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Criminal Syndicate my arse!

scroobal

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Sloppy controls made worse by the Govt's habit of throwing money to crony SMEs who work in grassroots organisation. Naturally crooks move in when controls are lax, and handouts are given not with the intention of upgrading skills but to buy votes.

Just because the amount is an eye-popping $40m, the notion of a highly sophisticated criminal syndicate is raised to cover their own shortcomings. I bet you it will be a bunch of street smart Ah Bengs. And a couple of Ah Bangs acting in concert suddenly does not become a criminal syndicate.

This not the first time. It was just as bad in the 2000s when money was handed to Malay SMEs thru a Malay lawyer who made a fortune and everyone in the community knew about it. His daughter ended up working for SPH.


Syndicate allegedly scams SkillsFuture of $40 million, throws away phones to hide evidence
41-year-old Ng Cheng Kwee allegedly defrauded SkillsFuture Singapore of nearly $40 million.ST PHOTO: WONG KWAI CHOW

Shaffiq Idris Alkhatib
SINGAPORE - A scheme aimed at promoting lifelong learning among Singaporeans allegedly became the target of a criminal syndicate that is said to have made bogus SkillsFuture claims totalling nearly $40 million, before being caught out in October.

Five Singaporeans have been hauled to court in what could be one of the biggest cases, to date, of defrauding a public institution.

The charges cover a wide range - from forging documents and obtain training subsidies to concealing gains from criminal conduct and trying to destroy evidence by throwing away mobile phones.

On Tuesday (Dec 19), one of the alleged masterminds behind the scheme, Ng Cheng Kwee, 41, was charged with three counts of intentionally trying to pervert the course of justice.

Before this, starting from November, a series of charges were laid out against other members of the syndicate. Apart from Ng, the other men involved in the case are Lee Chi Wai, 30 and David Lim Wee Hong, 39. The syndicate also included two women - Lee Lai Leng, 39, and Tan Yoon Nooi, 59, the charges indicate.

SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG) - which oversees the SkillsFuture initiative - said on Tuesday that the syndicate had used a network of nine business entities to make the bogus claims, initial investigations showed. These included employer companies and training providers.



After claims of nearly $40 million were paid out to this network, some anomalies came to light in October. At that point, SSG said it immediately suspended all payments of training grants to the nine entities and made a police report. A number of banks accounts were frozen and a large amount of cash seized.

The five people charged are said to have committed their offences between April and November this year.

Among the forged documents submitted to SSG were those titled “Record of Payment” bearing the letterhead of the Central Provident Fund (CPF) Board. They are said to have shown CPF contributions made to the employees of various companies.

The purpose of these forged documents, according to the charges, was to get SSG to disburse course fee subsidies to these firms.

Earlier, Ng had been charged with concealing benefits of criminal conduct - namely $6.7 million in cash and 11kg of gold worth about $600,000.

Over just three days, between Oct 29 and Nov 1, Lim is also said to have received about $1.8 million from a certain Vincent Peter.

Ng, who was in China on Nov 1, is also accused of phoning Lee Lai Leng and asking her to throw away her mobile phone to destroy evidence of their dealings, the court heard on Tuesday. He gave similar instructions to Lim.

Lim, in turn, allegedly deleted his WhatsApp conversations and call logs with Ng and Lee Lai Leng. The next day, he is also said to have concealed about $600,000 in cash in the vicinity of Greenleaf View near Holland Road.

Meanwhile, on Nov 1, Lee Lai Leng also allegedly told Lee Chi Wai to reformat his phone which contained evidence of their dealings. The same day, Lee Chi Wai is also said to have acquired 5kg of gold from People’s Park Complex, despite having grounds to believe that it represented “another person’s benefits from criminal conduct”.

SkillFuture Singapore said that after this incident, it has taken immediate action to tighten its processes, including implementing fraud analytics, while conducting a comprehensive review of the system.

Ng is now remanded at Central Police Division and will be back in court on Dec 26.
 
$500 per person.
40 million
That’s 80,000 persons/ names.
They did it over 7 months using 9 companies.
They are very prolific.
I bet you many employers are in on the scams. There’s a whole big web of network. CAD in for a busy time
 
There are a lot of elderly who will never make use of that $500 skillsfuture fund money. Anyone over 50 years of age should check if thy have been 'cheated'. You go around, you find those small stalls at heartland central touting COMPUTER classes for the elderly, cooking classes etc..

The amount of money cheated may be more than the 40million...if one have the time to do a research, they can go find out all the names they have reported & check if they are "volunteers"...especially at the RC.
 
There are a lot of elderly who will never make use of that $500 skillsfuture fund money. Anyone over 50 years of age should check if thy have been 'cheated'. You go around, you find those small stalls at heartland central touting COMPUTER classes for the elderly, cooking classes etc..

The amount of money cheated may be more than the 40million...if one have the time to do a research, they can go find out all the names they have reported & check if they are "volunteers"...especially at the RC.
my uncle say some sinkie use the buy 2 get 1 free mind to enrol for useless courses that have price marked up and end up paying for the actual course fee. He say sinkie is always a stewpig loser and thought they win.
 
Another gold mine the Pappies created is the Foreign Quota system and subsidizing tos workers abv 55yrs to companies.
 
Another gold mine the Pappies created is the Foreign Quota system and the

They had a lot of these employers who were "VOLUNTEERS", who were reaping a fortune with the quota system to at least $5,000 a head, until MOM, put breaks on it. But, that doesn't mean, you still can't make money...

It is very profitable to be a volunteer....for example you can open a tuition centre or centres, volunteer with the RC & you will reap great rewards...volunteer to give free tuition to the 'poor' residents; this is one example.

Volunteers have their rewards...be a member today!
 
The rot goes much much deeper. They need to get CPIB to do a check on the Institute of Adult Learning.
 
Has the money been shifted abroad? Or were they dumb enough to get caught with all the loot?
 
Ask any small time businessman who has been with grassroots organisation in the last few years and they will tell you the various schemes where govt give you grants with the usual few documents. And there is no measure of effectiveness or returns to both the company and the nation. There are no audits to even check if the staff actually attended the course or did the employer pockets these grants.

In 1999, one of the partners of Shook, Lin and Bok said that they had taken advantage of a government grant to upgrade their office PCs. They had qualified as an SMEs. I was shocked. Senior Partners were making in excess of $1m or close to it and we handing over money.


There are a lot of elderly who will never make use of that $500 skillsfuture fund money. Anyone over 50 years of age should check if thy have been 'cheated'. You go around, you find those small stalls at heartland central touting COMPUTER classes for the elderly, cooking classes etc..

The amount of money cheated may be more than the 40million...if one have the time to do a research, they can go find out all the names they have reported & check if they are "volunteers"...especially at the RC.
 
So far none of the reports shows any indication of a criminal syndicate. Couple of people charged for handling the proceeds of crime and it looked like amateurish with a bunch of clumsy women and men.

Let see where this goes.
 
The nature of the industry is that it is very easy to set up a 1 or 2 man show and call yourself a training provider. The situation on the ground is very similar to what was happening at Singapore Sports Council a couple of years back.

So far none of the reports shows any indication of a criminal syndicate. Couple of people charged for handling the proceeds of crime and it looked like amateurish with a bunch of clumsy women and men.

Let see where this goes.
 
my uncle say some sinkie use the buy 2 get 1 free mind to enrol for useless courses that have price marked up and end up paying for the actual course fee. He say sinkie is always a stewpig loser and thought they win.

I learn't my lesson way back when they allowed people to use their CPF to invest in approved Unit trusts.

These "approved" companies of course ended up losing $$$.

What surprises me is that many uncles & aunties are still being caught up by these gov't initiated scams?
 
each course costs S$500.00 exactly? :eek::eek::eek:

I believe the savvy scammers would price it higher but they could only reclaim $500 from pappies.
As bro mentioned many aged ones involved in similar scams these are illiterate old folks mind you.
Recently they also caught some smaller scams relating to these skill funds.
They also opened the floodgates and now every Tom Dick and Harry is conducting ‘free’ enrichment courses to get this $500 claim.
Community centers got countless useless language classes and cooking class by unqualified Trainers.
 
The nature of the industry is that it is very easy to set up a 1 or 2 man show and call yourself a training provider. The situation on the ground is very similar to what was happening at Singapore Sports Council a couple of years back.

Out of curiosity, actually it piqued me & got me interested, I am watching one, like you have describing. It actually those flyers they stuff everywhere in the letterboxes, doors.. some tuition center at one RC..that boast of good results. With social medias like FB, one can troll for information...it is part of a taoist association, community outreach, which they started a tuition centre to help poor kids...& hence reaped dividends as a tuition centre for, they volunteered at a RC. It was easy to follow...all on Facebook..names, places, events..etc....a training provider, whose principals are 'tang kees'....."members" certainly have privileges.. this is just one of the many..."legal business"..of course!
 
I learn't my lesson way back when they allowed people to use their CPF to invest in approved Unit trusts.

These "approved" companies of course ended up losing $$$.

What surprises me is that many uncles & aunties are still being caught up by these gov't initiated scams?

Churning by insurance agents were rampant then.
There were many who got their accounts wiped out in return for some upfront cash.
Many set up shop as Brokers just for this sole purpose.
 
Openly cheating by using fake documents and phantom courses are the hall marks of amateurs. The good ones always keep themselves just within legal limits by setting up proper legal entities, 'employ' proper teaching staff, document curriculum and yes actually hold the courses. If you look through the list of eligible education providers in SF, a lot of them though legal and by the book, are obvious shenanigans setup solely to tap the grants.
 
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