Tag: underage

  • PR From Germany Charged For Organising Sex Tours With Minors

    PR From Germany Charged For Organising Sex Tours With Minors

    A 45-year-old German businessman was charged on Wednesday (Feb 15) for allegedly organising tours overseas involving sex with minors.

    Michael Frank Hartung faces six charges – two for promoting sex tours, two for the possession of 245 obscene films and two for the possession of eight uncensored films.

    Hartung, a Singapore permanent resident, allegedly met two Singaporean men in September 2015 at Starbucks in Raffles City Shopping Centre to promote the sex tours.

    In April last year, he met another two Singapore permanent residents at a bar along Mackenzie Road to promote similar tours, court documents showed.

    He was arrested after investigators seized obscene and uncensored films from his home at Simei Green condominium last August.

    Hartung’s lawyer said his client plans to contest the charges.

    According to his LinkedIn profile, Hartung is a co-founder of business consulting firm OPTIIS. He also spent more than two decades at Deutsche Bank until September last year, starting out as a relationship manager before rising to the post of vice president of finance.

    Hartung is on S$15,000 bail, furnished by his wife, who is also a permanent resident. He will next appear in court on Feb 28.

    If convicted of promoting commercial sex tours involving minors, the German could be jailed up to 10 years and fined.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Monster Uncle Who Sexually Abused 5 year Old Niece Jailed

    Monster Uncle Who Sexually Abused 5 year Old Niece Jailed

    A former delivery truck driver was on Wednesday (Sept 16) jailed 6 1/2 years for sexually abusing his niece.

    He made the then five-year-old girl masturbate him, and also perform oral sex on him in his room.

    In one of the incidents, the victim’s younger sister, who was then four, saw what had happened.

    But when the sisters tried to tell their grandmother about the abuse, she did not believe them and scolded them for making things up.

    The offences happened between 2006 and 2007, in a flat in the central part of Singapore where the victim’s grandmother lived with her uncle.

    The girls were being looked after by their grandmother as their mother did shift work.

    We cannot name the accused because of a gag order protecting the identity of the victim.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 39 Year Old Youth Counsellor Jailed Seven Months For Taking Nude Photos Of 12 Year Old Girl

    39 Year Old Youth Counsellor Jailed Seven Months For Taking Nude Photos Of 12 Year Old Girl

    He volunteered by counselling troubled youths. Yet, the 39-year-old preyed on the 12-year-old daughter of a friend, asking her to strip for his camera when she asked him for money.

    Today (June 9), District Judge Low Wee Ping sentenced the man, who cannot be named to protect the victim’s identity, to seven months’ jail and chided him.

    “I find it ironic that you were once a counsellor for troubled youths, yet you did this to the girl,” said the judge.

    District Judge Low also took issue with the defence lawyer for underplaying the severity of the crime. “If you think it is merely taking a naked photo, then you don’t know what you’ve done and what the law is trying to protect,” he said, adding that “sexual exploitation of a child” was a better description of what had transpired.

    The court heard that the man was a friend of the victim’s mother, and had on previous occasions given the victim small sums of money ranging from S$2 to S$10.

    On April 25, 2012, the victim asked the man for S$300 to buy a handphone. The man called the victim’s friend, a 17-year-old sales assistant, later in the evening asking them to go to his Ang Mo Kio home. As she was uncomfortable going there alone, the victim asked her friend to accompany her.

    Once there, he said he would teach them how to make money by becoming a “hostess”. Despite her reluctance, she was persuaded to strip naked and pose on the bed for a photo, which the man took with his mobile phone. The next day, a family friend of the girl’s reported the incident to the police.

    Today, defence lawyer S S Dhillon argued that the victim was a “runaway girl” and that her mum had confided in his client about her problems. The man had not touched her either, he added.

    Pleading for leniency, he highlighted the man’s “contributions to society”, such as speaking to delinquents about not re-offending and voluntarily contributing S$27,000 to eight Nepalese earthquake victims.

    But deputy public prosecutor Dillon Kok pressed for a sentence of six to eight months’ imprisonment, citing the aggravating factors in the case, including the victim’s young age and his persuading her to pose naked despite her reluctance. “It is not even taking a picture of a naked girl. It’s child porn,” Mr Kok added.

    The maximum punishment for the offence under the Children and Young Persons Act is five years’ jail and/or a S$10,000 fine.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Accounts Manager And PR Jailed 4 Weeks For Sex With An Underage Girl

    Accounts Manager And PR Jailed 4 Weeks For Sex With An Underage Girl

    An accounts manager was jailed for four weeks on Tuesday in relation to a long-running online vice ring scandal involving an underage girl.

    Singapore permanent resident Atet Kardjono Sianandar, 42, is the 48th man to be dealt with and 46th to be convicted among 51 men first hauled to court three years ago.

    His jail sentence is the lowest to date as he had tried to verify the minor’s age and asked for her identity card.

    He admitted to paying $750 for the 17-year-old’s sexual services at Elizabeth Hotel on Nov 20, 2010.

    In his text messages to the social escort’s pimp, Tang Boon Thiew, Atet had asked whether the minor was over 18. Tang assured him that she was.

    Before the girl turned up at the hotel room, Atet had told Tang that he would like to check the minor’s identity card but Tang told him she did not bring it along.

    Atet, who was represented by Mr Anand Nalachandran, could have been jailed for up to seven years and/or fined.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Schools Turn To “Smokerlysers” To Combat Worsening Underage Smoker Problem

    Schools Turn To “Smokerlysers” To Combat Worsening Underage Smoker Problem

    The problem of underage smoking looks to have worsened, as some schools turn to detection devices to help them smoke out offenders.

    Last year, more than 6,200 smokers below the legal age of 18, including some in primary school, were caught. This was about 17 per cent more than the 5,311 in 2013, according to data from the Health Sciences Authority (HSA).

    Most underage smokers caught were 15 to 17 years old and the rise in numbers could be because of greater enforcement, said an HSA spokesman.

    But a 36-year-old teacher who spoke to The Straits Times on condition of anonymity said she has noticed a growing number of student smokers in her neighbourhood secondary school, where she has taught for 14 years.

    There are those who pick up the habit in primary school, smoking as many as 10 sticks a day by the time they enter secondary school. Some light up in school, with habitual offenders using hidden corners or toilets to take a puff, she said.

    Several schools, such as Greenridge and Chestnut Drive secondary schools, have used “smokerlysers” – portable devices that measure carbon monoxide, a by-product of cigarette smoke – to monitor if students smoke.

    Newer versions of these devices can detect cigarette use from as far as two days back. A Health Promotion Board (HPB) spokesman said these carbon monoxide meters are used in its smoking cessation programme in schools.

    Over in Choa Chu Kang, Regent Secondary School plans to install cigarette smoke detectors in the common areas of five of its male toilets. It wants detectors that can log the exact location and time when someone smokes, and send an alert to the school’s general office and a message to a staff member’s mobile phone.

    “The initiative is one of the school’s efforts to promote deterrence,” said Regent’s vice-principal Sheree Chong, adding that it also holds anti-smoking talks.

    Mr T.C. Lim, 48, whose company distributes cigarette smoke detectors, said such products have been in Singapore for more than a decade, but demand from schools has been low as most found the device too costly. He began getting enquiries from schools last year. A toilet with four cubicles should ideally have two detectors, he added, each of which can cost $500 to $700.

    The effectiveness of such efforts remains to be seen, as “it would take more influence than detection to curb the problem of underage smoking”, said Ms Gracia Goh, deputy director of the Singapore Children’s Society. Its Youth Centre runs anti-smoking campaigns and has encountered smokers as young as eight.

    “Influence by family, friends and community has a much stronger impact for them,” she said, referring to young smokers.

    Take Varun, a 17-year-old student, who took his first puff two years ago “because all my friends were smoking”. Now the Institute of Technical Education student, who declined to give his full name, is a habitual smoker but his family does not know.

    Persons below 18 caught using, buying or possessing tobacco products can be fined up to $300. First-time offenders can have the fines waived if they finish an online smoking cessation module.

    The HPB said it works closely with the Ministry of Education to discourage youth from experimenting with tobacco products.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com