Does painting a lie count?  Or casting shadows (she hinted at Benhur’s sexual preference) on an already shadowy character?  Or shedding crocodile tears before cameras as she implores “Oh, who can we trust but God”?

Since I am not a lawyer, I say I don’t have a clue.  But to prove my argument that there is a secret lawyers world, I would like to cite in evidence the true-to-life portrayal of defense lawyers in the Devil’s Advocate starring Keanu Reeves and Al Pacino, who together elaborately laid down the groundwork of evil for litigation success.  Oh yes, this movie by the way has its Pinoy life-imitating-art version starring the lawyer Fortun who is at the forefront of defending evil legion personified – the Ampatuans and, before that, once-popular President and now laughable city mayor Joseph Estrada, father of kindhearted but dimwitted senator Jinggoy Porkstrada.

Kapunan, herself, is a stalwart as far as the caliber and class of her sources of income are concerned.  She counts among her clients Hayden Kho and Marjorie and Claudine Barretto – characters embroiled in unsavory situations.  Tell me who your friends are and I will tell you who you are.  Of course Kapunan would say that they are not her friends; that she is simply putting a good word or two for them.  I don’t know. I don’t know how lawyers think, and I imagine carabaos speaking legalese so I can’t really be trusted on these matters.

I lost count at how many times Kapunan qualified her statements with “As a matter of fact…”  As a matter of fact, Napoles knew nothing about the NGOs.  As a matter of fact, the 17 supposed former Napoles employees turned whistleblowers all conspired to pin down Napoles to hide their devilish plans.  As a matter of fact this, matter of fact that.

If behavioral scientists are to be believed, one of the telltale signs a person is lying is when he or she uses “As a matter of fact” to bolster his or her statement.  But then again, what do I know?  I am just a curious biker who imagines a carabao speaking legalese, not really a legal luminary, nor even a law student who has had the privilege of having a gavel banged on his head.

But what I know is that every time Kapunan opens her mouth, she is being paid for by the money that has been siphoned off taxpayers; the same greens that were diverted from farmers’ implements, students’ classrooms and livelihood programs for the unemployed.  And I am sure that she knew and perhaps because of her advise (but won’t admit) that Napoles began withdrawing money from her countless bank accounts when this mess began to stink.  She should be made part of the charge sheet as an accessory to plunder.  Of course, I am not a lawyer and I don’t understand that a lawyer can lie through the skin of her teeth and proudly claim that she is only doing her job.

I don’t understand. 

Perhaps, in law school future lawyers are taught how to set aside personal beliefs and morals for the good of a bad person. Oh, Slytherin.   I don’t understand.  In fact, I believe that Benhur Luy and Merlita Sunas orchestrated all these mess, and now Napoles and the senators, and the congressmen are being unjustly vilified.


To paraphrase Kapunan in her teary spiel, “Oh, who can we trust… a lawyer perhaps?”