Quiboloy’s Supreme Court Shenanigans: A Pathetic Attempt to Dodge Justice

By Louis ‘Barok’ C. Biraogo

In a sickening display of legal trickery, Apollo Quiboloy’s minions are scrambling to evade the claws of justice. Their latest gambit? A desperate bid to challenge the Senate’s arrest warrant before the Supreme Court, cloaked in a thin veil of legal maneuvering and deceit.

Quiboloy’s lackeys, led by the slippery Mark Tolentino, dare to question the authority of the Senate and the Department of Justice, as if the law bends to the whims of self-proclaimed religious demagogues. Their brazen attempt to twist the legal system to their advantage reeks of desperation and moral bankruptcy.

But their feeble attempts to manipulate the legal system are swiftly dismantled by the scathing rebuke of a legal luminary. With surgical precision, he exposes their hollow arguments for what they truly are: a shameful attempt to evade accountability for their heinous crimes.

Quiboloy’s claim that the Senate has prejudged his guilt is laughable at best, pathetic at worst. The Senate does not pass judgment; it merely seeks the truth, a concept foreign to Quiboloy and his ilk. His refusal to honor the Senate’s summons is a slap in the face of justice, a cowardly act of defiance that will not go unpunished.

Meanwhile, Quiboloy’s lapdog, Ferdinand Topacio, barks empty threats of persecution, hiding behind the veneer of religious righteousness. But the law is blind to such deceit, and justice will prevail, no matter how hard Quiboloy’s cronies try to obscure it.

As the manhunt for Quiboloy continues, his sanctuary atop the prayer mountain crumbles beneath the weight of his own hubris. The law, like a relentless hound, closes in on its prey, ready to deliver swift and unforgiving justice to those who seek to evade its grasp.

In the end, Quiboloy’s Supreme Court charade is nothing more than a desperate ploy to delay the inevitable. Justice will not be denied, and Quiboloy will answer for his crimes, whether he likes it or not.

It’s time for Quiboloy to face the music. If he has nothing to hide, then he should stop hiding behind his lawyers and answer the call of justice, plain and simple.

Louis ‘Barok’ C. Biraogo

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