
Philippine Senator Rodante Marcoleta is facing a plunder case and other criminal charges before the Sandiganbayan after the Office of the Ombudsman moved on findings stemming from a widely viewed 2025 television broadcast. In that live appearance, Marcoleta openly acknowledged receiving P75 million in campaign donations for that year’s national elections from private backers who insisted on remaining anonymous. The amount, well above the P50-million threshold that triggers possible plunder liability, has since become the core of the Ombudsman’s case.
The admission prompted a complaint and a subsequent investigation by the Commission on Elections (Comelec), which discovered that the P75 million was not declared in Marcoleta’s Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) nor in his Statement of Contributions and Expenditures (SOCE). During the probe, Comelec identified former congressman Mike Defensor and businessmen Joseph Espiritu and Aristotle Viray as among those tied to the campaign support. Comelec ultimately concluded that the non-disclosure did not constitute an electoral offense because the funds were received before Marcoleta was officially a candidate.
For the Ombudsman, however, the central issue is not election law but the country’s plunder statute, which bars public officials from receiving gifts or donations from private individuals when the value exceeds P50 million, regardless of whether the money comes from public or private resources. Senator Panfilo “Ping” Lacson, commenting on the case, said Marcoleta’s own televised remarks could turn the proceedings into a kind of “reverse trial.” In his view, the prosecution could “sit and watch with folded arms” while the respondent contends with what Lacson described as an “admission against interest” made in plain view of the public.
Marcoleta has rejected the accusations and questioned the motives behind the Ombudsman’s move, repeatedly framing the case as “selective justice” and accusing the current administration of “bending the law” to silence critics. Speaking at the Iglesia ni Cristo National Rally, which his office has cited as his standing position on the matter, he denied any corruption or misuse of public funds, arguing that the controversy centers solely on campaign assistance from private friends using their own money. He said he is prepared to face arrest if it comes to that, casting the legal battle as part of his defense of “justice, national welfare, and the interests of the Filipino people,” and asked why he is being charged instead of those he claims are responsible for the alleged misuse of public resources.

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