According to Abrogar, Lahbati’s camp hasn’t filed any case yet.
Below is Abrogar’s statement:
“I have three things to say: First, as the subject of the direct attack of their unfiled complaints, I am unhappy that they haven’t filed them yet because I want the public to know who is telling the truth and who the real aggrieved party is in all of this. Kung hindi nila i-file, hindi malalaman ng mga tao kung totoo ba ang laman ng complaints and kung may basis ba talaga sila sa pagsampa ng kaso. What they did – making it appear to the media and the public that the complaints have already been filed when they were not — and having media carry their detailed and unsubstantiated allegations as if they have already filed the case — might have a deeper purpose. I am currently studying whatever cases I can file against them because of this.
“Secondly, I want to react not as the subject of their unfiled complaints but as a member of the media. I feel that whether they made that mistake with malice or not or with gross negligence or not, there was disrespect to media organizations. Members of the media who carried their story as if the complaints have been filed were victimized by them. By making the media believe that the complaints have been filed, the complaints were treated as public documents that may be exempt from libel when they carry or publish them. Unfortunately, hindi pa pala filed. Therefore, they exposed media organizations to potential criminal liability.
“Thirdly, I want to react as a member of the legal profession. I hope that the judiciary is given the respect it deserves. For me, making it appear that a case was being filed in a prosecutor’s office for publicity purposes shows disrespect to our judiciary and our legal system. Sana, sa mga actions natin, respetuhin naman natin ang ating judicial system.”
1 Comment
management of an enterprise is not a platform for personal fights. drama, drama.
the network lost one if its most talented performers with a less than smart quarrel about authority, computation of talent fee and management share, and scheduling that allows unhealty short time for sleep. that’s a major fail.
the whole issue looks awkward and should be buried instantly.
it’s not the first time. good leadership can prevent such a falling-out from negative consequences. are we still in the dark ages that authority must act out destruction and punishment, to be credible?
I have read a lot of statements about the issue, and to me sarah’s initial tweets sound the most credible part in the whole story. this is opinion by an observer. eventually, showbiz is about winning opinions.