MANILA, PHILIPPINES — A former district engineer from Bulacan linked two senators to the flood control mess at the resumption of the investigation by the House of Representatives on Tuesday.
Quoting his boss District Engineer Henry Alcantara, former assistant district engineer Brice Hernandez said Senators Jinggoy Estrada and Joel Villanueva demanded "30 percent" and was "delivered when these items came out in the GAA (General Appropriations Act).| Alcantara denied Hernandez's allegations.
Estrada, Villanueva tagged in flood control mess, 'SOP was 30%'
In response, Estrada, in Filipino and English, denied the claims and challenged him to take a lie detector test so that everyone would know who was telling the truth."
"Talk is cheap. I am ready to prove that all that he said against me were pure lies," he added in a text message., This news data comes from:http://dm.redcanaco.com

Hernandez was at the House after Senate President Tito Sotto III allowed him to attend the parallel probe on flood control projects.
Sotto has granted the request of the House for Hernandez to attend its public hearing, recognizing the principle of inter-parliamentary courtesy.
Estrada, Villanueva tagged in flood control mess, 'SOP was 30%'
Hernandez was detained at the Senate on Monday after the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee cited him in contempt for repeatedly denying his alleged casino habits.
- Van Gogh Museum 'could close' without more help from Dutch govt
- Sara’s claims that corruption probe could be done in one day 'absolutely preposterous' – Palace
- House probe tackles flood control corruption: Lawmakers disclose conflicts of interest
- Sotto ousts Escudero in Senate coup
- Marcos signs law giving 99-year land lease to foreign investors
- Go files housing development bill
- Nartatez vows to be fair in making reassignments
- PH, Australia hold live fire drills during ALON 2025 in Nueva Ecija
- UN food agency chief says women and children are starving in Gaza and pressed Netanyahu on aid
- Task force cites new threats to media workers