Based on the 27 official receipts offered as new evidence by the prosecution on Monday, all were under the name of Corona and his wife. "In all 27 receipts, nowhere did Charina's name appear,” confirms Megaworld Finance Director Giovanni Ng, the seventh witness of about 100 more to be presented to court. The deed of sale for the McKinley property, however, was under Corona's daughter Charina. Private prosecutor Joseph Perez then informed the court that the McKinley property was not disclosed in Corona's statement of assets, liabilities and net worth, which is among the evidence needed under Article II of the impeachment complaint. Lead defense counsel and retired Associate Justice Serafin Cuevas was quick to object to Perez' insinuation, forcing Senate president and presiding officer Juan Ponce Enrile to rule to strike out the prosecution's supposed "manifestation," agreeing the prosecution was making a conclusion. If the prosecution witness' test...