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The Fast & The Furious: This woman hit 215km/h, much faster than the Tanjong Pagar roast pigs

Screenshot 2025-03-03 20.36.50.png
 

Porsche involved in fatal crash on Nicoll Highway previously seen running red light in Tiong Bahru​

Porsche involved in fatal crash on Nicoll Highway previously seen running red light in Tiong Bahru


Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook & SGRV on Facebook

Porsche with damaged bumper runs red light in Tiong Bahru before Nicoll Highway accident
Yesterday (2 March), a Porsche driver died in a fiery high-speed crash on Nicoll Highway.

A video has surfaced of the same car being spotted running a red light in Tiong Bahru before the fatal accident.

The incident allegedly occurred on the same day at 1.41pm, 30 minutes before the crash happened.

In the footage, the camcar was making a right turn from Lower Delta Road onto Ganges Avenue, with the green light in its favour, when it spotted the Porsche.

Source: SGRV on Facebook
The Porsche drove down from Delta Road at relatively high speeds and ran the junction’s red light.


The Porsche’s driver managed to quickly brake and avoided a collision.

Source: SGRV on Facebook
Afterwards, the camcar driver carried on but noticed that the Porsche had a damaged left bumper.

They suggested that the car had already gotten into an accident prior to the near-accident.

porsche nicoll red light


Source: SGRV on Facebook
At 2.11pm on Nicoll Highway, the same Porsche that ran the red light would go flying down the road sideways.

Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook
It ended up damaging four other vehicles and crashing into the road divider.


Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook
The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) assessed seven involved motorists and conveyed two of them to the hospital.

As for the Porsche driver, he had gotten trapped in the burning wreck and was pronounced dead at the scene.

flames.gif


Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook
The video quickly gained traction online, with netizens instantly recognising the Porsche in the Tiong Bahru video to be the one in the Nicoll Highway accident.

Many reacted in shock.


porsche nicoll red light


Source: Facebook
One commenter criticised the driver’s reckless behavior, pointing out that he seemed to have already been in at least one accident before the fatal crash.

porsche-crash-3.jpg




Porsche involved in fatal crash on Nicoll Highway previously seen running red light in Tiong Bahru


Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook & SGRV on Facebook




Yesterday (2 March), a Porsche driver died in a fiery high-speed crash on Nicoll Highway.
A video has surfaced of the same car being spotted running a red light in Tiong Bahru before the fatal accident.
The incident allegedly occurred on the same day at 1.41pm, 30 minutes before the crash happened.
In the footage, the camcar was making a right turn from Lower Delta Road onto Ganges Avenue, with the green light in its favour, when it spotted the Porsche.
Source: SGRV on Facebook
The Porsche drove down from Delta Road at relatively high speeds and ran the junction’s red light.
The Porsche’s driver managed to quickly brake and avoided a collision.
Source: SGRV on Facebook
Afterwards, the camcar driver carried on but noticed that the Porsche had a damaged left bumper.
They suggested that the car had already gotten into an accident prior to the near-accident.
porsche nicoll red light


Source: SGRV on Facebook
At 2.11pm on Nicoll Highway, the same Porsche that ran the red light would go flying down the road sideways.
Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook
It ended up damaging four other vehicles and crashing into the road divider.
Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook
The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) assessed seven involved motorists and conveyed two of them to the hospital.
As for the Porsche driver, he had gotten trapped in the burning wreck and was pronounced dead at the scene.
flames.gif


Source: SG Kaypoh 人! on Facebook
The video quickly gained traction online, with netizens instantly recognising the Porsche in the Tiong Bahru video to be the one in the Nicoll Highway accident.
Many reacted in shock.
porsche nicoll red light


Source: Facebook
One commenter criticised the driver’s reckless behavior, pointing out that he seemed to have already been in at least one accident before the fatal crash.
 

Driver killed in high-speed car crash on Nicoll Highway was director of Chee Song Foods​

ST20200820-202061827249-Lim Yaohui-Choo Yun Ting-ytdist/Mr Jeffery Loh, 32, Director of Chee Song Foods, standing outside the packing room with the thermoforming packing machine inside at CS Foods' kitchen facility on Aug 20, 2020.Profile of food distributor Chee Song Foods, which has added new services such as cook-chill solutions for its F&B customers. Cook-chill system is an advanced food preparation designed to provide more flexibility and ensure food safety in food service. It expanded its facility in March, which has enabled it to cater to the increasing needs of F&B establishments which are dealing with manpower shortages during this Covid-19 pandemic.(ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI)


Mr Jeffrey Loh Chong Hao was killed in a high-speed crash on Nicoll Highway on March 2.ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI

Joyce Lim
Mar 03, 2025

SINGAPORE - The driver of the blue Porsche 911 Carrera killed in a high-speed crash on Nicoll Highway on March 2 was 37-year-old Jeffrey Loh Chong Hao, The Straits Times has learnt.

Mr Loh is the director and one of three shareholders of Chee Song Foods, a company known for its halal-certified meat products sold under the CS Foods brand in supermarkets. He is also a licensed financial adviser with AIA Singapore.

The Porsche was bought brand new in May 2021 and registered under Chee Song Foods, Land Transport Authority records show.

According to Mr Loh’s LinkedIn profile, he studied banking and finance at the Singapore Institute of Management under the University of London International Programme.

A business associate, who wanted to be known only as Mr Koh, told ST he was shocked when he saw the video of the crash and recognised Mr Loh’s car, which he had driven to their meetings.

“The industry is in shock, and we are waiting to hear if there will be a wake so we can bid farewell to him,” said Mr Koh.

Mr Loh’s colleagues declined to comment when The Straits Times visited the Chee Song Foods office on March 3.

CMG20250303-RChiong01/张俊杰/何家炜/【跟进】尼诰大道致命连环车祸 [4 Jln Masjid] An exterior view of CS Frozen Food 志松食品, a wholesale food supplier where the deceased driver of the Porsche 911 Turbo S is believed to be a director at, as seen on March 3, 2025. The deceased is believed to be 37-year-old Jeffrey Loh 志松食品(CS Foods)公司董事卢仲豪.


Chee Song Foods is known for its halal-certified meat products sold under the CS Foods brand in supermarkets.PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
At Mr Loh’s home, a family member told ST that the family does not plan to issue any statement at the moment.

Mr Koh described Mr Loh - who is not married - as hardworking, driven, and devoted to his work. He recalled a business trip with Mr Loh in November 2024 to visit food factories in China.

The fatal crash occurred on Nicoll Highway towards Guillemard Road. The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) and police were alerted to the burning car along a slip road before the Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway (KPE) entrance, at 2.10pm.

Dashcam footage circulating online showed a dark blue Porsche speeding down Nicoll Highway on the extreme right lane. The car swerved from right to left and hit a road divider before the KPE entrance. It flipped onto its left side, and skidded into several cars before bursting into flames.

Firefighters from the SCDF extinguished the blaze with a water jet, but Mr Loh was found in the charred wreckage and pronounced dead at the scene.


SCDF officers assessed seven people from other vehicles involved in the accident, and took two men, aged 53 and 66, to Tan Tock Seng Hospital. The others declined to go to the hospital.

Police and SCDF investigations into the crash and the cause of the fire are ongoing.

The incident is the latest in a series of recent vehicle fires. On Feb 27, a six-car collision on the Pan-Island Expressway near Paya Lebar resulted in two vehicles catching fire, though all drivers escaped injury.

In February, the Traffic Police released statistics that showed the number of people killed and injured in traffic accidents hit a five-year high in 2024, with speeding contributing to one in three fatal crashes.

The number of speeding violations in 2024 spiked by 64.8 per cent, compared with the previous year.
 
The Tanjong Pagar roast pigs drove at speeds of between 77km/h and 88 km/h while one clocked 109km/h.
Pretty slow compared with this fat pig who drove at up to 215 km/h.

Jail for motorist who drove at up to 215 kmh and caused fatal traffic accident involving 5 vehicles​

AC1I374820copy_0.jpg

Ng Wen Xun was also disqualified from holding or obtaining all classes of driving licences for 10 years from her release date. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
shaffiq_alkhatib.png

Shaffiq Alkhatib
Court Correspondent

May 29, 2023

SINGAPORE - A motorist who was travelling at speeds of up to 215 kmh along the Central Expressway (CTE) in July 2021, caused an accident with four other vehicles and a motorcyclist’s death.
On Monday, Ng Wen Xun, 35, who had failed to keep within the 80 kmh speed limit while she was driving a car, was sentenced to 30 months’ jail and disqualified from holding or obtaining all classes of driving licences for 10 years from her release date.
She had pleaded guilty to two charges under the Road Traffic Act.
Ng was speeding along the CTE towards Seletar Expressway at around 9.20pm on July 23, 2021, when she failed to maintain proper control of her vehicle, and it struck a centre guard railing before veering to the left.
Her vehicle then collided into a motorcycle, throwing its 31-year-old rider onto the road.
Following that, her car veered right and struck a second motorcycle, a lorry and another car.
The second motorcyclist, 28, was also flung onto the road, while the lorry toppled onto its right side, causing two of its Bangladeshi passengers to be flung from their rear passenger seats onto the road.

Ng’s car then hit the left side guard railing along the CTE, came to a halt and caught fire.
The authorities were alerted soon after, and the older motorcyclist was unconscious when an ambulance took him to Tan Tock Seng Hospital. He died of multiple injuries later that evening.
Most of the other motorists were also taken to the same hospital, said Deputy Public Prosecutor Chin Jincheng.
One of the Bangladeshis, 26, suffered injuries, including a fracture to his left wrist, and was discharged with nine days of medical leave. The other Bangladeshi, 50, who was found with fractures to his spine, was hospitalised for nine days.
The younger motorcyclist survived the crash with injuries, including wounds to his hands. He was warded for one night and was discharged with five days of medical leave.



The DPP said that at the time of the accident, traffic volume was moderate, the road surface was dry, the weather was fine, visibility was fair, and the street lightings were in good working condition.
A report from the Health Sciences Authority later stated that just prior to the crash, Ng had been travelling at speeds of between 118 kmh and 215 kmh.
Her bail was set at $15,000 on Monday, and she is expected to surrender herself at the State Courts on June 12 to begin serving her sentence.


Another Proof that life of people on the roads are dirt cheap ... killing any daft sinkies on the roads with taxed and high paid COE cars and vehicles doesnt have much consequences .... the Sinkie Law simply make killers pay small $$$ or stop driving when they kill human beings on the roads like rats. :roflmao:
 
“He was screaming for help and knocking against his window but they couldn’t help as the flames were so strong.”

giphy.gif
 
少年得志才俊傑
鈔票一疊續一疊
鐵馬奔馳身傾斜
命喪火海保時捷:cry:
 
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