I. PROLOGUE: THE MISSING GIRL OF MINGLANILLA

Cebu is known for its rich history and vibrant culture, but in 2011, a small municipality called Minglanilla became the center of a horrific crime. Ella Joy Pique, a bright-eyed 6-year-old student at Calajo-an Elementary School, lived a simple life with her parents, Renante and Ligaya.

On February 8, 2011, her routine was broken. Her father, Renante, told her he couldn’t pick her up due to work. The school was close, and she had walked home before. At 4:00 PM, Ella Joy walked out of the school gates with her friends, including twin boys.

According to the twins, a black vehicle pulled up. A man and a woman inside offered Ella Joy two 50-peso bills (Php 100) to get in. Enticed by the money, the innocent child climbed into the car. She waved goodbye to her friends, not knowing it was the last time they would see her alive.

II. THE DISCOVERY AT THE CLIFF

By 6:00 PM, Renante arrived home to an empty house. Panic set in. He searched the school, the neighborhood, and reported her missing to the police. The next day, February 9, a caretaker at a beach in a neighboring barangay spotted something unusual at the bottom of a cliff.

It was a package wrapped in a white bedsheet and bound with wires. Initial speculation was that it was a de@d pig or dog. But when curiosity drew a crowd and the package was opened, the horror was revealed: it was the lifeless b0dy of a child. Nearby, police found a school bag containing uniforms, notebooks, and two 50-peso bills—the price of her life.

The Father’s Grief At the police station, Renante was shown the bag. He confirmed it was Ella Joy’s. At the morgue, his world shattered. Seeing his daughter’s battered b0dy, he screamed in Visayan, “Who could do this to you, my child?” blaming himself for not picking her up. Her mother, Ligaya, was so traumatized she initially refused to believe the swollen, bruised face belonged to her daughter.

III. THE FIRST SUSPECTS: A RUSH TO JUDGMENT

Pressure mounted on the Cebu police to solve the heinous crime. Based on the twins’ description, a police sketch was released showing a foreigner and a Filipina.

On February 12, police arrested a Norwegian national and his Filipina fiancée at the Mactan-Cebu International Airport. The police were triumphant. They brought the child witnesses to identify the couple, and the kids pointed them out. Charges of Kidnapping with Homicide were filed. However, cracks appeared immediately:

    The Tattoo: The sketch showed a suspect with a tattoo. The Norwegian man stripped in front of investigators to prove he had none.

    The Alibi: The couple had solid proof (CCTV, receipts) that they were at the Waterfront Hotel in Cebu City during the abduction.

    The NBI Intervention: Cebu Governor Gwendolyn Garcia, skeptical of the police’s “achievement,” asked the NBI (National Bureau of Investigation) to intervene. The NBI confirmed the couple’s innocence. The police had arrested the wrong people, blinded by the need for a quick win. The couple was released after 17 days of wrongful detention, opting not to sue but demanding justice for Ella Joy. The blunder cost the investigation critical time.

IV. THE SECOND SUSPECTS: BELLA RUBY SANTOS AND IAN CHARLES GRIFFITHS

The investigation reset. New witnesses emerged, pointing to a different pair: Bella Ruby Santos (a Naga City native) and her British boyfriend, Ian Charles Griffiths. The Evidence Against Them:

The Black Pajero: Police seized Bella Ruby’s black Mitsubishi Pajero. Witnesses claimed seeing a similar vehicle in Minglanilla.

The Cybers*x Angle: Police raided Bella Ruby’s home, alleging it was a den for cybers*x operations. They theorized Ella Joy was abducted to be used in p0rn0graphy.

Witness Testimony: A witness claimed the couple tried to abduct another child, Sherilyn Rolo, earlier that day but failed. Another witness claimed seeing them dump a “package” off a cliff.

The Flight: Griffiths fled the Philippines on February 9, the day the b0dy was found.

The Defense: Bella Ruby and her lawyer presented a detailed itinerary. They claimed they arrived from Singapore on Feb 2, went to Palawan on Feb 4, and returned to Cebu on Feb 6. They missed their flight back to Singapore on Feb 7 and stayed in Naga City until Griffiths flew out on Feb 9. They argued they were nowhere near Minglanilla during the abduction.

V. THE TRIAL AND THE DISMISSAL

Charges were filed. Griffiths was arrested in London in April 2011 but could not be extradited; he was released on bail there. Bella Ruby was arrested in the Philippines. The Forensic Failure: In August 2012, DNA results from Bella Ruby’s Pajero came back. Negative. There was no trace of Ella Joy’s blood or DNA in the vehicle. This was a massive blow to the prosecution.

The Verdict (October 2014) After years of hearings, Judge Ester Veloso dismissed the case against Bella Ruby Santos. The judge granted the demurrer to evidence (motion to dismiss due to lack of evidence). Why?

    Unreliable Witnesses: The child witnesses who identified Bella Ruby and Ian were the same children who had positively identified the innocent Norwegian couple earlier. Their credibility was shattered.

    Lack of Forensics: No DNA linked the suspects to the crime scene or the victim.

    Circumstantial Weakness: The prosecution relied on theories (cybers*x, the car) that they could not scientifically prove.

Bella Ruby walked free. The bail money (Php 500,000) was returned.

VI. CONCLUSION: A COLD CASE

The case of Ella Joy Pique is technically closed in the courts, but it remains wide open in the search for truth. A 6-year-old girl was brutally m*rdered—bludgeoned to de@th with a hard object. The investigation was marred by incompetence, a rush to judgment, and reliance on traumatized child witnesses without corroborating forensic evidence.

Because of these failures, the real k*llers—whether they were the second pair of suspects who got away due to technicalities, or completely different people who were never caught—remain free. Ella Joy’s family received no justice. The only legacy of the case is a grim lesson on how a flawed investigation can bury the truth deeper than the grave.