FOR ANY INFORMATION LEADING TO THE APPREHENSION OF THE DIRTY BANDIDO SHOWN ABOVE.
FOO ALIAS BOY BORACAY ALIAS UTENCIANO TAMODING ALIAS BOY ULING ALIAS CHARLIE BOY, HAS A HISTORY OF HORRENDOUS CRIMES:
He was drunk when he committed his first robbery. When two service station attendants in Pasig refused to hand over the cash to this criminal, he threatened to call the police. They still refused, so Foo the robber called the police and was arrested.
Convicted for the Pasig Heist, Foo was sentenced for five years in Muntinlupa. There he fell in love with another criminal. When the girl was released ahead of Foo, he escaped out of Muntinlupa. Then a few days later accompanied his girlfriend to her own trial for robbery (she tried to Rob the Pasig service station to avenge Foo). The stupid girl filled her tank first and paid using her credit card before doing the robbery). At lunch, he went out of the court room for a sandwich. She needed to see him, and thus had him paged. Police officers recognized his name and arrested him as he returned to the courthouse in a car he had stolen over the lunch hour. Foo went to jail again.
Released five years later Foo settled down in Paranaque. One day, Foo who later said he was "tired of walking," stole a pedicab and led police on a 5 mph chase along Roxas boulevard (he has weak chicken legs) until a traffic policeman stepped aboard and brought the vehicle to a stop. Foo landed in jail again.
Foo successfully broke into a bank after hours and stole the bank's video camera.
While it was recording.
Remotely.
In other words, the television was located in another part of the bank, so he didn't get to watch himself stealing the camera.
The police, however, did. That was Foo's third stint in jail.
Released on good behaviour after a few years, Foo tried Gun stealing. In Cabanatuan Nueva Ecija, Foo went into a Gun Store hardware store to apply for a job. After completing his application he then went to the section of the store that sold guns. He asked to see a couple guns. The attendant left for a moment and Foo stole the guns. Not only was he video-taped, the police used the address on his application to go to his house and arrest him. Foo landed in Jail again.
Later he lead a gang of petty house burglars. Robbing a condominium, Foos band got less than they bargained for when they discovered a bag of fine powder marked "Charlie" in a pot on the mantlepiece of their victim's plush condo. As later discovered by the police, little did foo and his criminals know as they racked the powder out into lines and prepared to tuck in that it wasn't cocaine, but actually the ashes of a dog named Charlie. The big dog passed away in 1997 and owner Mang Oscar, who lost two TV's, a VCR, a stereo and gems worth 2,000 pesos in the burglary, said, "The idea of them trying to get high on a dead dog made me feel better."
In Makati, during the trial of foo's sixth Robbery, his band was charged with attempting one of manila's largest cash robbery, the prosecuting attorney told the court that his group forced an armored car, carrying over 18 million pesos, into a wooded area in Makiling. The group then used high-powered torches to open it. The prosecutor also noted that the torches set off "a horrendously expensive bonfire" that turned over 18 million pesos into ashes, causing foo's men to flee.
Once, Foo, was discovered behind the UCPB Bank In Diliman, moments after it had just been robbed. Police said Foo was counting the stolen money when police arrived and was quickly arrested.