Source: NUS Site

There was public outcry when it was reported that a National University of Singapore (NUS) student will only have to complete community-based sentences for physically assaulting his ex-girlfriend. 

However, a criminal lawyer has decried the media’s reporting of the verdict instead and stated the judge’s sentences were justified.  

NUS student gets community-based sentence for assault

Yin Zi Qin pleaded guilty in February for strangling his ex-girlfriend and causing her left eye to bleed when he pressed his thumb against it. 

He is a second-year undergraduate at NUS Dentistry course. 

Yin had asked her to reconcile in May 2019 after the victim broke up with him after close to two years of dating. The 21-year-old turned him down despite his pleas and gifted roses. 

He then banged his head against the wall before putting two hands on her and strangling her. He went on to press her left eye with his thumb until it bled and she passed out on the floor. 

The victim suffered a temporary impairment to her vision, with a prolonged eye infection that took five months to heal. She also had to wear an eye patch during that time. 

On Friday (17 Jul), Yin was ordered to serve a short detention of 12 days, fulfil a day reporting order for five months with counselling and complete 80 hours of community service over a year.

District Judge Marvin Bay said his “relative youth, his rehabilitative prospects and his lack of (previous convictions)” rendered community-based sentences “a viable option”.

He also felt Yin “is not at high risk of reoffending”. 

According to the State Courts, community-based sentences (CBS) are non-jail sentences introduced in 2010 to give the courts greater flexibility in sentencing options for minor offences. In appropriate cases, the court will consider CBS instead of traditional sentences such as imprisonment or a fine. 

If the CBS is successfully completed, the criminal record will be considered ‘spent’ and the offender will not have the conviction on his record. 

A short detention order (SDO) is one of the five CBS orders that can be considered. The offender can be detained in prison for a period not exceeding 14 days. This order is deterrent in nature and based on the circumstances of the case, the nature of the offence and the character of the offender. Its purpose is to allow the offender to experience the ‘short, sharp, shock’ of prison life.

A Day Reporting Order (DRO) is administered by the Singapore Prison Service and requires the offender to report to a day reporting centre for monitoring, counselling and to undergo rehabilitation programmes. The Judge will consider the nature of the offence and the character of the offender, and the possible effects of counselling and rehabilitation on the offender. 

A Community Service Order can be imposed on offenders on the potentiality of reformation and for them to make amends to the community by performing unpaid community service. 

The assessment for an CSO is based on the court’s satisfaction of the mental and physical condition of the offender. 

Netizens took to Facebook and Reddit to denounce the justice system in light of what they felt were serious offences. 

 

Some believed the university he was attending and ‘potential to excel’ were the drivers behind the sentences.

Two petitions have been created on Saturday (18 Jul) demanding harsher penalties for Yin and the expulsion of the offender from NUS. A total of 17,652 signatures have been garnered (at time of writing) for the two petitions out of the 20,000 goal.

NUS released a statement on its Facebook page at noon on Monday (20 Jul) stating that Yin is currently serving a suspension and is banned from entering the campus temporarily.

It added that a breach of NUS Statutes and Regulations may result in suspension or expulsion of the student.

Past NUS sex offence cases

One of the more notable past sex offences cases involving NUS students was the sentencing of 21-month probation for Terence Siow Kai Yuan. He was prosecuted for molesting a woman on three instances at Serangoon MRT station in September 2018. 

He was sentenced on 25 September 2019. 

District Judge Jasvender Kaur felt Siow was suitable for probation for the “minor intrusions” as his academic results showed that he has the “potential to excel in life”. 

The other would be Nicholas Lim Jun Kai’s sentence of a 12-month conditional warning for filming a fellow NUS student, Monica Baey, while she was showering at the hostel. 

From 2015 – 2018, 25 cases of sexual offences were brought in front of the NUS Board of Discipline according to NUS’ students’ portal. 

According to the police, 17 cases were reported. Nine accused were prosecuted in court, while the remaining six were given conditional warnings. One was under investigation then. 

The police added that out of the nine cases prosecuted in court, five received jail terms of between 10 days and eight months. 

Three accused were given supervised probation, and one was given a discharge not amounting to an acquittal. 

“The sentences, including supervised probation, were decided by the courts,” the police said.

Criminal lawyer says verdict is lawfully justified

On Sunday (19 Jul), a criminal lawyer spoke up to deconstruct the justification of Yin’s sentences from the perspective of the law. He asserted that the verdict was not only appropriately just but lawfully justified. 

He also lambasted the mainstream media for its biased clickbait reporting to “stoke public anger” so as to increase readership views and web traffic. 

For a young offender, he began by explaining that “the principle of rehabilitation is the dominant sentencing principle” for this demographic. 

“In such special circumstances, the Court will more likely than not impose community sentences such as probation, community work orders, day reporting orders or short detention orders.” 

Age of the offender – In Singapore, the principle of rehabilitation is the dominant sentencing principle for a young offender. In such special circumstances, the Court will more likely than not impose community sentences such as probation, community work orders, day reporting orders or short detention orders (the latter three being the sentences that were imposed in this case).

He moved on to give the background of the DRO and how it is determined. The main focus of its assessment is the “risk of reoffending”. 

The Day Reporting Order Suitability Report – the fact that the Court considered imposing a day reporting order means that a day reporting suitability report was called. This means that an independent review was conducted by Singapore Prisons to assess the Accused’s potential in rehabilitating while undergoing counselling sessions. It is important to determine the risk of reoffending and an offender will not be deemed suitable for a day reporting order if the risk is high.

Lastly, the SDO was ordered in the interest of public policy, “where (the court) does not want our young and highly impressionable youths to be spending months with hardened criminals”. 

The Clang of the Prisons Gates Theory – By giving an offender a short taste of prison life, it is deemed to be sufficient to deter a young or first time offender from a life of crime. As a matter of public policy, we do not want our young and highly impressionable youths to be spending months with hardened criminals.

He elaborated that sentences involve “numerous factors” and are a “complex process”, especially when a person’s liberty is at stake.

“The usual sentencing documents, including the Prosecution’s, usually extends to at least 15 full pages (not including case precedents which may be another few hundred pages).” 

The lawyer instead took issue with the “unsavoury tactics” of the media of “reporting bits and pieces of a matter to (generate) more advertising income”.

“It is my naive belief that the role of the media is not just to report the news, but to educate the general public. Be that as it may, it appears that it is now more important to generate (advertising) revenue via clickbait headlines and reporting, as compared to educating the public.”

He bemoaned that society was “powerless to influence anything in this age of digital capitalism”.

Subscribe
Notify of
3 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

A Nostalgic Hari Raya

A poem by Raymond Anthony Fernando/ Photos by Joshua Chiang Listening to…

天平两端如何取舍:剖析外国奖学金和学费津贴议题

作者:工人党前非选区议员余振忠 两日前,教育部长王乙康,在国会回应我的伙伴工人党非选区议员贝理安(Leon Perera)的质询,透露过去10年来,政府为外国学生所提供的奖学金和学费补贴预算,已降低50 巴仙。 目前,对外籍生奖学金和学费补贴的预算加总,为2亿3千800万新元,这意味着,2009年的年度开销可能达到4亿7千800万元。放在过去我国仅有四所政府津贴大学(目前是六所),相较之下,政府在过去支持外籍生,对比本地生开销之百分比,可能比现在还来得高。 自2011年我进入国会起,我便时时刻刻关注、倡议相关课题。此前,我曾遇见许多因学额有限,未能将孩子送入本地大学就读的新加坡人民。许多孩子最终只能前往私立大学或出国留学。 我曾于2011年向国会提呈,希望能够借此获得更多数据。目前有4万1000名本地学生进入私立大学或私人教育机构(PEIs)就读。这些数字还不包括国外就读的新加坡学生,因为政府无法就此追踪流失的学生数据。若两者结合,相信其国外留学与就读私立大学的新加坡学生数据会更高。 4万1000名学生可视为相当高的数字,要知道,新加坡每年准备升学的学生在4万5000到五万左右,这意味着有更多的学生拥有求学襟抱,但碍于学额的限制,只能另寻出路。 无论是就读私立学校或出国留学,其开支都相当昂贵,同时也违背了许多国人的意愿。此窘境一直持续到政府愿意为本地学生开放更多学额而增设另两所大学,新躍大學(SUSS)以及新加坡理工大学(SIT)。 一名于本地大学担任教师的朋友告诉我,他们发现,在政府的奖学金优惠下,外国学生人数正激增,但其表现也无法勉强达到三等荣誉学位( third class honours)。然而,针对外籍生所设立的奖学金开支却相当高,试想若将开支花费在非新加坡人身上,那也应该是将钱花在有素质、有助提升我们教育与经济的外籍生身上。…

抵触竞争法 四酒店被罚款152万新元

新加坡竞争与消费者委员会宣布,四家酒店因互换敏感商业资讯,触犯竞争法,酒店业主和管理者被罚款总值152万2354新元的罚款。 这四家酒店是:樟宜坊辉盛凯贝丽酒店(Capri by Fraser Changi City)、远东机构旗下的悦乐樟宜酒店(Village Hotel Changi)和悦乐加东酒店(Village Hotel Katong),以及樟宜机场皇冠假日酒店(Crowne Plaza Changi…

MOH confirms 407 additional cases of COVID-19; Brings total tally to 40,604

As of Sunday noon (14 June), the Ministry of Health (MOH) has…