• August 21, 1983 -
Ninoy Aquino was assassinated after disembarking a
China Airlines plane at
Manila International Airport. Also killed was
Rolando Galman. • August 24, 1983 –
Ferdinand Marcos set a fact-finding commission headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice
Enrique Fernando to investigate the Aquino murder (composed of four retired Supreme Court Justices who resigned, after its composition was challenged in court and thereafter,
Arturo M. Tolentino declined appointment as board chair). • August 31, 1983 – Burial of Ninoy at the Manila Memorial Park,
Parañaque after the 11-hour procession joined by 2 million Filipinos. • October 22, 1983 – Marcos created another fact-finding Agrava Board, headed by former Court of Appeals Justice
Corazon Agrava, chair, with lawyer Luciano E. Salazar, businessman Dante G. Santos, labor leader Ernesto F. Herrera and educator Amado C. Dizon, as members (3 P.D. 1886 dated October 14, 1983, and Amendatory P.D. 1903 dated February 8, 1984). It held 125 hearing days from November 3, 1983 (including 3 hearings in Tokyo and 8 hearings in Los Angeles, California), heard 194 witnesses recorded in 20,377 pages of transcripts. • October 22, 1984 – Agrava Board released the reports concluding that military officers, including Armed Forces Chief of Staff Gen.
Fabian Ver, conspired to kill Ninoy; the Supreme Court assigned the case to the
Sandiganbayan. • December 2, 1985 – Manuel Pamaran Sandiganbayan acquitted all the accused. • May 16, 1986 –
Corazon Aquino appointed Regino C. Hermosisima Jr. Justice of the Sandigangbyan (until July 18, 1995). • September 12, 1986 – The Supreme Court ordered a retrial, granting the 2nd Motion for Reconsideration in G.R. No. 72670. • September 16, 1986 – The Sandiganbayan issued a warrant to arrest 25 military men, led by Ver, and a civilian. • September 28, 1989 – Marcos died in exile at age 72 in Hawaii. • September 28, 1990 – Regino C. Hermosisima Jr. penned the 177-page Sandiganbayan
judgment to jail the 16 suspects, sentencing them to
reclusion perpetua in each case. Convicted of the crime were the Avsecom chief, Brig. Gen. Luther Custodio, Capt. Romeo Bautista, 2nd Lt. Jesus Castro, and Sergeants Claro L. Lat, Arnulfo de Mesa, Filomeno Miranda, Rolando de Guzman, Ernesto Mateo, Rodolfo Desolong, Ruben Aquino, and Arnulfo Artates, gunman Constable Rogelio Moreno, M/Sgt. Pablo Martinez, C1C Mario Lazaga, A1C Cordova Estelo and A1C Felizardo Taran. Custodio died of cancer while in prison in 1991. Estelo was stabbed dead in 2005 by another inmate. However, no mastermind was named. • July 23, 1991 – The Supreme Court affirmed the conviction. • July 10, 1995 -
Fidel Ramos appointed Regino C. Hermosisima Jr. Associate Justice of the
Philippine Supreme Court and retired on his 70th natal day in October 18, 1997. • December 17, 1997 – Regino C. Hermosisima Jr. was appointed
Judicial and Bar Council regular member. • November 21, 1998 – Ver died of a lung ailment in
Bangkok. • September 12, 2001 – Regino C. Hermosisima Jr. was re-appointed Judicial and Bar Council regular member. • March 8, 2005 – The Supreme Court denied the petition of the accused (filed in August 2004) to re-open the case. • October 4, 2005 – Regino C. Hermosisima Jr. was reappointed Judicial and Bar Council regular member, for his 3rd term, duplicating the 3rd term of Teresita Cruz-Sison. His last term was set to expire on July 9, 2009. • August 21, 2007 – The 24th anniversary of Ninoy's murder. Chief Justice
Andres Narvasa appealed for the closure of the case;
Juan Ponce Enrile asked for the review for clemency in favor of the 14 convicts; Palawan Bishop
Pedro Arigo, chair of the
CBCP’s Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care (ECPPC) asked for a pardon for the convicts, though he said the ECPPC will have to study the cases before asking clemency for the soldiers; Corazon Aquino and
Benigno Aquino III forgave the 14 soldiers but opposed their appeals for clemency or parole (which Sec. Raul Gonzales submitted to the President on 2004); Eduardo Ermita stated that the Bureau of Pardons and Parole had recommended a grant of executive clemency. • August 24, 2007 -
Eduardo Ermita officially announced that due to political implications, the appeal for clemency by the 14 soldiers was archived, even if the Bureau of Pardons and Parole presently reviews the plea. The executive secretary refused to give a time frame for the review. ==Judicial and Bar Council==