Press Release
March 27, 2019

Gordon unfazed by Bike Riders' threat to file for Declaratory Relief vs Motorcycle Law

Senator Richard J. Gordon was unfazed by motorcycle rider groups' threat to file for a declaratory relief against the newly-enacted Republic Act 11235 or the Motorcycle Crime Prevention Act.

Gordon, principal author and sponsor of the law, said this is a free country, hence rider groups could go to the courts anytime if they believe there is a need to do so.

"This is a well-researched law na dumaan sa dalawang kapulungan ng Kongreso. Nagsagawa ng mga hearings para dito. Si Presidente Duterte ay isa ring biker, pero pinirmahan niya dahil naintindihan niya na ang pakay ng batas na ito ay bigyang proteksyon ang publiko laban sa riding-in-tandems na pumapatay o nagnanakaw," the chairman of the Committee on Justice and Human Rights said.

"But this is a free country and they can go to the courts any time. Hindi naman ako ang matatalo kapag pumunta sila sa korte. Ang bayan ang matatalo kasi this is the first time that the government will take action against riding-in-tandem criminals. Riding in tandem criminals have been a plague for this country for the past 15 years and constitute one of the biggest contributors to EJK that everybody is complaining about," he added.

The Motorcycle Rights Organization has announced plans to file for declaratory relief against the law, but only when they have already seen the implementing rules and regulations. They claimed to have enough ammunition to prove before the courts that the passage of the recently signed law was unconstitutional and railroaded.

"Paano natin mabibigyan ng hustisya ang mga libo-libong biktima ng riding-in-tandems? Itong batas na ito ang binibigay kong solusyon. Tatanggalin o lilimitahan natin ang pagkakataon para pumatay of magnakaw with impunity gamit ang motorsiklo. Dahil magiging bigger, readable at color-coded ang mga plaka, madali na itong makikita ng mga witnesses or makikita nai ito sa CCTV kaya magkakaroon ng lead ang mga pulis," Gordon stressed.

PNP records showed that of the total of 28,409 motorcycle riding crimes or incidents reported from 2010 to 2017, 13,062 or 46% of which were shooting incidents. And out of over 4,000 motorcycle riding crimes or incidents in 2016, only eight cases (0.18%) were solved.

Based on records from the PNP-Highway Patrol Group, there were about 150 motorcycles stolen every week in Metro Manila alone or an average of 21 per day in 2017. In different parts of the country, there were 7,517 vehicles stolen, 6,956 were motorcycles.

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