“Not written by one and the same person,” he said in a Viber message sent to INQUIRER.net when asked if Guo’s signature matched the one on the counter-affidavit.
The Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission and Philippine National Police-Criminal Investigation and Detection Group filed a qualified human trafficking complaint against Guo and several others last June.
The complaint was submitted for resolution on August 6, but the camp of Guo filed a motion to reopen the investigation and admit her counter-affidavit 10 days later.
Galicia’s notarization of the counter-affidavit last August 14 raised questions as Guo had already left the country in July. The motion was refiled last September 6.
In a Senate hearing on Tuesday, Guo admitted to signing the last page of her counter-affidavit for her human trafficking complaint before she escaped the country.