The Department of Justice (DOJ) cited the conviction of former Bamban, Tarlac Mayor Alice Guo on qualified human trafficking charges as its most high-profile anti-trafficking victory under the Marcos Jr. administration, saying the case sends an unmistakable message that public office offers no protection against criminal liability.

Justice Undersecretary Nicholas Felix Ty made the statement in an interview on DZRH News program Special on Saturday on July 11, as part of “The DZRH SONA 2026 Series,” saying the Alice Guo case exemplifies the DOJ’s commitment to pursuing trafficking cases regardless of the political standing of the accused.

On November 20, 2025, the Pasig Regional Trial Court (RTC) convicted Guo of qualified human trafficking, sentencing her to life imprisonment and ordering her to pay a fine of ₱2 million.

Authorities alleged that Guo is a Chinese national named Guo Hua Ping, who faked Filipino citizenship to run for mayor of Bamban, where she ran an illegal online gaming complex in which hundreds of Chinese and other foreign nationals were forced to conduct scams.

The Pasig RTC convicted Guo along with Rachelle Malonzo Carreon, Jaimielyn Cruz, and Walter Wong Rong for their roles in a large-scale POGO hub in Bamban, with all four sentenced to reclusion perpetua and ordered to pay ₱2 million in fines each.

Guo first came under scrutiny following raids on two illegal POGO hubs in Bamban in 2023 and 2024, which led to the rescue of over 800 trafficking victims and the discovery that the properties housing the scam operations were linked to Guo.

She was dismissed as mayor by the Ombudsman in August 2024 for grave misconduct, fled the Philippines in July 2024, was arrested in Indonesia in September 2024, and was deported back to the Philippines where she was held in detention until her conviction.

Undersecretary Ty said the Alice Guo case is a landmark ruling under the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act because it established that individuals who are indirectly involved in human trafficking by providing support, such as land and infrastructure, can be convicted, even if they did not directly recruit or control the victims.

He said the conviction is also proof that the DOJ’s Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking leaves no one above the law, and that the same framework that convicted Alice Guo is being applied across the country against other trafficking networks.

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