Tag: SPF

  • Man Accuses Police Of Using Disproportionate Force On Him

    Man Accuses Police Of Using Disproportionate Force On Him

    Pinned on the ground, 21-year old Anderson Tan Lin He, struggled to breathe as he was also being held in a chokehold by a police officer.

    Tan said he almost passed out of consciousness before other police officer arrived on the scene and he was released from the grip.

    On 26 July (Sunday), Tan was walking in Bukit Panjang, heading towards Senja LRT when he was stopped by a police officer who had just alighted from his patrol vehicle.

    According to Tan, the Chinese uniformed officer called out to him from the back, “Eh, you stop there.”

    The uniformed officer, whom Tan approximate to be in his mid-twenties, then asked, “What is your problem?”

    Tan, who told The Online Citizen (TOC) that he has had his fair share of brushes with the law, rebutted the officer by saying, “I can tell you my problem, but are you capable of solving it?”

    The officer then asked for Tan’s identity card (ID).

    Tan complied and handed it over to the officer.

    While inspecting  the ID, the officer asked, “Why you so guai lan [cocky, rude]?” 

    “I guai lan also never disturb anybody,” retorted Tan.

    The police officer told Tan to show some respect for him.

    “Respect police?” Tan said. “Basic respect you earn yourself one. If you want respect for yourself, you must respect others first.”

    The argument went on for awhile  and the officer got very agitated, according to Tan.

    Tan then asked if the police officer was done with checking  his ID and said he wanted his it back.

    The police officer replied saying, “Wait, haven’t ok yet.”

    Tan replied, “You want to wait until durian drop down is it?”

    Tan said the officer responded immediately with vulgarity, and said that he was going to arrest Tan.

    Tan questioned why he was being arrested.

    The officer did not explain but instead pinned Tan down on the ground and handcuffed him.

    The other police officer who was apparently was the partner of the first officer, proceeded to cable-tie Tan’s legs to restrict his movement.

    anderson pinned on ground
    The two officers who tackled Anderson to the ground and one of whom is choking Anderson.

    After handcuffing the Tan, the Chinese officer wrapped his arm over Tan’s neck and choked him, making Tan grasp for air.

    Tan’s friend, Dahnan, who was with him, asked the police to stop what was being done to Tan.

    However, the police officer told him to “fxxx off”, according to Dahnan.

    Tan said that he nearly blacked out twice during the 3-5 minutes ordeal and had saliva dripping from his mouth because of the chokehold.

    It was only when two more police cars arrived at the scene that  the two police officers release Tan from their grip.

    One superintendent who was with the group of officers that just arrived, asked Tan what had happened.

    The superintendent proceeded to cut the cable tie off Tan’s leg and asked that the latter be brought back to the police station.

    Tan was subsequently charged for disorderly behaviour and was kept in detention overnight at the Jurong Police station.

    He was later released on $5000 bail.

    Bruises on Anderson's thigh
    Bruises on Anderson’s thigh after four days

    Tan told TOC, “How can a police officer arrest someone by choking his neck? Shouldn’t he just restrain the hands?”

    He said that if the other police officers had not arrived on time, he might have passed out or even died as a result of the chokehold.

    Dahnan asked how police officers could behave in such a manner, and  use disproportionate  force against suspects.

    He also questioned the police officer’s vulgar language. TOC wrote to the police on 2 August about the incident but has yet to receive any response from the police.

    TOC understands that the police officer who restrained  Tan with the chokehold has apologised to him in person since.

    However, the charge against Tan for disorderly behaviour still remains.

    On 2 April this year, a man claimed that he was injured by a group of plainclothes police officers after he flipped the identification card of one officer who was taking down his particulars.

    Read here: “Man claims to be injured by plainclothes officers after asking to verify police identity

    Mr Lim Chin Huat, 40, filed a police report on Saturday, 4 April, against the group of officers after sustaining multiple injuries from their actions.

    Mr Lim was later called up to help with the investigation but there has been no further updates from the police on the case.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • CNB And SPF To Explore Recording Interviews During Investigations

    CNB And SPF To Explore Recording Interviews During Investigations

    The Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) and the Singapore Police Force will start consultations on the Video Recording of Interviews (VRI) during investigations, the Ministry of Home Affairs announced on Wednesday (Jul 22).

    The consultations will be conducted with a view to start the VRI pilot from first quarter of 2016, it added in its press release.

    The pilot will involve a limited set of offences and allow for an assessment for how the VRI impacts investigations, its effectiveness in different situations, and the resources required to implement VRI, before a decision is made on its broader implementation, said the ministry.

    This comes after MHA, together with the Attorney-General’s Chambers and the Ministry of Law, conducted a study on the feasibility of introducing VRI. The study looked at how VRI has been adopted in the US, UK, Australia and Hong Kong, and how the various models of VRI impacted the administration of criminal justice, said MHA.

    The ministry found that the implementation of VRI in Singapore “will further strengthen confidence in the integrity of our criminal justice system and assist the Courts to try cases more effectively”.

    With the VRI, a recording of the interview will be provided to the Courts so as allow it to “take the interviewee’s demeanour into account in determining the admissibility or weight to be accorded to the interviewee’s statement”, said MHA.

    “It will also provide an objective, contemporaneous account of the interview process and allow the Courts to decide on allegations that may be made about the interview,” the ministry added.

    MHA said the pilot will be conducted under the existing legal framework, and that they will commence consultations with various stakeholders on its implementation. Further details will be announced after consultations have been completed, it said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Former Police Officer May Stand Trial In October For Kovan Double Murder

    Former Police Officer May Stand Trial In October For Kovan Double Murder

    More than two years after a father and son were found murdered in Kovan, former police officer Iskandar Rahmat could stand trial for their deaths in October.

    Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Teo Chee Hean yesterday (July 13) said a committal hearing has been scheduled for July 29, when the judge will decide if Iskandar is to go on trial at the High Court.

    In the event that he is committed to stand trial, his case will be heard in the High Court from Oct 20 to 30 and March 29 to April 8 next year, Mr Teo said in a written response to a parliamentary question filed by Aljunied GRC Member of Parliament Sylvia Lim, who had asked for an update on the criminal proceedings.

    On July 15, 2013, Iskandar was charged with the murder of 66-year-old car-workshop owner Tan Boon Sin and his son, Tan Chee Heong, 42.

    If convicted, Iskandar faces the death penalty.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Man Arrested For Attempting To Bribe Two Police Officers

    Man Arrested For Attempting To Bribe Two Police Officers

    A 31-year-old man has been arrested for attempting to bribe two police officers.

    On Friday (Jul  10), Staff Sergeant Noor Ramdan and Sergeant Mohammad Nazri from Ang Mo Kio Division responded to a case of a drunken passenger who refused to alight from a taxi at Ang Mo Kio Avenue 1.

    The man made indecent hand gestures and refused to heed the officers’ advice despite repeated warnings. He was eventually placed under arrest for disorderly behaviour and for insulting public servants.

    Police said in a statement that on the way back to the police station, the man offered to introduce the officers to paid sexual services, and gratification of S$50 as inducements to let him go.

    The officers rejected the bribes and the man was subsequently arrested for attempting to bribe police officers.

    The man will be charged in court on Monday (Jul 13).

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Yishun Drama – Intruder Hide In Sranger’s Flat To Evade Police

    Yishun Drama – Intruder Hide In Sranger’s Flat To Evade Police

    For 20 agonising minutes, a mother and her three young children were stricken by fear when they were held captive in their Yishun flat yesterday.

    A desperate intruder had broken into their home and was frantically trying to escape the police.

    He was eventually arrested.

    Speaking to The New Paper after the incident, Madam Suhadah Jumadi, 33, said she was getting ready to break fast with her children in the living of their home in Block 431B, Yishun Avenue 1, when she saw a barefooted man walk out of her bedroom.

    He had climbed into her sixth-storey flat through the master bedroom window from the level above, breaking her window grilles.

    She hadn’t heard him as the TV was on and her children were playing.

    “The man told me not to call the police and asked me to find a way to help him get away,” Madam Suhadah said.

    Then she heard a commotion at her door as well as sounds under the block.

    “I could see uniformed officers outside (the window on the first storey), as well those knocking on my door (through the peephole).

    “That’s when I knew he was a wanted man,” she said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg