Showing posts with label Vicente Sotto III. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vicente Sotto III. Show all posts
Monday, November 12, 2012
Ethics complaint filed vs Sotto over plagiarized speeches
MANILA, Philippines - Thirty seven individuals, mostly academics and bloggers, on Tuesday filed an ethics complaint against Senate Majority Leader Vicente Sotto III over plagiarized speeches on the Reproductive Health bill.
The 22-page complaint was filed before the Senate Ethics and Privileges Committee chaired by Senate Minority Leader Alan Peter Cayetano. The complainants were led by Dr. Sylvia Estrada-Claudio of the University of the Philippines' Center for Women, Antonio Contreras of the De La Salle University College of Liberal Arts, and Ateneo de Manila Political Science Department director Lisandro Claudio.
The complaint said that Sotto violated the Intellectual Property Code of Philippines, or RA 8293, and the Senate's own ethics rules.
The group formally accused Sotto of copying from blogs and writings of American blogger Sarah Pope, Marlon C. Ramirez, and Peter Engelman. He was also accused of lifting from the late US Senator Robert F. Kennedy's 1966 "Day of Affirmation" speech.
The complaint said that "to this date, respondent Sotto has not owned up to the nine (9) instances of copying without attributions included in the three parts of his en contra speech delivered on August 13 and 15, and September 5, 2012.
"Neither has he, since then, given proper attribution to any of these authors from whom these works were copied,” the complaint added.
The complaint also took Sotto to task for his insistence that plagiarism is not a crime in the Philippines. It quoted then Associate Justice, now Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno, in her dissenting opinion in an earlier charge of plagiarism against Associate Justice Mariano C. Del Mundo.
"The infringement of copyright necessitates a framework for characterizing the expression of ideas as property. It thus turns on a question of whether there exists resultant harm in a form which is economically quantifiable. Plagiarism, on the other hand, covers a much wider range of acts. In defining copy right infringement, Laurie Stearns points out how ‘it is an offense independent from plagiarism, so that an action for violation of copyright – which may take on either a criminal and civil aspect, or even both – does not sufficiently remedy the broader injury inherent in plagiarism," Sereno said in her opinion as cited by the complainants. "Plagiarism, with its lack of attribution, severs the connection between the original author’s name and work. A plagiarist, by falsely claiming authorship of someone else’s material, directly assault the author’s interest in receiving credits."
Sotto has been under fire since August, when he first made the anti-RH speech in question, not only for having lifted passages from the American authors, but, more gravely, for allegedly having twisted the contexts of what they wrote, to suit his anti-RH stance.
He was then later revealed to have translated portions of a speech from the late Robert Kennedy without permission or attribution, a fact that Sotto has acknowledged but that he insists warrants no apology.
Earlier this week, the daughter of the former US senator, Kerry Kennedy, released a letter chastising Sotto for copying from her father's speech. Ms. Kennedy said she was particularly appalled that Sotto had used her father's words to support an anti-reproductive health stance, suggesting that this would have run counter to Sen. Kennedy's life and convictions.
Sotto insists that everything he has said on the Senate floor is privileged. Moreover, he has maintained that he sees nothing wrong with how he had borrowed thoughts, words, and findings from other people without attribution. He says he is ready to face his detractors and the ethics complaint lodged against him.
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, May 28, 2012
Sotto: No bloc voting in Corona impeachment
Senate Majority Floor Leader Vicente Sotto III on Tuesday said there will be no bloc voting in the impeachment trial of Chief Justice Renato Corona, especially for the so-called "Enrile bloc."
"The Senate president has made it very clear to us and to many others who he talked that his vote is his vote, he is not influencing anyone, he does not want to influence anyone, even the so-called Enrile bloc," Sotto told reporters.
He issued the statement after some political analysts have poined out that the so-called Enrile bloc, composed of the Senate president, Sotto, Senate President Pro Tempore Jinggoy Estrada and Sen. Gregorio Honasan, will be crucial in deciding Corona's fate.
Sotto, however, said that Enrile told them that he will only tell them his vote if they ask and want to know. He said the Senate president hasn't told him what his vote was.
As for his own vote, he said "more or less" he knows what his decision is.
"I decided after I prayed last night, I consulted my family," Sotto said.
Vote based on conscience, evidence
Sen. Edgardo Angara, for his part, said he will base his decision on his conscience and the evidence presented during the trial.
"My decision to either acquit or convict centers on his fitness to decide as the chief magistrate. The issue of the impeachment of the chief magistrate centers on that factor," Angara said in a statement released Tuesday.
Angara's son, Rep. Sonny Angara, is one of the spokespersons for the prosecution. The elder Angara, however, has inisted that his being a senator-judge has nothing to do with his son's role in the impeachment trial.
The senators are expected to vote on Corona's case later in the day. Sixteen votes are needed to convict him.
Sotto said that if ever Corona is convicted, they will have the order drafted after the trial, which he said is basically immediately executory.
"More or less, yun ang sinasabi ng Constitution," he said.
The senator said that if ever the defense panel brings the case to the Supreme Court, it would not be their problem anymore.
"Whatever happens after is not our problem anymore unless they bring it up with us," he said. — Kimberly Jane Tan/RSJ, GMA News
source: gmanetwork.com
"The Senate president has made it very clear to us and to many others who he talked that his vote is his vote, he is not influencing anyone, he does not want to influence anyone, even the so-called Enrile bloc," Sotto told reporters.
He issued the statement after some political analysts have poined out that the so-called Enrile bloc, composed of the Senate president, Sotto, Senate President Pro Tempore Jinggoy Estrada and Sen. Gregorio Honasan, will be crucial in deciding Corona's fate.
Sotto, however, said that Enrile told them that he will only tell them his vote if they ask and want to know. He said the Senate president hasn't told him what his vote was.
As for his own vote, he said "more or less" he knows what his decision is.
"I decided after I prayed last night, I consulted my family," Sotto said.
Vote based on conscience, evidence
Sen. Edgardo Angara, for his part, said he will base his decision on his conscience and the evidence presented during the trial.
"My decision to either acquit or convict centers on his fitness to decide as the chief magistrate. The issue of the impeachment of the chief magistrate centers on that factor," Angara said in a statement released Tuesday.
Angara's son, Rep. Sonny Angara, is one of the spokespersons for the prosecution. The elder Angara, however, has inisted that his being a senator-judge has nothing to do with his son's role in the impeachment trial.
The senators are expected to vote on Corona's case later in the day. Sixteen votes are needed to convict him.
Sotto said that if ever Corona is convicted, they will have the order drafted after the trial, which he said is basically immediately executory.
"More or less, yun ang sinasabi ng Constitution," he said.
The senator said that if ever the defense panel brings the case to the Supreme Court, it would not be their problem anymore.
"Whatever happens after is not our problem anymore unless they bring it up with us," he said. — Kimberly Jane Tan/RSJ, GMA News
source: gmanetwork.com
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