Muntinlupa Bliss Scandal Part 1 Exclusive [portable] -

“They didn’t knock,” says Aling Rosa (not her real name), a 67-year-old widow who has lived in Bliss Unit 112 since 1992. “They used a bolt cutter on the back gate. My dog didn’t even bark. I thought it was the usual hulidap (dragnet), but they went straight to the filing cabinet.”

In , we trace the flow of the PHP 7.2 million into a cryptocurrency wallet used to purchase beachfront property in Batangas. muntinlupa bliss scandal part 1 exclusive

If you have information regarding the Muntinlupa Bliss Scandal, contact our tip line. Anonymity guaranteed. “They didn’t knock,” says Aling Rosa (not her

But when we cross-referenced those payments with the actual bank statements of the Muntinlupa City Housing Department? There is a discrepancy of PHP 7.2 Million. I thought it was the usual hulidap (dragnet),

On Wednesday morning, residents of Phase 3 of the Bliss compound woke up to red spray-painted “X” marks on their doors. Notices were posted, claiming that their occupancy was “illegal” and that the city plans to demolish the structures to make way for a “mixed-use commercial development.”

In the shadow of the sprawling industrial parks and the glimmering high-rises of Alabang lies a forgotten world. The Muntinlupa Bliss Housing Project—a collection of dilapidated, concrete row houses originally built in the 1980s for informal settlers—has always smelled of rust and desperation. But over the last 72 hours, it has begun to smell like kerosene and betrayal.

According to a whistleblower we will call “The Accountant,” the money was funneled through a small cooperative called Samahang Kapitbahay ng Muntinlupa (SKM) . The cooperative was supposed to collect the payments and remit them to Pag-IBIG.