Malaysian woman acquitted in high-profile court case involving fatal collision with illegal bicycles in 2017

The Court of Appeal on Tuesday (11 Apr) acquitted and discharged clerk, Sam Ke Ting, of the charge of reckless driving causing the death of eight teenagers who were riding illegal modified bicycles in 2017. The three-judge panel, led by Datuk Hadhariah Syed Ismail sitting with Datuk Hashim Hamzah and Datuk Azman Abdullah, unanimously made the decision to set aside the six-year imprisonment and RM6,000 (1,359 USD) fine imposed by the High Court on Ke Ting.

Court orders Terry Xu to pay S$30k fine and costs for publishing letter addressed to Chief Justice regarding Attorney-General’s Chambers

On Thursday, the High Court ordered Terry Xu, the editor of TOC, to pay a fine of S$18,000 for the publication of an article under the Administration of Justice (Protection) Act and S$12,000 of costs awarded to the Attorney General’s Chambers (AGC). The offending article is an open letter addressed to Singapore’s Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon and written by Julie O’Connor, a former Singapore Permanent Resident, in 2021. In the written judgement by Justice Hoo Sheau Peng, it is ruled that the article suggested that Singapore’s legal system favoured those who had money, power, or connections with judges, that judges were not selected for their courage to seek or determine the truth, and that the courts were complicit with the AGC in the political persecution of certain people. While Xu argued that the criticism was directed only at the AGC and not the Judiciary, Justice Hoo rejected this argument, stating that the “system of justice” necessarily included the Judiciary. The public prosecutors have earlier asked for a fine of S$20,000 and around S$18,000 for costs, while Mr Lim asked for a fine of S$3,000 and no cost in consideration of public interest. The judge said that she was of the view that a fine of S$18,000 is an appropriate sentence in light of precedents of Jolovan Wham, Alex Au and John Tan, who were fined between $5,000 to $8000 and where Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s nephew, Li Shengwu was previously fined $15,000 for a private Facebook post that he made. Justice Hoo wrote that Xu’s offending conduct is more egregious than that of the other contemnors and therefore warrants a higher sentence than those cases. The fine has to be paid within four weeks. In default of payment of the fine, a term of ten days’ imprisonment will be imposed.

Cryptocurrency surges as Musk changes Twitter logo to ‘meme dog’

Elon Musk changed the Twitter logo to a Shiba Inu dog associated with the meme-inspired cryptocurrency, Dogecoin, causing the price to surge over 20%. Despite being sued for promoting the volatile coin, Musk has used his 133 million followers to promote himself and humorously pump up the value of the cryptocurrency.

Former Malaysian PM Najib’s final attempt to challenge his graft conviction verdict dismissed by Malaysia’s apex court

MALAYSIA — Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak’s bid to review an…

Karl Liew’s defense argues against jail time due to Parkinson’s disease

Karl Liew, son of former Changi Airport Group chairman, pleaded guilty to intentionally providing false information during the trial of Parti Liyani. His defense lawyer argued against imposing a custodial sentence on account of his alleged Parkinson’s disease. Sentencing will take place on 14 April.

Former grassroot leader fined $50,000 for building illegal floor

ZACD Group founder and CEO and Grassroots leader Stanley Yeo Choon Guan. was fined S$50,000 by the court for his offenses of having illegally built an extra floor on a building at Alexandra Road.

Malaysia Court of Appeal grants DPM Zahid permanent access to passports amid corruption case ongoing

Deputy Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has been allowed by the Court of Appeal on Monday (27 Mar) to access to his personal and diplomatic passports to enable him to carry out official duties abroad. This comes after the previous rejection by the High Court on 3 Feb for the documents.

Suspended five-year for misconduct by court, Lawyer M Ravi says ‘no regrets’ to dedicate for the cause of human rights

Human rights lawyer M Ravi, an advocate for those on death row for 20 years, has been suspended from practising for five years by the Court of Three Judges in Singapore, for misconduct. The maximum possible sanction for lawyers was delivered for the charges against Mr Ravi for making “baseless and ill-conceived attacks” against the Attorney-General, the Law Society and officers from the Attorney-General’s Chambers. The court did not find it necessary to strike him off the roll of advocates and solicitors. In response to the latest court judgment, Mr Ravi said,

Singaporean rapper Subhas Nair on trial for allegedly attempting to promote ill will among racial and religious groups

Singaporean rapper Subhas Nair, 31, went on trial on Tuesday (21 Mar)…

Indonesia policeman jailed over football stadium crush

Indonesian court jails a police officer for 18 months over negligence in one of the worst stadium disasters in football history. Last year’s crush in Malang killed 135 people after a football match when police fired tear gas causing a deadly stampede. The court found Hasdarmawan, a commander for the East Java police’s mobile brigade unit, guilty of failing to predict the situation and ordering the tear gas. The sentence was shorter than the three years prosecutors had asked for. Another police officer was found not guilty, while one more was awaiting a verdict on negligence.