The Big Con: The triumphant return of Panfilo ‘Ping’ Lacson

In Steven Spielberg’s 2002 film Catch Me If You Can, Frank Abagnale Jr (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) manages to cash more than $2.5 million in bogus cheques while eluding law enforcement authorities who pursued him all over the world. Abagnale was eventually caught and his expertise as a forger and counterfeiter was put to good use on the right side of the Law. As an agent in the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Abagnale went on to apply the knowledge and experience he gained while on the run to catching crooks in a similar trade for the FBI.

Panfilo 'Ping' Lacson

It’s a classic Hollywood ending for an amazing true story. Clever conman leads glamorous 1960’s jet-set life mainly on the back of his wits and good looks. Square gray-suited FBI agent (played by Tom Hanks) finally catches conman in France and brings him to justice. Conman then starts a new life as a lawman.

SUPPORT INDEPENDENT SOCIAL COMMENTARY!
Subscribe to our Substack community GRP Insider to receive by email our in-depth free weekly newsletter. Opt into a paid subscription and you'll get premium insider briefs and insights from us.
Subscribe to our Substack newsletter, GRP Insider!
Learn more

The story of Senator Panfilo “Ping” Lacson is different. It is the opposite of Frank Abagnale’s. Lacson’s story can be summed up in one sentence:

Career lawman turns fugitive then comes back as a conman.

To the chagrin of law enforcement officials and government prosecutors, Ping Lacson has become some sort of celebrity bad boy. His account of life on the run was made into legend by the Media, and the extraordinary impunity surrounding the way he managed to cross international borders despite his passport and diplomatic privileges being suspended by the Philippines’ Department of Foreign Affairs surrounds him with an intriguing mystery. A cadre of “coddlers” who “provided him with food, shelter and other resources” remain shadowy characters in a cheesy plot that will surely be made into a movie someday.

Lacson even boasted that his success as a fugitive could be attributed to “law enforcement training and ‘the best of my instinctive compass’.”! While the fabled Frank Abagnale, at the end of the earlier story, turned his skills as a crook to the service of country, Ping Lacson did the opposite — he turned the skills he gained in the service of country into tools of deception and fraud.

And now, as he faces the Filipino public as an exonerated ex-fugitive, he draws on the capital gained from his “adventure” on the run to rebuild his public profile. From his perspective, on the basis of the way he was received both by Media and by Malacanang, Lacson has come back to Fat City. Indeed, the profile he may gain coming out of this journey may be far greater than the profile he enjoyed in his previous life as a dime-a-dozen politician.

As a matter of fact, even way back in 2000, Lacson had already endeared himself to the vacuous sensibilities of the Filipino public. The film Ping Lacson: Super Cop was released on that year and featured the late action star Rudy Fernandez playing the role of Lacson.

Way back in the couple of years following the release of Super Cop (the existence of which I was not aware of at the time), I published a short write up around the other top action star of the time, Robin Padilla which, as it turns out, is uncannily consistent with the underlying psychology that seems to be at work in Media phenomena like Lacson…

Robin Padilla, bad boy of Philippine cinema and convicted felon. He epitomises the typical mis-channeled machismo of Filipino manhood. The phenomenal recovery of his film career after doing time for illegal possession of firearms and general bad behaviour is testament to our indifference to (at best, tolerance for) criminal behaviour in our leaders. He is another Joseph Estrada in the making and currently comes the closest to filling the Robin Hood figure role that we Filipinos perpetually seek out. His emergence from prison to rise back to stardom can best be credited to our admiration of people who achieve their ends by beating the system.

A country populated by star-struck ignoramuses is fertile breeding ground for big cons like these. And as usual, Filipinos — always the scavengers of sensational diversions — are willing victims.

6 Replies to “The Big Con: The triumphant return of Panfilo ‘Ping’ Lacson”

  1. The idiot, Ping Lacson, may just be hiding in your neighborhood, and claim…he went abroad…Or, Noynoy Aquino may have used him again, as a diversion tool.
    Lacson is just one of those Political Opportunist. he is a suspect, of the crime of murdering: Dacer and Corbito. If he is innocent, as proven in court of Law…he can go free. If not, and is convicted…he can rot in jail…or we may electricute him..
    I found nothing important in the life of this man, except he is an opportunist…He may have paid the media people to hype his life…so that he can run again for public office…Filipino Suckers!!!

  2. The notion of right and wrong in the Philippines has a different foundation than in western countries. In western countries, laws restrain individual freedoms for the good of all. In the Philippines, laws pretend to restrain individual freedoms for the good of all, but do not, and Egos take pride in what they can get away with.

    The entire system of values – held by Filipinos far and wide – is for the benefit of the individual rather than society, which explains why the Philippines, as a society, is commercially and financially non-competitive. The sum of the parts is less than the whole, or hole, depending on one’s bent toward sarcasm. United we stand, divided into millions of little big Egos, we fall.

    Sancho Panza is my hero.

    If you will allow me to be blazingly blunt, the notion of Philippine pride is a crock, smoke and mirrors. What you see is individual pride, pure and simple, herds of Egos strutting about like prize fighting chickens. Loud enough, it seems to be national pride. Most assuredly it is not. The glue is missing. Respect for laws is missing. Respect for others is missing.

    National pride in the Philippines is an illusion, a mask of self deception that people wear to hide from the knowledge that . . . well, you figure it out . . . .

    1. So true, Joe.

      The basic culture here is utterly bankrupt. Lip service is paid to so many beliefs – that it’s a culture of respect, that it’s “Christian” etc… – but the fact is you the majority of Filipinos are unethical scum with no respect for anyone unless they are demonstrably more powerful than themselves.

      Family values? Look at incest rates in this country. What a bunch of filthy perverts. And where to the 600,000 prostitutes come from? From fathers, brothers and uncles putting pressure on their daughters, sisters and nieces to do whatever it takes to get some money so they can buy Tanduay and Red Horse.

      This is Sodom and Gomorrah except that it is a nation rather than two people.

  3. Ping LACSON with MULTI interpols working together for his arrest must had mainly hid in the Phil like in Tuguegarao shielded by a high official in government. SUPERCOP was glorification of a corrupt cop leader for mind conditioning … He should face conviction of PR Dacer & driver + all the crimes he did !!! He has been corrupt & a conman & always will be !!! Triumphant return SAYS WHO ???

  4. “he turned the skills he gained in the service of country into tools of deception and fraud.” Benigno…

    can it be called service of a country when all he did as a police czar was to corner vice and gambling including jueteng so erap can have cash to build palaces for his girlfriends?

  5. Ping Lacson will soon get his “reward” if not with this administration (who idolized him), but on the next administration! If he will not get his “reward” here on earth, then there is still justice after his death! And I wish it will be now!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.