Death of Michael de Guzman
Michael de Guzman was a Fillipino geologist who served as the chief geologist for Bre-X Minerals Ltd., a Canadian mining company. He was responsible for the reporting of gold sample results from the Busang exploration project in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. He became central to one of the most significant corporate frauds in the resource sector, known as the Bre-X scandal.
His reported death on March 19, 1997, occurred just as the massive fraud at the Busang site was about to be exposed. The circumstances surrounding his death remain controversial and unresolved.
Background
Michael de Guzman was a geologist with wide-ranging experience in mineral exploration across Southeast Asia. By the mid-1990s, he had a reputation as a skilled field geologist and was hired by Bre-X Minerals Ltd. to explore a gold prospect in the Busang region of Indonesia.He was put in charge of the site and was responsible for collecting, analyzing, and reporting gold sample results from the project. Under his supervision, Bre-X began to report increasingly positive assay results regarding gold deposits. These reports were key to the rapid increase in Bre-X’s market valuation, which went over C$6 billion by 1996 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
De Guzman was known to have a complicated personal life, reports later revealed he had at least two wives and maintained multiple identities and passports.
Circumstance of death
In early 1997, as Bre-X faced increasing pressure to verify its resource estimates through independent testing, the work of Michael de Guzman came under intense scrutiny. De Guzman reportedly died on March 19, 1997, after falling from a helicopter over the Indonesian jungle, while travelling to the Busang exploration camp. His death occurred at the time representatives from the U.S. mining firm Freeport-McMoRan were conducting on-site investigation.Official reports concluded the death was a suicide. The finding was based on official statements that he was suffering from hepatitis B and was under intense stress due to the scrutiny of Bre-X's claims. Suicide notes and personal items, including a Rolex watch, were reportedly found among his belongings.
The body was recovered days later in a remote jungle area severely decomposed, and was officially identified mainly through circumstantial evidence, such as dental records. However, no DNA testing was conducted before the corpse was cremated.
Controversy
The official story that Michael de Guzman died by suicide after jumping from a helicopter is strongly doubted by journalists, experts, and his own family. As his death happened just before the Bre-X fraud was made public, people widely guess that he either killed himself, was murdered, or secretly escaped and faked his death.The body was found days later in the jungle and was badly decomposed. It was officially identified mostly using dental records and personal items. This was immediately controversial because no DNA testing was done before the body was cremated. Filipino experts raised specific questions and said the recovered body had natural teeth, but de Guzman was known to wear dentures. They also looked at photos and suggested marks on the neck could be signs of strangulation.
Several other theories about de Guzman's fate are still talked about. One main idea is that he was murdered either thrown out of the helicopter or killed earlier to keep him from telling the police or naming other people involved in the gold fraud. Another popular theory is that de Guzman faked his death to run away from being arrested. This idea is supported by the fact that he had many passports and traveled under different names. Reports a year after his supposed death claimed money transfers linked to him were found in bank accounts overseas, and his wife in the Philippines said she received money she believed came from him.