Isn't the husband an accessory to a crime (Bigcock Law) or abetting a crime (Singcock law) if and when committed in his presence?
SINGAPORE — A 31-year-old woman has been accused of kicking her domestic worker in the crotch, along with other physical abuse, and forcing the woman to shower in front of her because she said the maid was “smelly”.
After they returned from the hotel, Rosdiana complained that her underwear and clothes reeked of a smell, so she kicked her in the crotch twice after ripping her T-shirt from the collar to the helm, Ms Mayang told the court.
She tried to cover herself from Rosdiana’s husband, who was nearby at that time, but the employer pinched her breasts as she remarked that her breasts are so small so her husband would not be interested, she added.
The bitch's husband was not charged. He was in the position to save the maid from being attack. By doing nothing to protect the maid, he is an accessory to a crime committed or abetting his wife to attack the maid.
SINGAPORE — A 31-year-old woman has been accused of kicking her domestic worker in the crotch, along with other physical abuse, and forcing the woman to shower in front of her because she said the maid was “smelly”.
After they returned from the hotel, Rosdiana complained that her underwear and clothes reeked of a smell, so she kicked her in the crotch twice after ripping her T-shirt from the collar to the helm, Ms Mayang told the court.
She tried to cover herself from Rosdiana’s husband, who was nearby at that time, but the employer pinched her breasts as she remarked that her breasts are so small so her husband would not be interested, she added.
The bitch's husband was not charged. He was in the position to save the maid from being attack. By doing nothing to protect the maid, he is an accessory to a crime committed or abetting his wife to attack the maid.