
[Updated July 1, 2026, 2:35 p.m.]
MANILA, Philippines – Alias Nash, the 14-year-old suspect in the school shooting in Tacloban City, was brought to the firing range by his aunt because he “looked up to” her, Nash’s aunt, Police Staff Sgt. Arla Ray Pacencia said on Wednesday.
During a Senate panel probe into the Tacloban shooting incident that led to three deaths, Pacencia was questioned about why she brought Nash to a firing range.
Article continues after this advertisement
“He usually told me that he wanted to be a police officer, like me. He looked up [to] me. He wanted to be a police officer, and he asked me to bring him to a firing range,” Pacencia said.
FEATURED STORIES
NEWSINFO
NEWSINFO
NEWSINFO
She clarified beforehand that she only brought Nash to the firing range once.
Still, Sen. Raffy Tulfo pressed that, though not prohibited, it is the responsibility of adults to ensure that minors are not exposed to the practice of gun firing.
“We adults should be responsible gun owners. We should not expose our minor relatives to guns… and show them guns — much more bringing them to firing ranges so they can see the actual firing of a gun, until they learn how to fire a gun,” Tulfo said in a mix of Filipino and English.
READ: Tacloban: Victim’s mom wants separate detention for suspects
Article continues after this advertisement
“He learned how to shoot a gun because you took him to the firing range. If you hadn’t taken him and if he hadn’t been exposed to that kind of environment, then things would’ve been different,” he added.
Apart from taking her nephew to a shooting range, it was also Pacencia’s gun, a government-issued 9mm Glock 17, that was supposedly used by Nash during the fatal school shooting.
Article continues after this advertisement
According to Pacencia, Nash broke into her home and got her firearm.
“Nash unlawfully entered my own house. He forcefully damaged my locker. It was locked, and my house was locked as well. [It was a] plastic locker, and my firearm was inside a gun box,” she said.
Sen. Risa Hontiveros, who was presiding over the hearing, raised her eyebrow on hearing how the firearm was stored in the first place.
READ: School shooting kills 3 students in Tacloban
Pacencia herself admitted that the standard protocol is to store guns in a safety vault, but “it was in good faith,” she said, believing it would be safe to leave her firearm in a plastic locker.
Later, Tulfo asked how Nash knew to break into the plastic locker.
To this, the police officer answered: “I have only one locker in my room. Maybe he was looking for some place I could hide items, and that was the only area with a lock.
Hontiveros then urged that standard protocols for gun ownership be followed to prevent the worst-case scenario.
Nash is one of the two suspects in the Tacloban school shooting that led to the death of their schoolmates and the injury of at least 13.
Asked if Pacencia observed any signs that Nash would incite harm to his schoolmates, she noted that when Nash hit puberty, he began having his “own world” and was always on his mobile phone.
She also described Nash as “introverted,” contrary to how a peer described him. The sister of Nash’s best friend, also present during the hearing, called Nash the “joker” of the friend group.
Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.
He is currently in the custody of the Department of Social Welfare and Development following the incident. /atm /mr
View original source — Philippine Daily Inquirer ↗


