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372 trips to casino in 2.5 years by CPIB direcotr

Confuseous

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SINGAPORE — He made 372 trips to the casinos over two-and-a-half years, losing at least S$478,583 at Resorts World Sentosa and Marina Bay Sands between April 2010 and September 2012. From 2008 to 2012, he lost S$263,699 through betting with Singapore Pools.

To fuel his gambling habit, former Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) Assistant Director Edwin Yeo Seow Hiong misappropriated funds issued to the branch he headed within the bureau.

Details of how he did so emerged yesterday as Yeo, 39, pleaded guilty to three charges of criminal breach of trust and one charge of forgery. He had faced 21 charges, but one charge of criminal breach of trust was dropped and 16 others taken into consideration as District Judge Ng Peng Hong sentenced Yeo to 10 years’ jail for his offences.

Yeo’s case had led to an independent review, which concluded that supervisory lapses had led to a lack of financial controls at the bureau. A new director was appointed in a move to rebuild public trust in the unit, while the two directors who were at the helm when the supervisory lapses occurred were issued warning letters. The Government also tightened rules governing public servants’ visits to casinos, including getting those who frequent the gaming tables to declare how often they make such trips or if they buy annual visit passes.

Yeo, who is married with a five-year-old son, was head of the CPIB’s Field Research and Technical Support (FRTS). His illegal actions came to light in September 2012 when the CPIB received information that payment for certain operational expenses incurred by his branch were overdue. On Oct 18 that year, the bureau lodged a report with the Commercial Affairs Department that Yeo had embezzled money.

The court heard yesterday that for each sum of money Yeo misappropriated, he would cover up the missing funds using the next sum of cash available. This was because the earlier funds had been spent on his personal debts and expenses. He also asked his staff to negotiate with vendors for delayed payment of sums owed to them.

For one of the charges, Yeo had gone against the management’s instruction to have two people authorising transactions for an FRTS bank account. He applied for Internet banking facilities, which allowed online transactions to be carried out using a single Internet banking token, and transferred S$470,265 from the account into his personal account between May and August 2012.

On the forgery charge, he edited a voucher documenting payment to trick CPIB Assistant Director of Administration and Support Sze Chinyu into thinking payment had been made to an equipment supplier. In total, Yeo misappropriated S$1.76 million, of which S$1.64 million has not been repaid.

District Judge Ng said retribution and deterrence must be considered in sentencing Yeo, whose actions impacted public confidence in the integrity of the public service. Only a small fraction of the money has been recovered and his misdeeds took place over a substantial period of time — between April 2009 and August 2012.

The judge agreed with prosecutors that this was a case of “egregious abuse of position and trust”, and noted that “the offences were well-planned and hard to detect”.

“The Court has to signal the society’s moral opprobrium over his offences and deter any like-minded offenders,” District Judge Ng said. He felt the focus ought to be on the aggregate sentence imposed and not the length of individual sentences, as was highlighted in the case of two former Singapore Land Authority employees who had also defrauded their employer of significant sums of money. In the SLA case, Koh Seah Wee and Lim Chai Meng received jail terms of 22 years and 15 years, respectively, for defrauding the agency of more than S$12 million.

Defence lawyer Tan Hee Joek, who had said in mitigation that his client had received prestigious awards in his 15 years with the CPIB and never took a single day of medical leave, said Yeo was unlikely to appeal.

The CPIB said that based on yesterday’s conviction, it would be initiating civil service disciplinary proceedings against Yeo, who has been suspended from duties and interdicted since Sept 15 last year. Yeo would most likely be terminated from the service and thereby lose his superannuation benefits, estimated to be worth about S$100,000.

TODAY
 
SINGAPORE — The head of the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) will be replaced when his term ends next month, a move that comes after a CPIB Assistant Director was charged last month with misappropriating S$1.76 million.

Incumbent CPIB Director Eric Tan, 52, will make way for Mr Wong Hong Kuan, 42, when his three-year term ends on Sept 30. Mr Tan will be deployed to other duties, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) announced yesterday.



Mr Wong is currently the Chief Executive of the Workforce Development Agency (WDA) and was formerly Deputy Commissioner of Police (Policy). He will be posted to the bureau from Sept 1 as Director-designate and take over on Oct 1. He will work with Mr Tan to “ensure a smooth and seamless handover”.

An independent review panel was appointed by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong after the alleged wrongdoings of Edwin Yeo Seow Hiong surfaced in September last year. Yeo was Assistant Director of CPIB’s Field Research and Technical Support Branch before he was interdicted on Sept 15 last year.

He faces 21 charges relating to the misappropriation of funds, criminal breach of trust and forgery, He also allegedly gambled away about S$241,000 of the public funds at the Marina Bay Sands casino. About S$67,000 of the allegedly misappropriated funds have been recovered.

Mr Wong’s taking over from Mr Tan was “to maintain public trust and confidence in CPIB and to fully implement the Review Panel’s recommendations”, the PMO said.

Among other things, the panel found supervisory lapses that had resulted in deficiencies in financial controls and the loss of public funds.

The lapses occurred under Mr Tan and his predecessor Soh Kee Hean, who both had supervisory and command responsibilities over Yeo.

Both Mr Tan and Mr Soh have been issued formal warning letters for their lapses and have “accepted responsibility for them”, said the PMO, adding that its statement “does not touch on Yeo’s innocence or guilt” on the charges he faces. Mr Soh, who was CPIB Director from 2005 to September 2010, is currently Deputy Executive Director at the Council for Estate Agencies.

The PMO said: “Despite this supervisory lapse, Mr Eric Tan has made many contributions to the CPIB, strengthening the organisation and handling major corruption cases. He will be redeployed to other duties where his knowledge and experience will be valuable.”

When Yeo was charged last month, Mr Tan had said in a CPIB statement that he was “deeply sorry that a loss of public funds occurred during my watch” and accepted responsibility for lapses or deficiencies that “allowed a senior staff’s actions to go undetected for four years”.
 
these type of threads you will never find the few known PAPIB here participating.

calling for wmulew and char-azn.
 
Cpib job must be chor bor lan....a lot of free time to go casino.
 
Fuck you cpib! You bunch of fuckers think you are some kind of big fuck Suka Suka summon people for questioning? Tiu le lo mo!
 
The Minister in Charge of the CPIB should also shoulder part of the blame and resign-WP should bring this up in Parliament.
What's hawker centre roof cleaning and some accounting lapses compared to this?
Name me one company that has 100% compliance in its audit report.
 
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Wow such blatant lack of control in CPIB...an assistant director can unilaterally apply for internet banking to allow use of single token to withdraw funds...Never heard before actually, I see companies all need two tokens for withdrawal of funds i.e two signatories...

"...For one of the charges, Yeo had gone against the management’s instruction to have two people authorising transactions for an FRTS bank account. He applied for Internet banking facilities, which allowed online transactions to be carried out using a single Internet banking token, and transferred S$470,265 from the account into his personal account between May and August 2012"
 
Woww..that's about 3 visits per week; or eVery aLternate day !....:eek:
 
Knn 10 years only ? 知法犯法罪加一等 min 20

And his pension is worth 100k? How many of us will earn this amount even working 20 30 yrs n he is 39 ?
 
His name in hokkien explain everything, 'seow hiong'? Really dare to 'hiong '.
 
The Minister in Charge of the CPIB should also shoulder part of the blame and resign-WP should bring this up in Parliament.
What's hawker centre roof cleaning and some accounting lapses compared to this?
Name me one company that has 100% compliance in its audit report.

Fully agreed! WP cleaning only involve $1700.00 compared to million dollar siphoning
by high ranking chenghu nan!! The ministers involved should be FIRED!!
 
Wow gambling addict. Director salary not enough? Wonder if he is a scholar.
 
"District Judge Ng said retribution and deterrence must be considered in sentencing Yeo, whose actions impacted public confidence in the integrity of the public service. Only a small fraction of the money has been recovered and his misdeeds took place over a substantial period of time — between April 2009 and August 2012."

So good hor, over a period of 3 years nobody found out. No audit ah?
WP damn sway, every year kena tekan. :(
 
Ya, when it drops, they challenge the report's accuracy.
When rating goes up, they beat their chests blue black.
KNN

Well said!

I will add to your points.
But heck! You got more points than me as it is.
So I think I will not add even if it is well said.
 
This is the transparency we need. We need a website for us to view
1. The declared assets of the elected government (President, PM, ministers, minister of state, parliamentary secretary) and political secretaries;
2. Cvil servants earning at least $100k.
 
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