Zaldy Co’s revelations exploded like a dropped match in a room filled with gasoline, and what did the implicated officials do? They ducked behind technicalities, insisting his statements did not weigh because they were not “under oath.” But with Orly Guteza, who is ready to swear before the heavens and the law about the bags of cash he delivered, they brushed him aside just the same. Their alibis reeked of panic disguised as procedure, and I cannot help but feel disgusted by how shamelessly they insult our intelligence.

Each time a scandal of this magnitude breaks, those caught in its blaze scramble to find the nearest legal fire exit. They pore over the law like students cramming for an exam, except they are not studying to pass—they are learning to escape. It’s a worn-out routine of dodging instead of answering, twisting instead of explaining, and prying loopholes open wide enough for millions—sometimes billions—of stolen pesos to slip through. And the spectacle, for me, is as infuriating as watching a thief calmly lecture the police about procedure while hiding the loot behind his back.

The excuse about Co’s statements “not being under oath” could have been laughable if it weren’t so glaringly manipulative. Everyone knows that when a whistleblower unmasks a racket of this size, the guilty’s first instinct is to discredit the messenger. Strip him of legitimacy, question his credibility, paint him as unstable or unreliable—anything to keep the conversation away from the money trail. And yet, when Guteza stepped forward, offering not just details but the oath they claimed they needed, the same officials suddenly found new reasons to reject him. Their contradiction felt like a slap: they were not after truth, they were after escape.

I’ve always believed that corruption exposes people not just by the money they take but by the stories they tell when cornered. In this scandal, the stories are pathetic. Their arguments limp like overused clichés, the sort of excuses only the excusers themselves can admire. They make it sound as if the problem is the volunteers coming forward, not the officials caught receiving bags of public money. As if the lack of an oath, or the presence of one, somehow erases the stench of wrongdoing already thick in the air. It is this kind of shamelessness that drains whatever trust remains in public institutions.

What’s worse, of course, are the allies who rush to protect them—those who suddenly develop selective blindness and partial deafness. They act like overzealous bodyguards, blocking every witness, silencing every detail, shielding every questionable transaction with legal jargon and smug technicalities. When I watch them speak, I see no genuine defense—only desperation painted over with confidence. Their loyalty is not to truth, not to country, not even to justice; it is to the machinery that keeps them comfortable, funded, and untouchable. And their presence in the halls of power makes me wonder how many more carry similar allegiances masked as public service.

There is a moment, every time I hear these alibis, when I feel a kind of fatigue mixed with bitterness. How many times must this country sit through the same show, performed by different actors but with the same script? I am tired of officials who take pride in their ability to outsmart the justice system rather than serve the people. I’m tired of watching them wiggle out of accountability while ordinary citizens face consequences for far more minor offenses. And I’m tired of the great national lie that claims this country is poor—when in reality it is being bled dry by well-dressed thieves who insist they’re innocent because of some technical clause not met by a witness.

Scandals like this also unmask the moral condition of those in power. Their alibis reveal their character more plainly than any investigation could. They show who runs toward the truth, who runs away from it, who buries it, and who sells it. In moments like this, I cling to the hope that public outrage still counts for something—that somewhere, someone in authority remembers that law exists not to protect criminals in office but to protect the people those criminals betrayed.

The only way forward is not through more technicalities. Still, through courage—courage from investigators, from witnesses, from citizens, and especially from the few good officials left who must resist their peers’ moral decay. This country has been fooled too many times, and the only remedy now is relentless clarity: let the evidence speak, let the corrupt answer, and let the law be used for justice rather than escape.