Guillermo Cruz de Vega, nicknamed Gimo, was a Presidential Assistant of Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos with the rank of Cabinet Secretary. He was assassinated on October 27, 1975 while working at his office at the Malacañan Palace, the site of the President’s residence and office complex.
Overview
As Presidential Assistant, Secretary de Vega was in charge of preparing documents for the President’s appointment of officials of the executive and judicial departments, among other duties. He was thus regarded as the “little president.” He was also the Chairman of the Board of Censors for Motion Pictures, a chess buff and a published writer. He first served Malacañang in 1967 under then Executive Secretary Rafael M. Salas, who recommended him as a Special Assistant in the Office of the President. Guillermo is survived by his wife Maria Rocio Atienza de Vega and their three children, Maria Margarita, born 1960, Eduardo Jose, born 1964, and Jaime Rafael, born 1967. They were married on February 21, 1959 and his widow has not remarried. His remains are in the St. James Parish at Muntinlupa, Philippines. Among De Vega’s published works were Ferdinand Marcos: An Epic, a biography in verse that was also translated into Filipino, and Film and Freedom: Movie Censorship in the Philippines, the first comprehensive historical account of film censorship in the Philippines.
The archives of De Vega are housed at the Technological Institute of the Philippines, which granted university scholarships annually in his name from 1976 to 2011. The Movie Workers Welfare Foundation or Mowelfund established the Dr. Guillermo de Vega Memorial Library in 2006. Mowelfund was the beneficiary of the popular annual Metro Manila Film Festival first held in 1975 when it was founded by De Vega together with former President Joseph Ejercito Estrada, who was then the President of the Philippine Motion Pictures Association, Mayor of San Juan town, and a film actor.
Death
De Vega’s death was considered mysterious since it occurred during the years when the Philippines was under martial law. Security within the Malacañang grounds should have been tight. Yet the convicted gunman Paulino Arceo had apparently smuggled in an unlicensed Smith & Wesson revolver in a manila envelope. During Arceo’s meeting with De Vega at his office in the Administration Building, gunshots were heard by witnesses including Judge Hilario Lacqui, and then Arceo rushed out. Arceo was immediately stopped and arrested when staff found de Vega unconscious and bleeding on the floor. De Vega was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital due to his five bullet wounds. The killing was ruled as murder on June 30, 1976 following trial by a military commission. Arceo was imprisoned and given the death penalty. After former President Marcos was replaced by former President Corazon C. Aquino in 1986, the Supreme Court invalidated all decisions rendered by military tribunals against civilians, and the criminal case was retried by the civil courts. The murder case against Arceo was filed before the Regional Trial Court of Manila, which ruled in 1990 that Arceo was guilty of the lesser crime of homicide. He was ordered released from jail since he had served more than the minimum sentence set by Philippine law for the crime of homicide. When interviewed for a television show in 2002, Arceo claimed he was a victim of the Marcos administration and denied having been paid for his crime. He also repeated his defense that he suddenly lost consciousness but was certain that De Vega was alive when he left the office. Arceo has since died.