Categories: World

Nobel Prize winner Maria Ressa acquitted of tax evasion, faces more legal cases in the Philippines

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for September 11

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa was acquitted of a final tax evasion charge Tuesday though she still faces two remaining legal cases she believes the former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte used to muzzle her critical reporting.

Ressa and her online news organization Rappler had faced five tax evasion charges but a court acquitted her of four of the charges in January. A different court heard the fifth charge and acquitted her Tuesday.

“Facts wins, truth wins, justice wins,” she told reporters outside the courthouse.

PROFESSOR WHO SAYS HE WAS SUSPENDED AFTER BRINGING CHOCOLATE MOCKING PRONOUNS CLAIMS FREE SPEECH ‘ELIMINATED’

Ressa and Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov were awarded the 2021 Nobel for their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression by fighting for the survival of their news organizations and defying government efforts to shut them.

She had said the charges against her were politically motivated as Rappler was critical of Duterte’s brutal crackdown on illegal drugs that left thousands of mostly petty drug suspects dead. The International Criminal Court is investigating the crackdown as a possible crime against humanity.

Filipino journalist Maria Ressa gestures as she talks to reporters after being acquitted of tax evasion in Pasig city, Philippines, on Sep. 12, 2023 (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

Rappler also criticized Duterte’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic including prolonged lockdowns that deepened poverty, caused one of the country’s worst recessions and sparked allegations of corruption in government medical purchases.

Ressa also said there appeared to be a “lifting of fear” under the Philippines’ new leader — Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who is the namesake son of the dictator overthrown in the army-backed “people power” uprising in 1986.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Ressa is still appealing to the Supreme Court against an online libel conviction, while Rappler is challenging a closure order issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“You’ve got to have faith,” Ressa said. “The acquittal now strengthens our resolve to continue with the justice system, to submit ourselves to the court despite the political harassment, despite the attacks on press freedom. It shows that the court system works and we hope to see the remaining charges dismissed.”

Share

Recent Posts

Elon Musk teases a future run by robots

Elon Musk has shared a new, alarming video on social media that paints a world…

4 hours ago

Chinese hackers turned AI tools into an automated attack machine

Cybersecurity has been reshaped by the rapid rise of advanced artificial intelligence tools, and recent…

20 hours ago

Apple Watch sleep score: What your number really means

Apple added a new Sleep Score feature that gives you a single number to sum…

1 day ago

Find a lost phone that is off or dead

Losing your phone can leave you in panic mode, especially when the battery dies. The…

2 days ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: How to stop AI from scanning your email

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - How to stop Google AI from scanning your Gmail- IRS to…

2 days ago

America’s most-used password in 2025 revealed

Passwords play a huge role in how you stay safe online. They protect your accounts,…

2 days ago