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Showing results for tags 'Appeals'.
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Not related in anyway to the victim & just helping to spread the word. A bit curious that this should be a clear-cut mata case but STOMPer did not mention anything about that. Maybe he is just trying to assist in ther investigations. From STOMP: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg/stomp/sg...un_appeals.html Posted on 05 Mar 2013 Pedestrian injured in Tanjong Katong hit-and-run appeals for information STOMPer Zen is appealing for anyone with information about a hit-and-run incident along Tanjong Katong Road on Saturday night to come forward and assist him in piecing together the order of events then. The STOMPer said he was crossing the road when a blue taxi turned into his path and knocked him down. He suffered a cut to the head which required stitches, as well as a sprained shoulder as a result of this accident. In his report, STOMPer Zen wrote: "There was a hit and run accident along Tanjong Katong Road at about 10.15pm to 10.30pm on Saturday (Mar 2) beside Tanjong Katong Complex. "I was crossing the road at the pedestrain crossing there when a car turned into my path and knocked me down. "I managed to get only a glimpse of the vehicle -- a blue taxi -- before I fainted. "I suffered a 1cm-long cut on my head which required stitches, as well as a sprained shoulder."
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please don't speed in the residential areas. ---- Aug 3, 2011 Man appeals against driving ban after fatal accident Phang Say Lang, 54, pleaded guilty in May to causing the death of Chen Chunyu (above) as a result of failing to keep a proper lookout while driving along Boon Lay Way on Sept 18, 2009. -- PHOTO: NONSPH A BUSINESSMAN who has paid an $8,000 fine for negligently causing the death of a nine-year-old pedestrian in a 2009 road traffic accident is appealing against his five-year driving ban. The appeal will be heard in the High Court on a date to be fixed. Phang Say Lang, 54, pleaded guilty in May to causing the death of Chen Chunyu as a result of failing to keep a proper lookout while driving along Boon Lay Way on Sept 18, 2009. The Primary 2 pupil was on his way to school in pouring rain when he was hit by Phang's Lexus. The boy was seriously injured and died in hospital six days later. The court heard he had stepped onto the road in front of a bus stop, heading for his school on the other side. The point at which he crossed was more than 130m from the nearest pedestrian crossing, at the junction of Boon Lay Way and Corporation Road. In his grounds of judgment last month, District Judge Roy Neighbour said there was no doubt that the mishap was the result of Phang's failure to keep a proper lookout for the boy.
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Hi, With China moving up in the global automobile industry, it's only a matter of time we will see China-made sports cars on the roads here. So, which one do you fancy?