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Beauty queen’s gowns, makeup spiked
Rebecca Banuchi
SAN JUAN(Puerto Rico)—Police on Monday sought to determine who tried to
turn a beauty contestant ugly by dousing her clothing with a chemical
solution and spiking her makeup, causing her to break out in hives.
Ingrid Marie Rivera was composed while appearing before cameras and
judges throughout the Miss Puerto Rico Universe pageant but had to strip
off her clothes backstage and apply ice bags to her face and body and
she swelled and broke out in hives twice. But the veteran beauty-pageant
contestant beat 29 rivals Friday to become Puerto Rico’s 2008 Miss
Universe contestant.
Pageant spokesman Harold Rosario said the symptoms first began showing
up during preliminary competition on Nov. 18.
“We thought at first it was an allergic reaction, or maybe nerves,”
Rosario said. “But the second time, we knew it couldn’t have been a
coincidence.”
Police spokesman Stephen Alvarez said Monday that an evening gown and
Rivera’s makeup have been delivered to the Institute of Forensic
Sciences for a chemical analysis. Magali Febles, director of the Miss
Puerto Rico Universe pageant, said earlier that the substance used in
the alleged attempt to derail Rivera’s bid for the crown appeared to be
pepper gas.
Rivera tearfully recounted her ordeal at a news conference Sunday,
acknowledging she had wavered about staying in the contest.
“At one point I said, `Am I a masochist?’” she recalled. “But I said, `I
am with God and this is my goal, regardless of the results.’”
Rosario said he saw something was wrong days ago.
“We noted that when she finished applying makeup and went to get on
stage, she began to get red in the face, on the back and shoulders —
everywhere she had applied makeup,” Rosario said in a telephone
interview from the Dominican Republic, where Rivera was participating in
a fashion show Monday.
Pageant security agents, some of whom are former police officers, on
Friday identified stains on Rivera’s clothing as originating from pepper
spray, according to Rosario.
Rosario said promoters and makeup artists of rival contestants are
suspected of being behind the sabotage effort, but he did not name
names.
From the beginning, Rivera’s bid for the crown was contentious. Some of
her rivals felt at a disadvantage because she was a veteran contestant,
having been second runner-up in the 2005 Miss World contest.
A bag with Rivera’s clothing, makeup, credit cards and other belongings
had mysteriously disappeared for a while during the pageant, Febles
said.
Beauty competitions in the U.S. Caribbean territory — which boasts five
Miss Universe titles, second only to the U.S. — are fierce, drawing
boisterous audiences and accusations of rigged results. |