Tag: illegal

  • Man Arrested For Suspected Involvement In Loansharking Activities

    Man Arrested For Suspected Involvement In Loansharking Activities

    A 23-year-old man has been arrested for suspected involvement in loansharking activities, said the police on Wednesday (Jun 3).

    Police said they received a report of loanshark harassment on Block 8 Jalan Kukoh, where the area was found to be splashed with paint and vandalised with loanshark-related graffiti.

    Preliminary investigations revealed the suspect was allegedly involved in splashing paint at debtors’ houses and scrawling graffiti at various locations in Singapore. Police seized two mobile phones and a red marker pen, believed to have been used in committing the offences.

    The suspect will be charged in court on Thursday. First-time offenders found guilty of loanshark harassment face up to five years in jail, a fine of between S$5,000 and S$50,000, and between three and six strokes of the cane.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

     

  • 15 Year Old Arrested, Suspected Involvment In Loanshark Harassment Cases

    15 Year Old Arrested, Suspected Involvment In Loanshark Harassment Cases

    A 15-year-old boy has been arrested for his suspected involvement in a series of loanshark harassment cases.

    Police said a case was reported on April 3, in which the front door of an HDB unit at Woodlands Street 82 was set on fire.

    Through ground enquiries and police camera images, officers from Jurong Police Division arrested the suspect at Block 351 Tampines Street 33 on Monday at about 4.30pm. He is believed to be involved in other similar cases, said police in a statement on Tuesday.

    Under the Moneylenders Act 2010 (Revised Edition), first-time offenders found guilty of loanshark harassment could be jailed for up to five years, fined a minimum of $5,000 and up to $50,000, and caned between three and six strokes.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • US And British Spies Hack To Obtain Access To Billions Of Phones

    US And British Spies Hack To Obtain Access To Billions Of Phones

    FRANKFURT — US and British spies hacked into the world’s biggest maker of phone SIM cards, allowing them to potentially monitor the calls, texts and emails of billions of mobile users around the world, an investigative news website reported.

    The alleged hack on Gemalto, if confirmed, would expand the scope of known mass surveillance methods available to U.S. and British spy agencies to include not just email and web traffic, as previously revealed, but also mobile communications.

    The Franco-Dutch company said yesterday it was investigating whether the US National Security Agency (NSA) and Britain’s GCHQ had hacked into its systems to steal encryption keys that could unlock the security settings on billions of mobile phones.

    The report by The Intercept site, which cites documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, could prove an embarrassment for the US and British governments. It opens a fresh front in the dispute between civil liberties campaigners and intelligence services which say their citizens face a grave threat of attack from militant groups like Islamic State.

    It comes just weeks after a British tribunal ruled that Britain’s Government Communication Headquarters (GCHQ) had acted unlawfully in accessing data on millions of people in Britain that had been collected by the NSA.

    The Intercept report said the hack was detailed in a secret 2010 GCHQ document and allowed the NSA and GCHQ to monitor a large portion of voice and data mobile communications around the world without permission from governments, telecom companies or users.

    “We take this publication very seriously and will devote all resources necessary to fully investigate and understand the scope of such sophisticated techniques,” said Gemalto, whose shares sunk by as much as 10 per cent in early trading yesterday, following the report.

    The report follows revelations from Snowden in 2013 of the NSA’s Prism programme which allowed the agency to access email and web data handled by the world’s largest Internet companies, including Google, Yahoo and Facebook.

    A spokeswoman for Britain’s GCHQ said yesterday that it did not comment on intelligence matters. The NSA could not be immediately reached for comment.

    A European security source said that mobile devices were widely used by terrorist groups and that intelligence agencies’ attempts to access the communications were justified if they were “authorised, necessary and proportionate.” The source did not confirm or deny that the documents were from GCHQ.

    The source also said Western agencies would sometimes hold on to data over time in order to decrypt the communications of specific intelligence targets.

    The source added that wireless networks in Iran, Afghanistan and Yemen were viewed as having significance intelligence value. These were identified by the Intercept as countries where Britain’s GCHQ intercepted encryption keys used by local wireless network providers.

    SURVEILLANCE

    The new allegations could boost efforts by major technology firms such as Apple Inc and Google to make strong encryption methods standard in communications devices they sell, moves attacked by some politicians and security officials.

    Leaders including US President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron have expressed concern that turning such encryption into a mass-market feature could prevent governments from tracking militants planning attacks.

    Gemalto makes SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) cards for phones and tablets as well as “chip and pin” bank cards and biometric passports. It produces around 2 billion SIM cards a year and counts Verizon, AT&T Inc and Vodafone among hundreds of wireless network provider customers.

    The European security source said that an assertion by The Intercept that GCHQ had taken control of Gemalto’s internal network was speculative and not supported by documentation published by the website.

    The Intercept, published by First Look Media, was founded by the journalists who first interviewed Snowden and made headlines around the world with reports on US electronic surveillance programmes.

    It published what it said was a secret GCHQ document that said its staff implanted software to monitor Gemalto’s entire network, giving them access to SIM card encryption keys. The report suggested this gave GCHQ, with the backing of the NSA, unlimited access to phone communications using Gemalto SIMs.

    French bank Mirabaud said in a research report the attacks appeared to be limited to 2010 and 2011 and were aimed only at older 2G phones widely used in emerging markets, rather than modern smartphones. It did not name the source of these assertions.

    Some analysts argued that if a highly security-conscious company like Gemalto is vulnerable, then all of its competitors are as well.

    Gemalto competes with several European and Chinese SIM card suppliers. A spokesman for one major rival, Giesecke & Devrien of Germany, told Reuters: “We have no signs that something like that happened to us. We always do everything to protect our customers’ data.”

    But while security experts have long believed spy agencies in many countries have the ability to crack the complex mathematical codes used to encrypt most modern communications, such methods remain costly, limiting their usefulness to targeted hijacking of individual communications.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Ho Thong Chew Barred From Practising Medicine After Selling Cough Syrup Illegally

    Ho Thong Chew Barred From Practising Medicine After Selling Cough Syrup Illegally

    A doctor who illegally sold nearly 3,000 litres of codeine-laced cough syrup to three men, who then peddled the drug on the streets, has been stripped of his licence to practise medicine.

    Ho Thong Chew, who made almost S$267,000 from his illicit venture, faced the Singapore Medical Council’s (SMC) disciplinary hearings after he had been sentenced in 2012 to seven-and-a-half months’ jail and a S$60,000 fine in the then Subordinate Courts.

    In its grounds of decision released yesterday, the disciplinary tribunal said Ho’s court conviction implied a defect in character which makes him unfit for the medical profession.

    Although Ho’s lawyer argued that he should be censured or suspended for a short period, the tribunal listed several aggravating factors in the case that it felt warranted a harsher punishment.

    The doctor, who ran his own clinic in Ang Mo Kio for seven years before it was closed down by the Ministry of Health, had supplied the cough syrup to the three men for five months despite knowing that it would be sold to the public indiscriminately, the tribunal said. The men gave him a cut of the proceeds from peddling the cough syrup in Geylang, amounting to a vast profit of S$266,825 for him, it added.

    He sold a total of 846 canisters of cough syrup, each of which contained 3.8 litres of the mixture.

    Ho also showed blatant disregard for the law by continuing to supply the cough syrup illegally after the Health Sciences Authority had carried out a raid at his clinic, the tribunal said.

    In mitigation, Ho said he had committed the offences because he had wanted to earn more money for his clinic and to support his children’s medical care and future.

    While it noted that the ailments suffered by Ho’s daughter will result in lifelong disability and dependence, the tribunal said: “Needing money cannot be an excuse for the criminal acts.”

    It added: “The overriding interests in this case must be the protection of the public interests and to uphold the integrity of the medical profession.”

    The tribunal ordered that Ho’s name by removed from the Register of Medical Practitioners and for him to bear the costs and expenses of the disciplinary proceedings, including the SMC’s legal fees.

    The three men who had bought the cough syrup from Ho to resell it to codeine abusers were sentenced to between 10 and 16 weeks’ jail in 2012.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • District Judge: National Servicemen Do Not Need To Follow Illegal Or Unlawful Orders

    District Judge: National Servicemen Do Not Need To Follow Illegal Or Unlawful Orders

    A former full-time national serviceman (NSF) who was driving a military jeep without a licence when it crashed and killed his close friend was sentenced to a 10-day short detention order (SDO) yesterday.

    Cavin Tan, 22, had no Class 3 driving licence when he caused the death of NSF Tan Mou Sheng and caused hurt to NSFs Ow Yong Wei Long and Dickson Hong, who were all 20 then, at the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) Marsiling training area in Mandai 21/2 years ago. He pleaded guilty to both charges.

    It also emerged that he had been ordered to drive the jeep.

    District Judge Low Wee Ping said: “Perhaps one positive outcome of this case is that national servicemen now know that they do not need to obey a manifestly illegal or unlawful order.”

    He asked Tan’s lawyer Laurence Goh, a senior officer in the SAF, to get the message out that national servicemen need not obey any such order.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor Tang Shangjun said the four men – all instructors – were involved in a training exercise led by Master Sergeant Lee Kong Kean. The 33-year-old has been charged and his case is pending.

    The Defence Ministry said that it does “not condone our commanders giving unlawful orders, and those who do so will be seriously disciplined”.

    Tan was told by Lee to drive one of the jeeps in the exercise even though he had no Class 3 military licence and had not been trained to drive one.

    On the morning of the accident, Tan lost control of his jeep while negotiating a downward slope with a left bend.

    DPP Tang said Tan misjudged the bend and made a sudden, sharp turn. The jeep tilted, rotated around and overturned several times before landing on its side.

    NSF Hong and NSF Ow Yong, who had not been wearing seat belts or helmets, were thrown out and injured. Tan unbuckled himself and found NSF Tan Mou Sheng pinned under the jeep at his left hip. He was bleeding from his nose and mouth and soon lapsed into unconsciousness. The soldiers managed to lift the jeep and pull him out. He died later from severe pelvic crush injuries.

    Mr Goh said in mitigation that Tan, now an undergraduate, obeyed the order to drive even when Lee had been told that he did not have a Class 3 licence. Tan, he said, was truly sorry for having caused the death of his college mate.

    He urged the court to give his client a second chance by imposing the SDO, a community-based sentence which came into place in 2011. These can last up to 14 days and are less disruptive and stigmatising than a jail sentence.

    Said Mr Goh: “The accused’s decision to drive the jeep not only went against good sense, but also constituted serious breaches of SAF military training safety protocols.”

    Judge Low urged Tan to put this behind him and look forward.

    NSF Tan Mou Sheng’s father told Tan and his parents that Tan was not at fault because he was just obeying orders. Both fathers shook hands outside the court.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com