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Shots fired, shots fired in Yishun!!!

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Yishun again?! What a fucked up place!

Several Yishun flats hit with metal ball bearings; police investigating​


hzyishun180322a.jpg

One resident said this has been going on since at least June last year. PHOTOS: CHONG JUN LIANG, SHIN MIN DAILY NEWS

nadinechua.png

Nadine Chua
18 Mar 2022, 9:15 pm SGT


SINGAPORE - The police are investigating complaints from residents in several Yishun blocks that their flats have been shot at with metal ball bearings in the past few months, causing damage to windows and furniture.

This has been going on since at least June last year, said a resident of Block 347A Yishun Avenue 11, who gave her name only as Mrs Lou, whose flat was also targeted with 3cm bearings last year.

She is aware of nine neighbours who had their glass doors and windows damaged, the 40-year-old human resource assistant told The Straits Times (ST) on Friday (March 18).

Chinese-language evening daily Shin Min Daily News on Friday quoted another resident, named only as Ms Chung, 32, saying that her windows were hit four times by metal ball bearings over the past six months.

An MP for Nee Soon GRC Louis Ng told ST on Friday that police investigations are ongoing for the cases reported.

Mrs Lou, who lives in a ninth-floor unit with her husband and two sons, aged 10 and 15, said she did not think much of it when her neighbour told her in December last year about a few such incidents.

But to her horror, when she checked for damage around her flat, she found two large dents in the glass sliding doors of her master bedroom balcony.

"This is worrying, because what if someone was standing on the balcony? I often spend time there watering my plants," she said.
Mrs Lou said she and several other residents made police reports.

In response to queries from ST, the police confirmed that reports were lodged and investigations are ongoing.

The nearest buildings facing her bedroom balcony are Housing Board flats about 150m away, separated by a park connector.

She said she worried about her children getting hit, noting that the shots "did quite a bit of damage to the door".

"I have no idea when it happened. No one in the family heard any sounds, so we suspect this happened when we were not at home. It's fortunate no one was hurt."

She does not plan to replace the damaged doors until the culprit is caught, but said the cost is estimated to be $900.

"There are many young children and older people living in these blocks. What if a window is left open and someone gets injured? It is very scary," she added.

HZYISHUN180322B.jpg

The nearest buildings facing Mrs Lou's bedroom balcony are Housing Board flats, separated by a park connector. ST PHOTO: CHONG JUN LIANG

A resident from the neighbouring Block 347B told ST that her windows were also damaged by ball bearings, but declined to comment further.

Other residents ST approached said they had been hearing of such incidents around the estate since last year and were worried if the same would happen to them.

Mr Ng said: "We are working closely with the police and will spare no effort to apprehend the culprit. Residents are also urged to report any incident immediately to the police."

He urged anyone with information to call the police hotline on 1800-255-0000 or submit information online at this website.

A spokesman for Nee Soon Town Council said the town council is assisting the police with their investigations, and its conservancy cleaning staff are helping to keep a lookout for suspicious behaviour in the estate.

"We would like to take this opportunity to remind all residents to refrain from irresponsible actions such as these, which may cause physical harm to others," said the spokesman.

hzyishun180322c.jpg

Residents are urged to report any incident immediately to the police. PHOTO: SHIN MIN DAILY NEWS

In December 2020, a man was sentenced to 18 weeks' jail and fined $2,000 for shooting metal ball bearings at nearby residential blocks from his Jurong West home using metal airguns.

The Deputy Public Prosecutor had noted that the man had shot more than 200 ball bearings using his airguns.

In a separate case, a man was sentenced to three weeks' jail in September 2020 for using a wooden catapult to shoot ball bearings from his Woodlands flat, which damaged two cars near a bridal party in 2017. No one was injured in the incident.

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...shun-resident-police-investigating-more-cases
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Yishun word look You I soon.... you I soon for what, where and when?

Used to be graveyard cemetery lands... dead ah gong and ah ma souls getting upset?...
 

UltimaOnline

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Yishun again?! What a fucked up place!

Several Yishun flats hit with metal ball bearings; police investigating​


hzyishun180322a.jpg

One resident said this has been going on since at least June last year. PHOTOS: CHONG JUN LIANG, SHIN MIN DAILY NEWS


Catching a deadly sniper has long been harder than solving most other forms of homicide, with more sniper killings going unsolved than murders in general, experts say.

From 1976 to 2000, more than 500 people committed sniper attacks, killing at long range, and about 200 of these crimes, or 40 percent, remain unsolved, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reports. By comparison, only 25 percent of all homicides go unsolved.

The reason the police have had a hard time catching snipers over the years is the same as the reason law enforcement officials are now having difficulty tracking down the one in the Washington area, said James Alan Fox, a professor of criminal justice at Northeastern University.

''Because they kill from a distance, because the crime scene has little evidence and typically because the victims have no relationship to the shooter, there are very few clues for the police,'' Professor Fox said.

By contrast, most killers leave some form of evidence -- fingerprints, blood, semen, hair -- or have some connection to the victim that provides a trail for law enforcement to follow.

The difficulty in catching a sniper is compounded if he stops his attacks, whether out of fear of being caught or because he has gotten his satisfaction, Professor Fox said.

In the case of the current sniper, he said: ''If this guy just stops, there is a high probability that he will never be brought to justice. It will be a good thing if he stops, but may be very frustrating for law enforcement.''


https://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/19/...iper-cases-prove-hardest-for-authorities.html
 
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