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1️⃣ Tragedy Behind Closed Doors — A Wife Accused of Having Five Secret Lovers Is Allegedly Caught in the Act by Her Own Husband, Turning a Quiet Marriage into a Shocking Public Scandal — Was it really a coincidence that he arrived at that exact moment, or a carefully planned confrontation after months of suspicion? Witnesses claim chaos, tears, and frozen silence 😱 What are they hiding about the other men, and how deep does this betrayal truly go? Accident, setup, or a truth finally exposed after years of lies? The night changed everything forever… Click to uncover the full story.

🔪 BLOOD ON THE MOTEL FLOOR! 🔪 The Saleslady with Five Lovers: A Husband’s Final, Deadly Act of Vengeance After Catching His Wife in Flagrante Delicto!

This is the chilling, heart-wrenching true story of a simple man pushed beyond the brink, revealing the brutal consequences when poverty, desperation, and betrayal collide. Gerald Sianko, a former habal-habal driver from Butuan City, sacrificed everything to provide for his wife, Lazel (38), and their child. But when Lazel moved to Manila for “work,” she plunged headfirst into a secret life of infidelity, juggling five different lovers and exchanging her body for money and comfort.

The journey ended in a bloody, inevitable confrontation inside a Taguig motel room, culminating in a violent act of vengeance that shattered one family and cost two lives. This is the dark investigation into how poverty destroyed their marriage, how temptation poisoned a soul, and the irreversible choice a betrayed husband made when facing the ultimate humiliation.


The Road to Ruin: Poverty, Temptation, and the Five Lovers

Lazel Sianko started as a quiet, devoted wife and mother in Butuan. Gerald, her husband of 14 years, was a hardworking man, enduring the sun and rain driving his habal-habal (motorcycle taxi), later moving to harvesting bananas just to put food on the table. They were poor, exhausted, and hungry.

Lazel could not bear the hardship. She moved to Manila to work as a saleslady in a large mall, a move initially supported by Gerald, as she dutifully sent money home. But the isolation, the anonymity of the city, and the constant stress quickly exposed her to a darker path.

She began telling men she was single, diving into a calculated life of deceit:

Mark Gadner: Her first lover, a supervisor at the mall who offered money and affection.

Zander Baloyot: A wealthy neighbor who gave her kilig (thrills) and quick money after work.

Edward, Ramil, and Crisanto: Three more men added to her roster, each one a source of cash and temporary happiness.

Lazel’s strategy was simple: she traded sexual favors for money, skillfully scheduling her five lovers—a meticulous plan to maximize her income without exerting effort.

The King of the Scheme: Crisanto, The Wealthy Kabit

Among the five, Crisanto was the game-changer. He was not an ordinary man; he owned a large poultry farm and a successful construction supply business, making him Lazel’s wealthiest lover.

Crisanto demanded luxury, always meeting in expensive hotels and showering Lazel with gifts. His financial power was so great that Lazel realized her small saleslady salary was insignificant compared to his weekly handouts. She quit her mall job after only four months, though she continued wearing her uniform and deceiving Gerald’s cousin, pretending to go to work while actually reporting to Crisanto’s private rest house inside his Taguig construction compound.

The Fatal Discovery: The Instinct That Unleashed Fury

Back in Butuan, Gerald was suffering. Though Lazel was sending him ₱10,000 monthly—an impossibly high amount for a mall saleslady—his suspicion was relentless. His wife, who had grown distant on the phone, was suddenly sending too much money.

Driven by an “unexplainable gut feeling,” Gerald called his cousin in Quezon City, begging him to follow Lazel. The cousin quickly discovered the truth: Lazel had quit her job four months ago.

The next day, the cousin followed Lazel to Crisanto’s construction supply. The sight was immediate and devastating: Crisanto stepped out, embraced Lazel, and kissed her openly. The cousin quickly recorded the evidence and sent the horrifying video back to Butuan.

Gerald was shattered. “He was struck by lightning from the intensity of the pain.” For three days, he drank relentlessly, nearly losing his mind. He then made an irreversible decision.

The Confrontation: A Final, Deadly Showdown

Gerald pawned a small piece of land he inherited from his mother for travel money and raced to Manila. He stayed hidden at his cousin’s room, waiting for the perfect opportunity.

That opportunity arrived when Lazel and Crisanto went out on a date. Gerald and his cousin followed them silently through the city streets, watching the betrayal unfold in public. The trail led them to a hotel.

Once Lazel and Crisanto entered the motel room, Gerald and his cousin approached the reception desk. Gerald calmly explained the situation: the woman was his wife, and the man was her lover. Moved by sympathy and pity, the receptionist not only gave Gerald the duplicate key but also escorted them to the room, cellphone recording every step.

The door opened to a sight that solidified Gerald’s worst fears: Lazel, partially unclothed, beside Crisanto.

Stunned into silence, Gerald stood motionless. But the pain, the humiliation, and the long-simmering rage of years of poverty and betrayal consumed him. He reached for something concealed at his side—a weapon he had desperately hoped not to use.

In a split second, Gerald committed a final, violent act of vengeance that instantly ended the lives of both his wife and her lover.

The Bitter Aftermath: A Life Sentence for Vengeance

The cousins fled the scene. Gerald immediately took a bus back to Butuan, desperate to escape. However, authorities were swift. Gerald was intercepted and arrested in Matnog.

The verdict was swift and devastating: Gerald Sianko was convicted on two counts of homicide and sentenced to life imprisonment. His cousin, who was merely a witness, was eventually released but left with the heavy burden of regret and guilt for exposing the secret.

In his cell, Gerald expressed no remorse:

“If I had not done that, I would have continuously been tortured by the pain of her betrayal and the slow destruction of the family I worked hard to build.” (Translation of: “Hindi siya nagsisi. Ayon sa kanya kung hindi daw niya iyon ginawa patuloy lang din siyang lulukhin sa sakit sa pagtataksil.”)

For Gerald, the act was not one of murder, but of cutting off a cycle of deception that had imprisoned his trust and dignity.

The tragedy of Lazel and Gerald Sianko is a stark warning: while poverty can drive individuals to desperate lengths, it never justifies the choice of wrongdoing. Every decision, whether driven by hardship or temptation, carries a responsibility—and sometimes, a catastrophic price.

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