Murder of Radika Devi Thayagarajah

Last updated
Radika Devi Thayagarajah
Born
Radika Devi Thayagarajah

8 January 1987
Died (aged 21)
Geylang, Singapore
Cause of deathStrangulation
Nationality Sri Lankan
OccupationProstitute
Known forMurder victim
ChildrenOne unborn son (deceased)
Two sons

On 4 September 2008, at a hotel in Geylang, Singapore's red-light district, the naked body of a 21-year-old Sri Lankan prostitute was found under the bed of one of its rooms. [1] [2] The victim, identified as Radika Devi Thayagarajah, was later found to be seven months' pregnant with a baby boy, and the child died as a result of his mother's death. Furthermore, Devi was speculated to have been killed at least 24 hours before her corpse was discovered by the hotel cleaners. Through police investigations, the police tracked down the man last seen booking the hotel room with Devi, and arrested the 20-year-old suspect Madhuri Jaya Chandra Reddy, who confessed to strangling Devi to death during an argument, which occurred due to Reddy asking to have sex with Devi a third time but Devi demanded him to pay more money. Originally charged with murder, Reddy was in the end sentenced to 17 years in jail and 12 strokes of the cane after he pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter. [3] [4]

Contents

Discovery of Devi's body

On 4 September 2008, at around 11am, two cleaners working at a hotel in Geylang, Singapore's red-light district, were carrying their usual task of cleaning one of the rooms when one of them (who wanted to sweep the underside of the bed) was unable to move the bed, finding it unusually heavy, and after finding bloodstains under the bed, the two men checked underneath and discovered the naked body of a deceased woman hidden under the bed. A police report was lodged at around 11.50pm, and the police classified the woman's death as murder through preliminary investigations. [5] [6] [7]

According to a forensic pathologist Dr George Paul, who performed an autopsy on the victim, he found that the cause of death was manual strangulation. He also found that the victim was seven months' pregnant and the fetus was a boy, and the unborn child had also died due to his mother's death. [8] Dr Paul also determined that the woman had died for at least 24 hours from the time when her corpse was found, as the body was getting discoloured. The victim's outer skin had begun to loosen due to early stages of decomposition, and discoloured veins were popping up under the skin. [6]

The Geylang hotel case was one of the two murders to happen on that same day itself. [9] In the other case of murder (six hours before the Geylang case), a Chinese national named Gong Hui Long was stabbed to death by his comaptriot, who later went to his employer's flat to attack and stab the employer, who survived the stabbing. The killer, Luo Faming, was charged with murder on the same day as the perpetrator of the Geylang case but subsequently, Luo was given 24 years' jail for two reduced charges of manslaughter and attempted manslaughter. During the time when police conducted simultaneous investigations in the two separate murders (including the Geylang case), the killer of the Geylang case remained at large as of the time when Luo was arrested, [10] although by the time Luo was charged, the suspect had been taken into custody. [11]

Police investigations

The Special Investigation Section of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) were put in charge of the investigations, which were led by Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Ang Leong Peng. ASP Ang instructed both Station Inspector (SI) Chris Lee and SI Erulandy Guruthevan to check with the hotel registrar and CCTV footage, and the police cordoned the room for eight hours while collecting the evidence, [12] and the shockng discovery itself caused the people staying in the hotel to check out. [13] The police found that based on the name list, an Indian construction worker named Samy Gopinath was the last person using the room, and at 2.30 am on 4 September (nine hours before the gruesome discovery), Samy checked in together with a woman using his work permit. After obtaining his particulars, the police approached Samy at his workplace in Jalan Kayu, and brought him in for questioning. Samy, who was not yet considered as a prime suspect at this point, denied that he committed any crime on the date he checked in, much less murder. Subsequently, after the autopsy revealed that the victim died for at least a day or more at the time of the discovery, and since Samy checked in the room just nine hours before the body was found, the police concluded that Samy was not the killer and he was innocent, and hence SI Guru released Samy after receiving the autopsy findings and order from ASP Ang. [6]

The police searched around the room, and inside the bathroom, they discovered items hidden in a hole at the side of the bathtub. Among these items were a black handbag, a Sri Lankan passport, stub of a prepaid SIM card, a pair of jeans, a woman's blouse and female underwear. With the discovery of the passport, the police identified the victim as 21-year-old Radika Devi Thayagarajah, a Sri Lankan citizen born on 8 January 1987. Background information revealed that Devi had two more sons aged two and six at the time of the murder, and she was working as a sex worker in Geylang prior to her death. [6]

After checking the CCTV footage and hotel registry, the police found that Devi checked in the hotel using her passport at 11.58pm on 2 September 2008, two days before her body was found. [14] The footage revealed that Devi was together with a dark-skinned and Indian-looking man wearing a beige cap, a sighting confirmed by a witness. [15] As the footage showed that Devi was using her mobile phone on one of the scenes, and the police did not find the phone among the belongings recovered, the police deduced that the killer, most likely the man with the beige cap, might have stolen the mobile phone. Phone records also showed that the phone belonging to Devi was still being used even after she died and prior to the phone calls made after her death, Devi's phone had last made two phone calls to one same phone number. The number was later traced to an Indian national named Madhuri Jaya Chandra Reddy, and he resembled the man captured wearing the beige cap by the hotel's CCTV cameras. [6]

At around 5am the next day on 5 September 2008, ASP Ang and his team of officers went to a dormitory in Ama Keng Road (located at Lim Chu Kang), where Reddy was staying. According to the police records, the security officer was informed that the police were looking for Reddy to seek his assistance in investigations, and the officer was unable to provide them Reddy's block and room number, as only the manager, who was then not present, had the details. The security officer agreed to help the police to deactivate Reddy's dormitory access pass (which bore Reddy's work permit number) and to bring him to the office, where the police could arrest him. The plan eventually worked, as Reddy was unable to exit with his access pass, and he approached the security officer for help, and brought into the security office. [16] This allowed the police to finally arrest Reddy after 22 hours of investigation. [17] Devi's mobile phone and several pieces of gold items and jewelry were found in Reddy's possession, and soon after his arrest, Reddy confessed that he indeed murdered Devi. [6]

After this, 20-year-old Madhuri Jaya Chandra Reddy was officially charged with murder on 6 September 2008. If found guilty of murder, Reddy would be sentenced to death under Section 302 of the Singaporean Penal Code. [18] [19]

Account of the murder

The following was the official account of the murder of Radika Devi Thayagarajah, based on the confession of Madhuri Jaya Chandra Reddy and the evidence pieced together by the police.

Reddy, a native of Andhra Pradesh from India, first came to Singapore to work as a general worker on 28 November 2007. Reddy worked here for about ten months before mid-August 2008, when he noticed a missed call from an unknown number and when he dialed back, he heard the voice of a female caller, who introduced herself as Devi and asked if he could head fo Geylang and meet her; the caller "Devi" was none other than the victim Radika Devi Thayagarajah. Reddy correctly assumed that Devi was a prostitute based on the flirtatious way she spoke to him on the phone, but he stated that he was sleeping and could not go. Reddy would call her back in the following few weeks, and on 2 September 2008, at 7pm, the eve of the murder, Reddy asked Devi if he could meet her at Geylang, and it was negotiated that Reddy would pay Devi $S50 for one round of sex. More than three hours later, Reddy and Devi met each other at a hotel along Lorong 18 in Geylang, and after Devi finished her dinner at 11.45pm, the pair discussed on the payment and while Devi told Reddy that he had to pay S$150 for sex in addition to S$40 for renting a room for four hours. After some bargaining, Devi agreed to pay the S$40 room charge instead. [20] [21]

At around midnight, the duo went into the hotel (the same place where she met Reddy) and Devi booked one room using her Sri Lankan passport, and inside the room, Reddy and Devi had two rounds of sex, and by 2am on 3 September 2008, Reddy asked Devi to have sexual intercourse with him a third time. However, Devi wanted Reddy to pay her more if he wanted to do it, but Reddy refused. Devi and Reddy fiercely argued over this and Devi threatened to call her agent to come and beat Reddy up. Reddy managed to snatch away the phone and when Devi rushed towards him with her fists clenched, Reddy retaliated by closing his hand around Devi's neck, squeezing it and pinned her down on the bed to stop her from attacking him or taking back her phone. During the struggle, which lasted for a couple of minutes, Devi was unable to put up resistance due to her pregnancy and she died as a result of strangulation. [22] [23]

Upon realizing that Devi had died, Reddy frantically tried to hide the body to cover up Devi's death. Reddy chose to hide the naked body of Devi under the bed, but the bed was not lying flat due to the body underneath, and noticing that there was a layer of fabric covering the base. Reddy slashed open the fabric and found an empty space between the bed top and the base, and after removing Devi's gold chain and two gold rings, Reddy pushed the corpse into the space itself, and laid the bed down. After hiding the body, Reddy left the hotel by the spiral staircase and roamed the streets for about ten minutes before he returned to the room. When he entered the bathroom, he discovered Devi's belongings and hid them at an opening at the base of the bathtub, and covered up the hole. Reddy also stole two gold bangles and a gold chain from Devi's bag and also kept her handphone, and he pushed the bag and Devi's clothes inside the hollow space of the bathtub. Knowing that he was seen checking into the room with a girl, Reddy decided to avoid suspicion by looking for another girl and bring her back to the hotel. [24] [25] [26]

Reddy roamed around the streets of Geylang and managed to find another sex worker, whom he brought back to the same hotel. Reddy informed the hotel receptionist that he would be extending his stay for another hour, and he later had sex with the other prostitute inside the same room where he killed Devi. He and the other sex worker left the hotel and checked out at 4.20pm. Reddy wandered around the area before he returned his Ama Keng Road dormitory at daybreak to go to bed, and he would use Devi's phone to call his home at Andhra Pradesh. The next day on 4 September 2008, Reddy went to Geylang and found the police officers outside the hotel where Devi died, and he speculated that Devi's body was found, and before he could make plans to leave for India, Reddy was identified by the police and arrested for murdering Devi just 22 hours after the discovery of her body. [27]

Trial and sentencing of Reddy

On 11 January 2010, about a year and four months after his arrest, 21-year-old Madhuri Jaya Chandra Reddy stood trial at the High Court for the killing of Radika Devi Thayagarajah. By then, the prosecution reduced the charge of murder to one of culpable homicide not amounting to murder, equivalent to manslaughter in the law of Singapore, and this allowed Reddy to escape the death penalty for murdering Devi. Reddy pleaded guilty to the reduced charge and therefore convicted. Judicial Commissioner Steven Chong, the trial judge, adjourned sentencing until 14 January 2010 for Reddy to make his mitigation plea and for both sides to prepare their submissions on sentence. The stipulated sentence for manslaughter was either life imprisonment or up to 20 years' jail, with a possible fine or caning. [28] [29]

On 14 January 2010, during Reddy's sentencing trial, Reddy's lawyer Low Cheong Yeow argued in mitigation that his client was unaware of Devi's pregnancy and he was “neither the initiator nor aggressor” in the altercation, which arose from a dispute over another round of sex. He stated that Devi had tried to assault Reddy by moving towards him with clenched fists, and Reddy only retaliated because of this threat. Low said that Reddy was liable to be repatriated after his release from prison and the likelihood of Reddy's future actions having effects on the local populace was remote. [30] [31]

The prosecution, however, sought a sentence of 18 to 20 years' jail for Reddy, stating that the death of Devi was the result of a "cold-blooded and callous" killing. Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Gillian Koh-Tan pointed out that Reddy had grossly overreacted to Devi's threats and he took undue advantage over a "defenceless woman" who was seven months' pregnant and unable to put up resistance to protect herself and her unborn son, which led to the tragic loss of two lives, and even after snatching Devi's mobile phone, Reddy had the choice to not continue argue with Devi and leave the place instead of killing her. DPP Koh also directed the court's attention to the post-killing actions of Reddy, who took meticulous and systematic steps to cover up his tracks by stealing the valuables of Devi. hiding or disposing of her remaining belongings and even engaged the services of another prostitute, with whom he had sex in the same room where Devi was killed, and this reinforced the prosecution's claim of Reddy's "utter lack of contrition" behind the murder. [32] [33]

On the same day, Judicial Commissioner Steven Chong delivered his verdict. He found that the killing of Devi was far disproportionate to the threats she posed to Reddy, and he also made note that Reddy was fully conscious of his actions. Judicial Commissioner Chong also admonished Reddy for his utter lack of remorse, stating that it was demonstrated through his acts of misappropriating the items of the deceased and having sexual intercourse with another sex worker on the same bed he shared with Devi before he killed her just hours before engaging the services of the other prostitute. Having considered the aggravating factors of the case, and noting that two lives were ultimately lost in this case, Judicial Commissioner Chong sentenced Reddy to 17 years' imprisonment and 12 strokes of the cane. [34] [35] [36]

Aftermath

During the same week when Reddy was sentenced for killing Devi, the case shed light on the phenomenon of foreign women working as illegal prostitutes in Geylang, and the presence of both violence and pregnancy were the job hazards which these women often faced in their line of work. [37] Additionally, in 2011, when a similar case of a dead woman's body was found in a hotel occurred in Geylang, the 2008 killing of Devi once again gained attention. [38]

The move to drop the murder charge and convict Reddy of manslaughter was controversial to a certain extent, as some members of the public felt that it was not an appropriate legal outcome due to the heinous nature of the crime. An opinion piece, titled “The uneven nature of Singapore's justice system”, was published by the Asian Correspondent a day after Reddy's sentencing and the writer Ben Bland expressed his concern over the uneven nature of Singapore's justice system, given that Reddy was responsible for the cold-blooded and ruthless murder of a pregnant woman but ultimately sentenced to 17 years in prison with caning after the prosecution stopped pushing for a murder charge, and escaped the gallows in contrast to Yong Vui Kong, a Malaysian youth who was given the death penalty for trafficking 47g of diamorphine. Bland found that it was relatively lenient for Reddy to not face the murder charge that would have warranted a mandatory death sentence, as well as the maximum sentence of life imprisonment for manslaughter, and this particular legal outcome posed an extreme disparity between Reddy and Yong, the latter who was sentenced to death for smuggling a small amount of drugs into Singapore. The writer clarified that despite his opinion, he did not wish to cast aspersions on Singapore's legal system and refrained from making judgements on Reddy's defence claims at trial due to him not being present in the court proceedings of Reddy's case, and he felt that the leniency accorded to Reddy, whom Bland described as a “callous killer”, should also be equally extended to a "naive, low-level drug mule" like Yong. [39] Three years later in 2013, after the changes to the death penalty laws in Singapore, Yong's death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment and 15 strokes of the cane on the grounds that Yong was only acting as a courier and had cooperated with the authorities in tackling drug crimes, which were among the requirements for an alleged drug trafficker to fulfill in order to get a life sentence in lieu of death. [40] [41]

In March 2011, Singaporean crime show Crimewatch re-enacted the murder of Radika Devi Thayagarajah, and it depicted the investigations that led to the arrest and conviction of Madhuri Jaya Chandra Reddy. [42]

In June 2022, a local writer Foo Siang Luen wrote a real-life crime book titled Justice Is Done 2, which recorded some of Singapore's high-profile murder cases solved by police throughout the years between 2005 and 2016, and the 2008 case of Radika Devi Thayagarajah's death was recorded as one of these cases covered in the book. [6]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Duck Den murder</span> 1997 murder of brothel owner in Singapore

On 20 June 1997, a 65-year-old Singaporean and retiree Low Cheng Quee, also known as Philip Low, was found dead inside his bedroom of his Jalan Rajah flat, where he operated a homosexual brothel, which was colloquially known as a "duck den", which thus coined the case's name as the Duck Den murder. Through the police investigations and interview of two witnesses, the police identified Lim Chin Chong, an 18-year-old Malaysian prostitute who worked at Low's brothel, as the prime suspect behind Low's murder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mandai burnt car murder</span> 1992 murder of a loan shark by two men in Singapore

On 30 November 1992, 32-year-old Tan Heng Hong, a Singaporean odd-job labourer and loan shark, was murdered by two security guards, S. S. Asokan and Maniam Rathinswamy, who lured him to a room at Tan Tock Seng Hospital under the pretext of offering to sell gold. After he was slashed to death with an axe and a knife, Tan's corpse was left inside his car and both Maniam and Asokan drove the car to Mandai, where they set the car alight to cover up the murder. The burnt car and charred remains of Tan were eventually discovered and it led to the police investigating Tan's death. Asokan and Maniam were both arrested more than a month later in Malaysia and Singapore respectively, and they were both found guilty of murder and were executed on 8 September 1995.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Tan Hui Ngin</span> 1990 rape-murder of a woman at Punggol, Singapore

On 16 October 1990, four days after her disappearance, 30-year-old Tan Hui Ngin was found dead at a disused egg hatchery nearby her home at Punggol, and when her decomposed body was discovered, Tan was half-naked and had fractures to her skull, and showed signs of possible sexual assault before her death. Five months later, with the assistance from the Malaysian police, a suspect was finally arrested and brought back to Singapore to be charged with the brutal rape-murder of Tan. The killer, Tan's 30-year-old childhood friend Lim Lye Hock, was eventually found guilty of murdering Tan and sentenced to death on 1 December 1993.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ang Mo Kio family murders</span> 1983 family mass murder in Singapore

On 28 March 1983, 28-year-old housewife Soh Lee Lee and her two young children, three-year-old Jeremy Yeong Yin Kit and two-year-old Joyce Yeong Pei Ling were brutally murdered inside their flat at Ang Mo Kio, and some of their possessions were also stolen from the flat. The police investigated the case and within a month, they managed to arrest two suspects, Lim Beng Hai and Michael Tan Teow, for the killings. One of them, Tan, was Soh's tenant.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Sim Ah Lek</span> 1993 murder of a moneylender at Jurong, Singapore

On 14 July 1993, 50-year-old sub-contractor Sim Ah Lek, who was also a moneylender, was killed by 37-year-old Phua Soy Boon, who was his creditor, after he refused Sim's request to lend him S$10,000. After killing Sim, Phua stole Sim's Rolex watch, diamond ring and S$9,000 in cash, and even stuffed the dead body inside a gunny sack before disposing of it at Jurong Swimming Complex, where it was found the next morning.

On 1 December 1990, at Singapore's Tanjong Katong Road, a 20-year-old Malaysian woman named Wong Mee Hiong was stabbed to death inside her rented house and her body was wrapped in a blanket before being hidden in a storeroom. Wong's corpse was discovered by her fiancé and ten days after her killing, Wong's killer Yap Biew Hian, a fellow tenant of the house and also a Malaysian, was arrested for the case and charged. Yap, who admitted to killing the victim with intent to rob her, was sentenced to death three years after he murdered Wong.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Ching Bee Ing</span> 1995 killing of a prostitute in Singapore

On 8 August 1995, a 26-year-old prostitute named Ching Bee Ing was stabbed seven times by her 35-year-old co-worker Teo Kim Hong at a brothel along Teck Lim Road. Ching, a Malaysian, died as a result of four fatal knife wounds to her liver and heart. Teo, a Singaporean, was charged with murder after she was arrested for the brutal stabbing. Teo was found guilty and sentenced to death in January 1996, and after the loss of her appeal, Teo was hanged on 30 August 1996.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Bock Tuan Thong</span> 2004 robbery-murder of a scrap car dealer in Singapore

On 2 April 2004, a 56-year-old Singaporean and scrap car dealer named Bock Tuan Thong was found dead inside the boot of his brother's car at a multi-storey carpark in Boon Keng, Singapore. According to witnesses, Bock was last seen with two to three men, who were inside the car with him and assaulted him.

On 8 October 1993, at his Jalan Berseh flat, an Indian moneychanger named Shamsul Hameed was killed by his friend Jahabar Bagurudeen. Bagurudeen, a businessman, was said to have killed Shamsul due to them having argued earlier about sharing a prostitute. Bagurudeen was sentenced to death after the trial court accepted the same prostitute's testimony that she saw Bagurudeen killing the victim, and rejected Bagurudeen's argument that he killed Shamsul out of anger for the victim's alleged mistreatment of Bagurudeen before the murder. After losing his appeal and clemency plea, Bagurudeen was hanged on 2 June 1995.

On 28 June 2003, 68-year-old Chi Tue Tiong, a caretaker of one of the rental apartments in Geylang, was murdered by a couple who rented one of the rooms of the apartment. Chi, who had been bludgeoned on the head at least nine times, died as a result of brain injuries and extensive skull fractures. The police managed to trace the two suspects, but only the male assailant, 35-year-old Zailani bin Ahmad, was arrested and charged with murder, because the second suspect, who was Zailani's Indonesian girlfriend, had fled from Singapore to Batam and was not extradited to stand trial. Zailani, who argued that he suffered diminished responsibility and had killed Chi under the influence of sleeping pills, was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death in March 2004.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Leong Fook Weng</span> 2000 gang-related killing of a man in Singapore

On 17 May 2000, at a vacant plot of land in Bukit Timah, 36-year-old odd-job worker and moneylender Leong Fook Weng was found dead, wearing only his underwear and sustaining several stab wounds on his chest and neck. Investigations showed that Leong had been attacked and assaulted by four secret society members, and died as a result of a knife wound to his heart. The four attackers escaped Singapore after the killing, but two of them – See Chee Keong and Robson Tay Teik Chai – were discovered to be imprisoned in Cambodia and France respectively for unrelated drug offences, and the remaining two suspects – Lim Hin Teck and Ong Chin Huat – remained at large for the murder.

On 28 June 2008, 25-year-old Wu Yun Yun, a Chinese national and wife of opposition politician Tan Lead Shake, used a fruit knife to stab both her brother-in-law and sister-in-law. The brother-in-law, who was Tan's 33-year-old brother Tan Lead Sane, died after he sustained several knife wounds on his chest and abdomen, while the sister-in-law Huang Mei Zhe, who was Tan Lead Sane's wife, survived the stabbing. Wu, who was said to have committed the stabbing due to mistreatment from her in-laws and jealousy towards the supposed better life of Tan and Huang, was charged with murder and attempted murder. Eventually, in November 2008, the charges were reduced to manslaughter and attempted manslaughter due to Wu suffering from depression at the time of the murder. Six months after she pleaded guilty, Wu was sentenced to 16 years in prison on 17 November 2009.

On the Christmas Eve night of 24 December 2005, 41-year-old Myanmar national Thein Naing was brutally assaulted and murdered by a group of three Malaysians, who robbed him of S$40, on a footpath along Upper Boon Keng Road. The three killers, together with a fourth man who acted as a lookout, were all arrested and charged with murder. Although one of the robbers, Benedict Inyang Anak Igal, was sentenced to five years' jail and 12 strokes of the cane for robbery with hurt, the remaining three robbers - Hamir bin Hasim, Kamal bin Kupli and Abdul Malik bin Usman - who were identified as the ones responsible for fatally assaulting the victim, were all found guilty of murdering Thein and sentenced to death on 1 March 2007. The trio later lost their appeals in February 2008, and they were since hanged for the murder.

On 16 October 2008, during a heated argument inside her car, 47-year-old Choo Xue Ying, alias Jennifer Choo, was assaulted to death by a business partner Rosli bin Yassin, and abandoned it at Bukit Batok Nature Park, where Choo's skeletal remains were discovered four days after her death. Rosli, who was later found to have committed cheating following the murder itself, was arrested and charged with killing Choo, and his girlfriend was also charged with abetting him to commit cheating. Rosli's murder charge was subsequently reduced to manslaughter, and after pleading guilty to the reduced charge and several other unrelated charges for cheating, Rosli was sentenced to 12 years of preventive detention on account of his long criminal record, and subsequently, through the prosecution's appeal, Rosli's sentence of preventive detention was raised to the maximum of 20 years for the same reason, as well as due to his high risk of re-offending and his original sentence was manifestly inadequate.

On 22 September 2005, 37-year-old film-maker Ho Kien Leong, alias Jayson Ho, was found dead inside his flat at Indus Road, Bukit Merah, and he was certified to be stabbed to death around nine days before his highly decomposed corpse was found. Ho's killer, Lim Ah Liang, was arrested in Johor, Malaysia, where he was hiding after he killed Ho by stabbing him 13 times during an argument, and Lim was extradited back to Singapore to be investigated for killing Ho. Originally charged with murder, Lim, who suffered from depression at the time of the murder, was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to life imprisonment on 17 January 2007. Lim later lost his appeal for a lower jail term and is currently in prison serving his life sentence since 2005.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Nurdin Nguan Song</span> 1985 murder of an Indonesian fish merchant in Singapore

On 13 November 1985, 33-year-old Indonesian fish merchant Nurdin Nguan Song was murdered at a hotel along Waterloo Street, Singapore. Nurdin died after he was slashed and stabbed repeatedly by two men, who were revealed to have been paid by Nurdin's business rival to attack him. Between 1988 and 1992, the two murderers were arrested after spending several years on the run from the police, and charged with murder. One of them, a Malaysian named Loh Yoon Seong, was found guilty of murdering Nurdin and sentenced to death, while the other, a Singaporean named Tan Swee Hoon, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and for having killed Nurdin and committed an armed robbery while on the run, Tan was jailed for 23 years and given 24 strokes of the cane.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of S. Salim Ahmad</span> 1999 murder of a rag-and-bone man in Singapore

On 2 May 1999, at a coffeeshop in Singapore's Geylang, 56-year-old rag-and-bone man S. Salim Ahmad was brutally battered to death by a man whose girlfriend was allegedly harassed by Salim. The murderer, identified as Seah Kok Meng, fled Singapore for Malaysia, where he remained in hiding for a year before his arrest in May 2000. Seah, who claimed that he was acting under sudden and grave provocation and had no intent to fatally assault Salim, was found guilty of murdering Salim and sentenced to death in November 2000. Seah's appeal was dismissed and he was hanged on 30 November 2001.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tanglin Halt double murders</span> 1989 double murder at Tanglin Halt, Singapore

On 24 May 1989, at a flat in Tanglin Halt, 32-year-old Ithinin Kamari had fatally stabbed two men - Mohamed Johar Selamat (33) and Mohd Said Abdul Majid (29) - due to the two men, one of whom was his girlfriend's ex-lover, allegedly insulting him. Ithinin was arrested and charged for the double murder, and he claimed that the fatal stabbing was committed due to grave and sudden provocation from the victims. However, in January 1992, Ithinin was found guilty of murdering both Mohd Said and Mohamed Johar, and sentenced to death, due to his actions being grossly out of proportion to the provocation given.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Suk Malasri</span> 1995 murder of a Thai forklift operator in Singapore

On 17 June 1995, 23-year-old Thai forklift operator Suk Malasri was found bludgeoned to death inside his living quarters at a construction site in Sungei Kadut, Singapore. The police managed to identify and arrest a suspect three days after the murder, and the killer, a welder named Thongbai Naklangdon, confessed to murdering Suk after the victim threatened to seek revenge over a previous physical assault he suffered from four of his colleagues. Although Thongbai later recanted his confession and also claimed that he killed Suk in self-defence during an alleged fight between the both of them, Thongbai was found guilty of murdering Suk and sentenced to death by the High Court, which rejected his defence. Thongbai's appeal was dismissed, and he was hanged on 30 August 1996.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Celine Ng</span> 2011 disapearance and murder of a property agent in Singapore

On 26 May 2011, the date of her 36th birthday, Singaporean property agent Celine Ng Swee Peng disappeared after she was last seen by her flatmate, who reported her missing two days after Ng's disappearance. According to the flatmate, she heard Ng telling her she wanted to go overseas during a drinks session at her condominium, before she went to sleep and later awoke to find Ng missing. The police questioned Ng's family and friends, who all publicized her case to seek information of her whereabouts, which remained a mystery for more than a month. The police eventually conducted a nationwide search and 41 days after Ng's disappearance, the police found a skeleton left in the forest along Clementi Road, and the skeletal remains were confirmed to be Ng's after some DNA tests.

References

  1. "Body of naked woman found in Geylang hotel". The Straits Times. 5 September 2008.
  2. "2.印度女子卧尸芽笼旅店客房". Lianhe Zaobao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  3. "杀孕妓藏床底 冷血汉监17年". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 14 January 2010.
  4. "Indian gets jail for killing prostitute". The New Indian Express. 14 January 2010.
  5. "艳女被杀裸尸藏床底". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Justice Is Done 2". Singapore Police Force. June 2022. Retrieved 26 May 2024.
  7. "Gruesome find under Geylang hotel bed". TODAY. 5 September 2008.
  8. "新加坡.被告藏尸床底再嫖妓.杀妓监17年打12鞭". Sin Chew Daily (in Chinese). 15 January 2010.
  9. "Lelaki ditikam, wanita ditemui bogel dalam dua kes bunuh". Berita Harian (in Malay). 5 September 2008.
  10. "Six hours, two murders". TODAY. 5 September 2008.
  11. "China worker on murder rap". The Straits Times. 6 September 2008.
  12. "警搬走床褥家具". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  13. "封锁8小时 旅客吓得退房". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  14. "裸尸案爆惊人内幕 裸女尸藏床底两天才被发现". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  15. "案发前有人目睹 男子买壮阳药带艳女开房". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  16. "刷卡不过关嫌凶宿舍就擒". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  17. "芽笼旅店赤裸女郎藏尸床底案 警方22小时破案逮捕—印度客工". Lianhe Zaobao (in Chinese). 6 September 2008.
  18. "GEYLANG MURDER SUSPECT CAUGHT ATAMA KENG ROAD". TODAY. 6 September 2008.
  19. "五短身材 长发丑男被控谋杀". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 5 September 2008.
  20. "嫖客要妓女 付40元房费". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 12 January 2010.
  21. "新加坡‧殺孕妓藏屍床底‧嫖客另找妓女床上交歡". Guangming Daily (in Chinese). 12 January 2010.
  22. "He pleads guilty to killing prostitute". TODAY. 12 January 2010.
  23. "Bunuh pelacur lepas adakan hubungan seks". Berita Harian (in Malay). 12 January 2010.
  24. "He pleads guilty to killing prostitute". TODAY (Afternoon Edition). 12 January 2010.
  25. "杀妓案惊爆 床底藏尸床上照嫖". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 12 January 2010.
  26. "He hides dead woman's clothes, steals jewellery and handphone". The New Paper. 12 January 2010.
  27. "床底藏死尸 再召妓来嫖". Lianhe Wanbao (in Chinese). 12 January 2010.
  28. "杀妓藏床底再召妓 客工谋杀改为误杀". Lianhe Zaobao (in Chinese). 12 January 2010.
  29. "Guilty of killing pregnant prostitute". The Straits Times. 12 January 2010.
  30. "Accused claims victim 'guided and lured' him". TODAY (3). 15 January 2010.
  31. "嫖妓后杀妓女并藏尸床下 印客工判坐牢17年鞭12下". Lianhe Zaobao (in Chinese). 15 January 2010.
  32. "Accused claims victim 'guided and lured' him". TODAY. 15 January 2010.
  33. "Man gets 17 years for manslaughter". The New Paper. 15 January 2010.
  34. "Accused claims victim 'guided and lured' him". TODAY (Afternoon Edition). 15 January 2010.
  35. "Killer showed 'utter lack of remorse'". The Straits Times. 15 January 2010.
  36. "Indian jailed for Lankan murder". The Daily Mirror . 14 January 2010.
  37. "Pregnancy, violence are just 'job hazards'". The New Paper. 17 January 2010.
  38. "'People here are rotten, anything can happen'". The New Paper. 1 July 2011.
  39. "The uneven nature of Singapore's justice system". Asian Correspondent. 15 January 2010.
  40. "A street urchin's journey to Death Row and back". The Straits Times. 24 November 2013.
  41. "Death penalty lifted for Yong Vui Kong". TODAY. 14 November 2013.
  42. "Crimewatch 2011 Ep 1". meWATCH. Retrieved 26 May 2024.