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CTTO"No Court Order, No ICC Request, No Red Notice: How Duterte Was Taken Without Legal PaperBy: Anthony Ludalvi VistaTh...
09/11/2025

CTTO

"No Court Order, No ICC Request, No Red Notice: How Duterte Was Taken Without Legal Paper

By: Anthony Ludalvi Vista

The Morning at the Airport

On March 11, 2025, former President Rodrigo Duterte arrived at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport from Hong Kong. Waiting there were police officers led by Major General Nicolas Torre III, head of the PNP Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG).

Moments later, Duterte was stopped and brought to a waiting vehicle. Within minutes, videos spread online. Many thought it was ordered by the International Criminal Court (ICC) or by Interpol, or perhaps based on a local court warrant.

By the end of that day, none of those turned out to be true. There was no court warrant, no ICC request, and no Interpol notice.

What the Law Requires

The 1987 Constitution says no person may be arrested without a warrant issued by a judge, except in three cases — if caught in the act of committing a crime, chased right after doing so, or escaping from detention.

Duterte was doing none of these. He was not a fugitive. He was not committing a crime. He was not under any court process. Without a judge’s order, there was no legal ground to arrest him.

What Torre Carried

During the Senate hearing on March 20, 2025, Police Brigadier General Ronald Lee of the Philippine Center on Transnational Crime admitted that there was no Interpol Red Notice. What the police had was a “red diffusion” — an internal alert made by the PNP’s Interpol desk, not by Interpol Headquarters in France.

He said, “It did not pass through Interpol’s General Secretariat in Lyon. It was only circulated locally.”

That means the order came from within the Philippine police, not from any international body. A red diffusion is not a warrant. It is only a message between police agencies. It gives no power to arrest anyone.

When asked what document he showed Duterte, General Torre said it was that same “diffusion.” It bore no signature of a judge or international official — only a PNP heading. On paper, it was a memo, not an order of arrest.

What the ICC Required

The ICC had issued a warrant dated March 7, 2025, but this was never sent to the Philippine government. There was no request for arrest or surrender, no diplomatic note, and no filing before any local court.

Under Article 59 of the Rome Statute, the ICC cannot simply order a country to arrest someone. It must first ask the courts of that country to review and confirm the legality of the arrest. That never happened here.

So even under international law, there was no authority for Torre to act.

What Philippine Law Says

The Philippine Act on Crimes Against International Humanitarian Law (RA 9851) allows cooperation with international courts, but only “pursuant to applicable extradition laws and treaties.”

This means a Philippine court must first hear the case, issue the necessary order, and then allow the surrender. No such process was ever done.

Without a court case or order, RA 9851 gives no one — not even the police — any power to arrest a Filipino citizen for international crimes.

The Flight to The Hague

That same evening, Duterte was placed on a chartered flight to The Hague. He was never brought before any Philippine judge. No court authorized his transfer. No hearing was held to verify the legality of the arrest or to allow him to challenge it.

The entire operation — arrest, detention, and airlift — happened outside the supervision of the courts.

Why It Was Wrong

In law, power must always come from paper — a written authority from a court or a valid international request approved by the government.

General Torre had none. The ICC did not transmit a request. Interpol did not issue a notice. No court released a warrant. The paper he carried came from the police themselves.

Without that legal authority, the arrest violated the Constitution, the Rules of Criminal Procedure, and even the Rome Statute itself.

The Bigger Picture

This issue is not about defending Duterte. It is about the rule of law. When police act without a court order, they replace the law with discretion. That is what the Constitution was written to prevent.

Even in cases involving grave crimes, due process must still be followed. If one person — even a former president — can be taken without judicial paper, then every Filipino can be treated the same way.

In the End

General Torre acted on a document written by his own office — one that had no binding force under Philippine or international law.

In a republic governed by laws, power must always come from lawful authority. And where there is no paper, there is no power."
- Anthony Ludalvi Vista, Esquire

The current administration is causing a lot of trouble to our beloved country. They kidnapped our beloved fPRRD to the Hague, it's clear that it's illegal and unconstitutional, it's betrayal of public trust, treason and they do not protect our national sovereignty because they want to eliminate the Duterte[s] before 2028. The worst administration due to corruption such as ghost flood control projects, billions have been plundered that have caused lost of human lives. There are concerns about massive and systemic corruption in Congress, DPWH and other government agencies with allegations of incompetence, and prioritization of personal interests over the welfare of the Filipino people. 🙏🇵🇭⚖️👊

08/09/2025

Sir Richard Gumia Grande Ato siguro apilon ning DPWH project nga solar street light sa usa ka barangay sa dakong lungsod sa Agusan.

Kumusta naman? 10 Million project cost niya, more or less 10 ka POLE ra. tag 1 Million ang isa?




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