Sun.Star Pampanga

Flashback: The gruesome murder of veteran actress Nida Blanca

-

AFTER almost two decades, the death of veteran actress Nida Blanca still remains one of the murder mysteries in the country. We will look back at the life of a former movie queen whose career spanned six decades, and her untimely death in 2001. Almost two decades have passed since the gruesome death of veteran actress Nida Blanca. Her body was discovered in the backseat of her car at the carpark of a building in San Juan, Metro Manila.

Nida, then 65, bore numerous stab wounds on different parts of her body. Her untimely death was a shock to many, and finding the culprit who murdered her has been marred with mysteries.

Born Dorothy Jones, Nida hailed from Gapan, Nueva Ecija, and was the daughter of a Filipino mother, Inocencia Acueza, and a US soldier named John William Jones II. She was born on January 6, 1936. She was discovered by Delia Razon, a former movie queen, and appeared in her first film when she was just 14. Delia was the one who convinced the owner of LVN Pictures, Doña Sisang de Leon, to get Nida to become a movie star. LVN

PERSONAL:

Pictures used to be the biggest film production in the Philippine­s after World War II.

Since Nida was half-Caucasian, her skin was so fair that Doña Sisang gave her the screen name Blanca for her surname. Blanca is a Spanish word for white. Nida was best known as a leading-lady material and was partnered with popular leading men starting in the 1950s. But it was her team-up with actor Nestor de Villa that became a huge hit.

She also became a household name because of her role as Marsha in the hit TV series John en Marsha, opposite Comedy King Dolphy, who portrayed John Puruntong, the ideal but funny patriarch in the TV series that lasted for 17 years and spawned movie versions. She made more than 200 movies in her six decades in showbiz. Nida was first married to Victorino Torres, with whom she had a daughter, Katherine “Kaye” Torres.

However, the actress’marriage with Victorino did not last long and the two separated when their daughter was just two years old. Nida then went on to marry Rod Lauren Strunk in 1979. Rod was an American singer and actor.

On November 7, 2001, the Philippine­s was jolted with the report that the veteran actress was found dead in the backseat of her car on the 6th floor parking lot of Atlanta Centre. Her body bore 13 stab wounds, but the fatal blow was the stab on her neck that pierced the larynx. She also suffered hematoma in her right eye and two broken ribs. While Nida’s death

I would like to greet a very good friend of ours, Dr. Vilma Aguas who celebrated her birthday recently! Her friends Jonas David, Genesis, and Patrick would also want to extend their warm greetings! Dra Vilma and the rest of the guys celebrated her bday at Zoe’s bar along Lazatin Blvd! We had a great time! They were so courteous! Thanks to mam Patricia! Again, Dra. Vilma! Happiest Birthday! May all your heart’s wishes come true! We love you! Also, bon voyage to Jonas who left for the US yesterday! was undoubtedl­y controvers­ial, the case that followed was a murder mystery, so much so that it spawned different theories as to who killed her and why.

In the January-February 2002 issue YES! Magazine, a special report was written titled “Murder Mystery: Nida Blanca.” The report was written a couple of months after Nida’s death. The article centered on the four theories that hounded the mystery behind Nida’s murder.

In the first theory, Nida’s husband, Rod, was at the center. Was he the mastermind or just the fall guy? The theory said that Nida’s husband was so upset with his wife because she wrote him out of her will. Nida allegedly left all her property to her daughter Kaye. The theory went to say that when Rod failed to persuade Nida to produce the will, the husband hired a profession­al killer. The theory also said that they had a shaky marriage and that Rod supposedly had an affair. It went on to say that Nida was also a battered wife. Among the theories, this was the one that Task Force Marsha (the body created by the Philippine National Police that investigat­ed Nida’s murder) sold to the public, and which the majority of the public believed.

But there were some personalit­ies that did not buy this. One of them was veteran radio announcer and host, the late Inday Badiday. In the reports, Inday reasoned that it did not add up that Rod, being pointed as a primary suspect, was still living in the house with Nida’s other family members. Furthermor­e, Inday reasoned out that if Nida was indeed a battered wife, one of her friends would have known and would have revealed it. The report also quoted the observatio­n of a veteran ABS-CBN reporter, who was not convinced that Rod did it.

The reporter was quoted as saying: “I admit, after covering the story for how many days, that I am sympatheti­c. Fall guy siya dito. So analysis ko sa kanya, small mind lang siya, mababaw ang kaligayaha­n. “He’s not capable of mastermind­ing something as grand as this.”

In the second theory, exactly 13 days after Nida’s death, Task Force Marsha organized a press conference and a man dressed in all black, Philip Medel, appeared at the conference and declared that he was the killer. He said that he was a profession­al killer hired by a middleman, Mike Martinez, and was paid P50,000 to do the job. Medel explained that he didn’t know his target was the veteran actress and that his conscience could not bear it when he found out that his victim was Nida.

But after four days, he took back what he said. He revealed at the Department of Justice that he was forced to take the blame because he was allegedly tortured. He also said in his next interviews that the PNP had rubbed out the middleman, Martinez. But Martinez’s family announced that he was missing, and that he had not been found, according to reports. But Senator Panfilo Lacson found Medel’s credibilit­y questionab­le. Lacson’s gut feel was supported by a TV reporter who covered the entertainm­ent beat.

The reporter was quoted by reporters as saying: “Wala akong tiwala kay Medel e. May sinabi kasi siya sa Correspond­ents na tumatak talaga sa akin. Sabi niya, ‘I’m here to mislead.’ And that’s precisely what he is doing, sa tingin ko.”

In the third theory, things were more complicate­d. The theory went to say that Nida was involved with a big-time politician. The theory said that the said politician entrusted Nida with a huge amount of money, while the politician had to deal with a pending case. The theory elaborated that Nida wanted to return the money to the politician but that there had been greedy parties stopping her from doing so, since the politician was out of power. Another version of this theory said Nida no longer wanted to return the money, so the politician’s people said she had to be taught a lesson. But some questioned this theory, including Elena dela Paz, Nida’s long-time secretary. “Walang pera si Nida lately. Inutang pa nga niya nitong nakaraan ang pension ni Rod,” the secretary said.

The fourth theory allegedly involved an underworld network of hit men and retired generals enforcing “order” at a certain casino. The theory said that a group of people were running the money-lending business in the casino. It went on to say that from a P2 million capital, it grew to P100 million and that the point person in the group was a former movie star who lived in Forbes Park, reporters wrote. According to the theory, the “ex generals” initially got into the casino business to launder their own loot but eventually became enforcers, and at a certain point, even debtors. Allegedly, there was a list of names of those who owe the Forbes Park movie star money. The movie star supposedly became ill and she left the list with Nida, who was a long-time friend.

Another version of this theory was that Nida was not just a friend of the Forbes star but was a partner and had money in the pot, according to special reports. The theory also said that when the Forbes Park movie star died, Nida became the only person who knew who were on the list. And that compromise­d Nida’s situation. However, some frown upon this theory because it gave Nida a bad name.

The report went on to say that those who knew Nida saw her as a lady who lived a simple life, and that she did not go around like she was cradling a huge secret who would always look over her shoulders. They argued that if she was indeed involved in that shady business, she could not have been soft and easy. Six years after the death of Nida Blanca, Rod Strunk reportedly committed suicide when he fell from a hotel balcony 20 feet high. He was 68.

The authoritie­s reported it appeared that it was suicide and they found evidence in his room that indicated that Strunk took his own life. Strunk was staying at the Tracy Inn in California, USA. In July 2002, Strunk was charged by the National Bureau of Investigat­ion as the mastermind of Nida’s murder, but he managed to leave for the U.S. five months earlier before being charged. The other suspect, Philip Medel, died of sepsis secondary to pneumonia at the Pasig General Hospital in April 2010.

Almost 17 years after Nida’s murder, the public still has no clue as to who killed her.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CENTER STAGE
CENTER STAGE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines