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incident happened at 5.30am. si ginna picked the wrong person to rob.... taxi driver is bigger size than him. his knees also injured.. taxi driver power the robber was pinned to the ground with the help of 2 passerbys pic from hwz
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At Paya Lebar today turning into Ubi. I was queuing up just like others then one big MOFO thinks he drive Merc S350 very big shot skip the queue and try to cut in front of me. I die die don't give way. My is just a smashed up car, want to bang then come lar. Squeeze almost bang liao. I stare at him, he stare at me. In the end he bo pian give up and miss the turn and drove straight to the next junction instead. You think you drive big car means you own the road? Don't come and fug around with me.
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As they say.. "Cho lang mai kwai lan.. lang bi ler ko ka kwai lan" Taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streetdirectory.com Use of litigation Since early 2004, Streetdirectory.com has gained prominence in several of its owner's successful legal action against schools and small and medium enterprises for what they see as unauthorised use of its maps. This is after Virtual Map has also won landmark cases against larger enterprises such as NTUC Income[1][2] and Suncool International, with the former's damages waived[1] and the latter's appeal being subsequently dismissed.[3][4] Its owner is known to have hired an IT firm to conduct investigations aggressively against the unlicensed use of their maps on other websites,[1] and most of the defendants contacted by Virtual Map's legal team claim that they were not aware that doing so constitutes a copyright infringement. Nevertheless, they were liable for damages and lawyers subsequently warned of this fact in the local media.[1][2] The justification given by Virtual Map was that enough skill and effort was made in using SLA data to create maps that the company can claim its own independent copyright to,[3] and suffered from a loss of potential profit when businesses reproduced their maps online without paying any licensing fees. Such use constituted, as Virtual Map claims, infringement of the Copyright Law and has angered existing clients who have legally paid to license their maps.[1] This position was endorsed by the High Court of Singapore, which gave Virtual Map the green light[3] to send cease and desist letters to hundreds of companies and organisations who have used the maps on their websites in a similar manner, demanding that they either pay up to $10,000 or more, or to face legal action.[4] In most cases matters were settled out of court.[1][2] [edit] SLA v. Virtual Map In October 2006, Virtual Map became embroiled in a civil suit against the ex-provider, Singapore Land Authority (SLA), a statutory board under the Singapore Ministry of Law.[5] Until July 2004, Singapore Land Authority (SLA) provided digitised data to Virtual Map non-exclusively under seven agreements that the latter has signed, and claims that the latter has infringed SLA's copyright by continually selling and redistributing its maps even after the expiration of the agreements.[6][7] The statutory board is currently seeking damages, an injunction to prevent further use of the data by Virtual Map, an order to disclose its client's list and addresses, and to destroy all copies of the infringing material.[6] In its defence, Virtual Map has reiterated that its works have been sufficiently original, an argument which held in Suncool's unsuccessful appeal against the company.[3] The defendant has also claimed that SLA has obtained information from other agencies that it did not own.[8] On the second day of the trial, three SLA employees took the stand to testify that Virtual Map has copied "SLA's skeleton", which has been the "hard work, skill, labour and money invested by the government", and pointed out several irregularities in Virtual Map's work.[9] The trial began on 8 January 2007. SLA has since set up an alternative website that allows non-commercial users to download its maps for free.[5] Eight months later on 7 August 2007, a district court ruled that Virtual Map's online maps on streetdirectory.com had breached SLA's copyright. District Judge Thian Yee Sze also held that Virtual Map should stop "dealing in maps which are reproductions of SLA's street directory vector data and address point vector data", and further ordered an inquiry into the damages due to SLA. Lawyers from Drew & Napier represented SLA, while Virtual Map was defended by counsel from Rodyk & Davidson.[10] Streetdirectory.com lost its subsequent appeal on the decision, but it did not affect the earlier legal settlements against hundreds of businesses and organisations. However, it had to also temporarily shut down its website to replace its map data.[11][12]
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http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/showthread.php?t=3204580 http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot..._5521627_n.jpg fakeMOE: PAP trying to ride on the popularity of fake parody accounts, e.g. us, this #SGElections? http://t.co/9X8BWIY Seriously #sgfail. #sgedu ETA: Jane Ngoh who was the third "person" to post http://i54.tinypic.com/4s0fbd.png Jane Zhang: Zhang Liang Ying 张靓颖 http://i54.tinypic.com/v4v76w.png Jian Lnew, the fourth "person" to post http://i56.tinypic.com/14y07k0.png http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_O6_UTsKpb2...52813%2529.jpg Alexandra Chiang, the seventh "person" to post http://i52.tinypic.com/208czk8.png http://i54.tinypic.com/2z729ti.png Just in case fakeMOE's image gets removed, view the pic below:
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Just recalling the things, the stupidest things I did to my car...in most of innocent situations. 1) leaving site office after meeting, moving off from covered lot. turned right too soon and brushed the rear right fender against the column. so malu, female colleague was beside me. after dropping her at a bus stop, got down the car and gan jiong wanna "rub" away the scratches. but the reddish brown markings would not go away 2) reserve park in a HDB carpark to take lunch at a market in Dover. bang quite hard into a lamp post. fortunately the dent rebounded back and left a not so obvious mark, almost in the centre of the bumper. sheesh, whoever design the carpark ought to be shot, there was not much clearance from the lot and its smack right in the centre behind the lot. Observed that the lamp was almost dropping, probably a lot of ppl hit it while reverse parking 3) reversing in a petrol kiosk and scrap the top of the boot lid against a portable metal signage 4) after grocery trip, rest the trolley against the rear bumper rubber, open the boot and the lid actually swung out and kanna the trolley, leaving a scratch 5) finished washing the front windscreen with the wipers in the upright position. proceeded to open the bonnet...the rest I leave to your imagination 6) at tanjong pagar area, while waiting for CO, itchy backside shift here and there until knocked into a Honda Stream, no dents on the Stream front bumper except that my exhaust left a circular mark on it. left a note on the windscreen and the owner actually contacted me. I wanted to pay for the scratch but owner said dunno how to count cos his bumper already a lot of dents and scratches. Till today still keep the SMSes in case kanna $80k claim 7) attempted a three point turn at one of those rich ppl estate. made of of the slope to one of the houses, front up but when reverse back, the whole front lip scrap heavily and almost ripped off. after that go some deserted carpark to check and re-adjust/secure the front lip Darn, sometimes I just to the darndest thing.
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Sibeh song..... Pwned a Lexus today. L600 somemore. Trying to cut infront of me despite a long queue. I die die don't give way and horn..... Almost bang already but he no balls to bang me so slow down almost to a stop and try to cut in behind but behind car so don't give way. Then cars behind him all horn him to move. He LL move off miss the turn... LOL!! PWNAGE!! Who says only I hate elites, even other cars also don't give way to elites as well!! LOL!! PWNAGE!!
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...pay $70 +++ for wat fug.......I watch internet better somemore...Singtel say our fault cause wire old....kns Poor transmission quality of football matches mars fans' viewing pleasure By Shaffiq Alfhatib | Posted: 12 June 2010 2212 hrs Photos 1 of 1 Mexico's Rafael Marquez (L) and Ricardo Osorio (2nd R, front) fight for the ball with South Africa's midfielder Steven Pienaar ® SINGAPORE: Some footballs fans who caught the World Cup on SingTel's Mio TV said that their viewing pleasure was marred by the poor transmission quality of the matches. One of them is 19-year-old Lee Zheng Xuan, a student from the Singapore Polytechnic. He said: "It was the first match of the World Cup. When we turned on the World Cup channel on Mio TV, the image just didn't load. We just got lots of grainy pictures and bits of sound here and there.
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Mr Kevin Liang's brand-new Ferrari can usually go from zero to 100kmh in four seconds. As of last Thursday, it could not even crawl on its own power. Just 11/2 months old and costing more than $650,000, the F430 Coupe supercar was among the 100 vehicles submerged in the 500-space basement carpark at Tessarina condominium in Bukit Timah, as a result of a sudden flash flood that afternoon. Mr Liang, 47, a resident, received a call from his wife about his car's fate while he was at work. He said: 'It seemed that there was nothing I could do, so I didn't rush home. Besides, it is the company car, so I checked with the finance department and found that it is comprehensively insured.' He is the chief executive of the EPS group of companies which specialises in IT manpower outsourcing. Still, when he returned home that night and saw the submerged car, he could not help feeling sad. He had recently traded in an Audi R8 for the Ferrari - a reward for the directors of his company, who also get to use the car. His 18-year-old son put on swimming trunks to take pictures of the car that night. The next morning, Mr Liang went to the basement, after the water had been pumped away by PUB contractors, to watch his car being towed away. He said: 'It was completely muddy and it stank. I retrieved personal items like my CashCard and petrol card, but for now it's with the dealer and I'm waiting for updates.' Mr Liang added that while he does not know how bad the situation is, the damage looked bad. He and his wife have since had to park their other cars, a Mercedes and a BMW, on higher ground in the basement carpark. When The Sunday Times visited the Tessarina yesterday, some residents expressed their unhappiness about the event. Ms Viviana Halim, 23, who is in customer service, helped her mother drive away the family's Toyota, but their other car, a Honda, was submerged. She said: 'It may have been an act of God, but the management could have told us early that water was flowing into the carpark so we could have saved both cars.' Analyst Norman Yap, 32, found that the flooding had cut off power to his block and the lifts. He had to walk up five floors to his unit. He said: 'It has been two days now, and no one has told us if any preventive measures are being taken. This may be a rare event, but the infrastructure should be in place to handle it.' Mr Liang said: 'I was concerned about casualties in the flood, so perhaps the Government can relook the drainage system.' The Government has since said that plans to widen and deepen drainage networks in the area are being speeded up. 'I understand that this is a very unexpected event. The water just came rushing in, so what can you do?' Mr Liang added. Link on EDMW http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/showthre...4253&page=8
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China tycoon's mistress contest ends in tragedy source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp.../409545/1/.html SHANGHAI: A married Chinese tycoon who could no longer afford to support his five mistresses during the economic slowdown held a contest to decide which one to keep, local media reported Tuesday. The contest took a tragic turn when one of the mistresses, who was eliminated based on her looks, drove her former lover and the four other women off a mountain road in an apparent fit of anger, the Shanghai Daily reported. The driver died in the December 6 crash while the man and four other women were hospitalised, the report said. Initially, it was thought to be an accident, but then details of the bizarre contest emerged in a letter left by the dead woman, a 29-year-old former waitress surnamed Yu, the newspaper said. The woman met the entrepreneur, surnamed Fan, at the restaurant where she worked in the coastal city of Qingdao in 2000 and became his lover, the report said. Fan later introduced her to the four other mistresses
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he should have known better to than open their mouth without thinking ... Give him some credit (1 cent) for trying ... Or are we too fierce ?
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Home > Breaking News > Singapore > Story Sep 25, 2008 'Dead' man jailed Shamsul plotted with wife and others to get payouts by faking death By Elena Chong A MAN played dead so he could claim Central Provident Fund (CPF) and insurance payouts totalling almost $270,000 - and then blew the whistle on himself to prevent his Indonesian wife from getting her hands on more of his insurance money. Yesterday, Shamsul Bahri Lamaon, 44, was sent to jail for 42 months for the scam. He admitted to conspiring with his wife, Madam Rima Triyana, and others to deceive the CPF Board into believing he had died of a heart attack in Indonesia. The board released $143,142 to the Public Trustee in 2006 as Shamsul had not nominated a recipient for the funds. The unemployed man also plotted with his 34-year-old wife and others to cheat Great Eastern (GE) Life Assurance of $125,690 in the same manner. The money was paid to Madam Rima in October that year. The remainder of the total death claim of $325,940 was intended for Shamsul's son, who was a minor. In sentencing Shamsul, District Judge Liew Thiam Leng said it was important to deter other like-minded offenders. He noted that two institutions were involved, and that the amount involved was substantial. In 2004, Shamsul, then an engineer, was posted to work in Jakarta. He owed money to a few financial institutions as a result of credit card debts. Two years later, he quit his job. His wife then hatched a scheme to fake his death and use fraudulent documents to file claims with the CPF Board and GE. He agreed to go along with it. They wanted the money to run a business, buy a house and pay for their children's education. To avoid detection, Shamsul remained in a village at Surade while his wife went about getting the fake documents to show that he had died of a heart attack on April 20, 2006. She then flew to Singapore in August 2006 to make her claims. Both institutions approved the claims. The CPF Board lodged the money with the Public Trustee pending a claim on the money by Shamsul's next of kin. GE paid Madam Rima her share of the payout. In January this year, fearing that his wife would get the insurance money meant for his son, Shamsul asked his cousin to alert GE to stop the payment, and to tell the company he was alive. He was arrested on Feb 4 when he arrived from Jakarta. His wife is at large. The CPF money was later reinstated to his account. Pleading for leniency, Shamsul said he was remorseful and did not get a single cent from his wife. He said his mother was taking care of his three children and had difficulty doing all the housework by herself. He could have been jailed for up to seven years and fined on each charge. [email protected] http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking...ry_282302.html guess he dun trust her with so much $$ and ran away.
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http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking%2BNew...ory_276532.html THIS car is one of the eight vehicles damaged by a man who hurled bricks and wooden planks at vehicles parked at an open-air carpark in Jurong East Street 13 on Monday morning. The windscreens and side windows of the cars were either smashed or cracked. Some of the cars' side mirrors were also left dangling from their hinges. The morning blitz near Block 112 was apparently committed by a man in his 40s who lived in the neighbourhood. He was later arrested by the police, who arrived at the scene after receiving calls from residents. -----
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http://redsports.sg/2008/08/24/jiawei-study-peking/ more goot years ahead
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http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg/photo/getMediumSizePhoto.do?id=25973 STOMPer Honey took this photo of a police car which had apparently hit a pillar while parking at Tan Quee Lan Street at about 5pm yesterday (July 4). "Was there a traffic emergency causing the driver to park so carelessly or an example for 'How Not to Park' by the traffic police?" http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg/singapor...nt.jsp?id=27311
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Singapore forum 'scammer' faces caning and prison Blagger facing flogging By John Oates Published Friday 27th June 2008 15:12?GMT Nail down your security priorities. Ask the experts and your peers at The Register Security Debate, April 17, 2008 A British man faces caning and a prison sentence for allegedly conning members of an IT forum in Singapore. Members of the VR-Zone forum used "mass ordering" to make savings when buying hardware - they teamed up to make large orders which earned them discounts. But Johnson Henry Plant, a 36-year-old British national, is accused of exploiting this to con $10,000 SGD (
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Woman motorcyclist lodged under trailer By Sumathi V Selvaretnam The motorcyclist, a Chinese woman in her early 30s sustained leg injuries and was semi-conscious when taken to Tan Tock Seng Hospital. -- PHOTO: COURTESY TO MR R. S. NATHAN SBS bus driver Mr R.S. Nathan was shocked to see this motorcycle partially lodged beneath a trailer along Mountbatten Road at about 9am on Tuesday. He snapped a picture of it with his mobile phone and sent it to Stomp. The woman appeared unconscious but was still sitting on her motorcycle with her head slumped over the handlebars. The front tyre of the motorcyle was caught under the back of the trailer. 'She looked like she was sleeping. She didn't fall down but was balancing on her toes,' said Mr Nathan, 60. Police said that they received a call at 9am about the accident. The motorcyclist, a Chinese woman in her early 30s sustained leg injuries and was semi-conscious when taken to Tan Tock Seng Hospital. Police are investigating the incident. http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/...99.html?vgnmr=1 For a moment I tot the President moonlighting as a Transport Leader... oops Bus Captain... oops Bus driver.
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Teens say they were banned from Apple stores for life, company denies it By Kristina Peterson Bay Area News Group Article Launched: 05/29/2008 07:27:16 PM PDT Four Palo Alto teenagers raised in the heart of Silicon Valley got the scare of their lives when they thought they might be banished from all Apple stores worldwide, for life. Their crime, the teens said, was downloading a third-party car racing game onto iPhones at Apple's University Avenue store in Palo Alto last weekend. For that, the two Palo Alto High School students and two recent graduates said they were detained 2 1/2 hours at the store and permanently banned by management. Apple spokesman Steve Dowling denied the teenagers' banishment claim. "They were not banned from that store or any other store," Dowling said. Coincidentally, the company has already announced it will encourage customers to download similar third-party applications onto their iPhones, starting next month. Earlier this week, the four teenagers said they were depressed about not being able to visit their favorite store again. "I can't walk down University Avenue without going in there," said Paly senior Daniel Fukuba, who camped out for the first iPhones last year. Fukuba, who works at a local start-up when not in school, said he and two friends - junior Eric Vicenti and Paly alum Noah Rogers - had some time to kill before meeting up with Paly alum Anjay Patel on Saturday, so they headed over to the Apple store. Showing off the capabilities of the iPhone to Vicenti, Fukuba downloaded a car racing game called "Raging Thunder" - a third-party application created by the Swedish company Polarbits - onto the store phone. "We thought that it was completely harmless," Vicenti said. When an employee stopped by and asked what they were doing, Fukuba told him they were "playing around with the phones." Rogers, who said he worked for the Palo Alto Apple store during the holiday season, said employees are trained to restore the iPhones and computers each night so any downloaded applications would be erased before the next day. "All you have to do is plug it in a laptop to restore it to normal," he said. The employee did not seem alarmed, but a few minutes later a manager came over and asked whether they needed help, Fukuba said. He replied that they were doing fine, and shortly after Patel arrived the group left the store. Patel said he had spent less than five minutes in the store, doing nothing but checking his Facebook page and barely chatting with his friends. "I may have said one or two words to them," he said. But the group had time to talk over the next 2 1/2 hours. "We're halfway down the block when the manager comes running out and tells us to stop right there,"' Fukuba said. The students were ordered to return to the store, where a security guard and the manager called police, Vicenti said. Sgt. Sandra Brown confirmed that the store called the Palo Alto Police Department and an officer responded, but made no arrests. She said the store issued the teens an "admonishment" to leave the store, but police did not force them out. After being lectured by the manager on the dangers of "hacking" into the phones, the teens were photographed and told their pictures were being sent to all Apple stores "so they'd be on the lookout for us," Rogers said. He and Patel were then allowed to leave. Fukuba and Vicenti, who are both under 18, had to wait for their parents to come pick them up. Over the next few days, the boys worried about the ban's repercussions. Fukuba wondered what will happen if he needs to get his computer or iPhone repaired. "I'll have to get a friend to buy stuff for me, like a drug deal," Fukuba said. Later in the week, the teens had heard through a friend that a different manager had told said they were still welcome at Apple, despite what the other employees had said. "I'm not really sure what's going on," Fukuba said. http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_942052...ce=most_viewed
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For those of you looking for another true account to read about, you owe your thanks to a blue Evo SG* *5 A that I encountered last night, or to be technically correct, early this morning at about 0200hrs near river valley road. Unlike other younger folks who are up and about at 0200hrs in the morning, probably partying, meeting friends for cool coffee rendezvous, or returning from a date, I was awake for the practical reason that I had to play chauffeur to my wife who was incidentally partying with a few of her glamor puss friends at Zouk. I did not want to embarass her by joining her. My acquaintance with Zouk (and all the happening night spots you must be so familiar with) ended some 5 years back. So there I was, a sleepy road phantom on his way to pick his fetch his wife home. This time I was driving like a man on a mission, wanting to get the missus into the car and home ASAP so that I could keep my appointment with the God of Snooze. So I must have inevitably come too close for comfort to the rear of a blue evo (9 I think) cruising in front of me. If you are the driver of the blue evo and you happen to read this, my apologies.. I was simply not paying much attention to my surroundings! Anyhow, in order not to antagonize him unintentionally, I decided to pull up on the adjacent left lane at the set of traffic lights, which was red then. Traditionally, it meant stop, but looking back, I believe the red displayed at the lights then meant danger. To me. The Evo driver was a guy who I judge to be around my age, which disqualifies him from being described as a young punk. Maybe an "approaching middle age and hating it" punk, but definitely not young. Not too friendly either. With a passenger who looked like his bodyguard, weighing in at 250lbs and ready to rearrange my face at the drop of a pin. They both gave me a look and then talked a bit among themselves. I could imagine their conversation going something like this: Approaching Middle Age punk to his 250lbs passenger: How ah. You think I should take him on or not? 250lbs wrestler passenger: Yeah why not. Yours is evo leh. A.M.A punk: ok come we try It seemed that the red lights were never going to turn green. But at least I got to witness the launch control system being engaged for the evo. To be honest it sounds really very intimidating. I glanced at the evo driver and saw that both of them were simply looking ahead as though the Le Mans race 2008 was about to commence. One eternity later, the lights turned green. The evo scrambled for a little traction before blasting off like a torpedo, tires wailing like banshees in the night. I was impressed, seriously. It was with a display of raw power and brutal abandon that the evo sped off and disappeared, the thunderous exhaust echoing off the buildings on both sides. If that is not a side planted exhaust job, he must be running amplifiers somewhere in his exhaust system. I think the car must be running at least 10sec for the quarter mile, judging from its pace. There. I was pwned. Cos I had time merely to put my car into first gear and roll off, when the evo disappeared from complete view. Oh sure I could still hear the car but you would have to be seriously impaired in your hearing to miss the sound. I thought of my chauffeur duties then, and sped up a little. If I arrive late I would probably get pwned a second time in the same night by the missus. My motto is never to get pwned more than once a night. But unless I learn to properly drive a manual, perhaps from boy-boy or eternity gal, perhaps its time the 911 turbo finds a more deserving owner. This current one is getting too sloppy!
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since no one posted.. this news is last week. SS driver shocked his new bucket seats and HU stolen. This burglar is beri daring.. take so much time and efforts to remove these items. And looks like pretty experience in dismantling also. Consequence of not paying for a proper car alarm system. [inline CIMG1269.jpg]
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April 2, 2008 Man arrested for faking as 'accident victim' to cheat drivers A MAN has been arrested for trying to get compensation from at least two drivers after falsely claiming that they had knocked him down. Police said on Wednesday a woman in her 40s was driving her car onto Lorong 27 Geylang from Sims Avenue on Tuesday at about 11 pm when she heard a loud bang at the rear of her vehicle. She stopped to check. A man sitting by the road claimed that she had knocked into him. The driver wanted to send him to hospital for treatment, but he refused. Instead, he demanded $200 compensation. Police were called. The man was arrested on the spot. Earlier that night, police received a call from another driver, in his late 30s, who said he had met with a similar situation at Lorong 19 Geylang at about 9.30pm. The driver had offered to send the alleged victim to hospital, but the man refused and insisted that the driver give him money in return. When the driver said he would call the police, the man quickly left. Police advise those who may have fallen prey to similar scams to make a report. The suspect, a 32-year-old Chinese man will be charged in court on Thursday for cheating. http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/...ory_223111.html
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April 7, 2008 Malaysian police arrest 7 in SMS scam PENANG - SEVEN men including a Taiwanese, who are believed to have fleeced numerous people of at least RM1 million (S$434,000) nationwide in SMS scams, have been arrested. The men, in their 30s and 40s, who were nabbed in Kuala Lumpur, are said to be behind a series of SMS scams reported in Johor, Selangor, Penang, Negri Sembilan and Perak. Sources said Bukit Aman police picked them up at the Sungai Wang Plaza shopping complex more than two weeks ago. It is believed that the Negri Sembilan and Johor police questioned them before sending them here on Saturday. Fourteen people here were cheated of about RM85,000 between March 1 and March 15 after being informed via SMS that they had won luxury cars and cash prizes. Six cases involving RM37,000 were reported to the George Town police while the other cases were reported in Balik Pulau, Bukit Mertajam and Butterworth. The victims were duped into believing that they had each won a car and also RM20,000 in the Petronas Super Car Craze Contest, which has since ended. The mode of operation of the syndicate, which had been active for some time, was to send an SMS to their victims asking them to call a mobile phone number. They were then told that they had won some prizes but were required to deposit some money into a bank account as administration fees in order to claim the prizes. Between RM1,000 and RM20,000 was banked in by the victims who realised that they had been cheated when the prizes failed to arrive after a week of waiting. Police have not ruled out the possibility that the syndicate could be behind variations of the scam using the name of companies such as Maxis and popular reality shows such as Akademi Fantasia. The suspects have been remanded by a magistrate's court. If convicted, they each face a 10-year jail term with possible caning. -- THE STAR/ANN http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/...ory_224746.html Boleh!
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KNN!!! In the wrong still want to give bloody excuses!! http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg/singapor...nt.jsp?id=12682 http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg/photo/getMediumSizePhoto.do?id=11368
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Security guards claim cameras in Great World City carpark are dummies LAST week, my husband went to Great World City for dinner. Being a careful person, he deliberately chose a parking lot near a security camera. When he went to fetch his car after dinner, he found that someone had knocked his car and that the culprit had already driven off. My husband immediately headed to the guard room, hoping to trace the culprit from the security camera. To his surprise, the guard said that all the security cameras in the carpark are dummies. Only the camera at the exit/entrance is real. And it is the same for the cameras in the shopping mall too. The guard also told him that this issue had been brought up to management a long time ago but that nothing had been done. Tan Hong Leng (Ms) http://www.straitstimes.com/ST%2BForum/Onl...ory_176456.html