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Ex-M1 CEO's son fined - A fair Sentence?

Porfirio Rubirosa

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Ex-M1 CEO's son fined
By Elena Chong, Courts Correspondent

Briton Alexander Montefiore (left) stole a total of $13,000 from its managing director, Mr William Louis Selig, using his DBS debit card. -- ST PHOTO: WONG KWAI CHOW

THE son of former MobileOne chief executive was fined a total of $23,000 on Friday for theft from his boss and forgery.

Briton Alexander Montefiore, 28, a former sales trader of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services company, stole a total of $13,000 from its managing director, Mr William Louis Selig, using his DBS debit card.

He had admitted to two charges of theft by withdrawing $2,000 each time from Mr Selig's DBS account on Nov 7 and 26 last year.

He also pleaded guilty to forging an employment letter issued by the company by altering his annual salary from US$45,000 to US$100,000 on Nov 14.

Five other theft charges were taken into consideration during his sentencing.

Montefiore, now unemployed, is the son of former MobileOne chief Neil Montefiore.

The court was told that Mr Selig had entrusted his DBS ATM card and PIN number to Alexander Montefiore for making withdrawals.

On Nov 26 when Mr Selig returned to his office and found his DBS ATM card missing from his wallet, he suspected Montefiore of taking it.

He later discovered that Montefiore had made six unauthorised withdrawals without his permission.

Lawyer Suresh Damodara submitted more than a dozen testimonials and letters attesting to his client's good conduct to show that what he did was out of character.

Among them was from Mr Selig, who had forgiven Montefioire, who had also paid back the money before he was charged.

Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it.

His wife, who was in court, broke down after District Judge Lee Poh Choo had passed sentence.

His father will take over as CEO of StarHub next January following the retirement of incumbent chief Terry Clontz.
 
Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it.
.

A thief is a thief whatever the motives are :rolleyes:
 
A thief is a thief whatever the motives are :rolleyes:

Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it.


Ya.. agreed.. thief is thief. If that was the case as the psychiatrist mentioned... just continue to take from his father lor..
 
this is an eg of total injustice, if its a local commitng the same crime, sure get 2 yr jail term or more, and caning even maybe....
 
Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it.


Ya.. agreed.. thief is thief. If that was the case as the psychiatrist mentioned... just continue to take from his father lor..

Not every father is as rich as LKY who's got limitless reach into Sporean pockets :rolleyes:
 
pls lah let's try and be fair and rational here ok...no canning is prescribed for those charges...but i would have thought a custodial (jail) sentence may have been warranted...not 2 years but maybe 3 months?...

this is an eg of total injustice, if its a local commitng the same crime, sure get 2 yr jail term or more, and caning even maybe....
 
Home > Breaking News > Singapore > Story
Sep 18, 2009
Ex-M1 CEO's son fined <!--10 min-->
<!-- headline one : start --> <!-- headline one : end --> <!-- Author --> <!-- show image if available --> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr></tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr><td colspan="2" class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold">By Elena Chong, Courts Correspondent </td></tr> <tr valign="bottom"> <td width="330">
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Briton Alexander Montefiore (left) stole a total of $13,000 from its managing director, Mr William Louis Selig, using his DBS debit card. -- ST PHOTO: WONG KWAI CHOW
</td></tr> </tbody></table>
THE son of former MobileOne chief executive was fined a total of $23,000 on Friday for theft from his boss and forgery. Briton Alexander Montefiore, 28, a former sales trader of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services company, stole a total of $13,000 from its managing director, Mr William Louis Selig, using his DBS debit card. He had admitted to two charges of theft by withdrawing $2,000 each time from Mr Selig's DBS account on Nov 7 and 26 last year. He also pleaded guilty to forging an employment letter issued by the company by altering his annual salary from US$45,000 to US$100,000 on Nov 14.

Five other theft charges were taken into consideration during his sentencing. Montefiore, now unemployed, is the son of former MobileOne chief Neil Montefiore. The court was told that Mr Selig had entrusted his DBS ATM card and PIN number to Alexander Montefiore for making withdrawals. On Nov 26 when Mr Selig returned to his office and found his DBS ATM card missing from his wallet, he suspected Montefiore of taking it. He later discovered that Montefiore had made six unauthorised withdrawals without his permission. Lawyer Suresh Damodara submitted more than a dozen testimonials and letters attesting to his client's good conduct to show that what he did was out of character. Among them was from Mr Selig, who had forgiven Montefioire, who had also paid back the money before he was charged. Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it. His wife, who was in court, broke down after District Judge Lee Poh Choo had passed sentence. His father will take over as CEO of StarHub next January following the retirement of incumbent chief Terry Clontz.
 
what about the one who privatise taxpayers monies?

no charges has been press yet?
 
Ex-M1 CEO's son fined
By Elena Chong, Courts Correspondent

Briton Alexander Montefiore (left) stole a total of $13,000 from its managing director, Mr William Louis Selig, using his DBS debit card. -- ST PHOTO: WONG KWAI CHOW

THE son of former MobileOne chief executive was fined a total of $23,000 on Friday for theft from his boss and forgery.

Briton Alexander Montefiore, 28, a former sales trader of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services company, stole a total of $13,000 from its managing director, Mr William Louis Selig, using his DBS debit card.

He had admitted to two charges of theft by withdrawing $2,000 each time from Mr Selig's DBS account on Nov 7 and 26 last year.

He also pleaded guilty to forging an employment letter issued by the company by altering his annual salary from US$45,000 to US$100,000 on Nov 14.

Five other theft charges were taken into consideration during his sentencing.

Montefiore, now unemployed, is the son of former MobileOne chief Neil Montefiore.

The court was told that Mr Selig had entrusted his DBS ATM card and PIN number to Alexander Montefiore for making withdrawals.

On Nov 26 when Mr Selig returned to his office and found his DBS ATM card missing from his wallet, he suspected Montefiore of taking it.

He later discovered that Montefiore had made six unauthorised withdrawals without his permission.

Lawyer Suresh Damodara submitted more than a dozen testimonials and letters attesting to his client's good conduct to show that what he did was out of character.

Among them was from Mr Selig, who had forgiven Montefioire, who had also paid back the money before he was charged.

Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it.

His wife, who was in court, broke down after District Judge Lee Poh Choo had passed sentence.

His father will take over as CEO of StarHub next January following the retirement of incumbent chief Terry Clontz.

Haha funny story. A troubled son of a rich man. Like all foreign diplomats in foreign lands he should just be returned to the safe custody of his father.
 
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Talking about 'STEALING', nobody in this world can beats ME!

Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha!
 
What do you expect he is elite. At the very least should have a 2 week jail sentence. I have seen people kena jail just for shoplifting $100 of clothing. We are talking about stealing lots of money. Is it not true that when money above certain amount can only be handled by higher level court (showing the seriousness of offence)?

Same situation as the relative of CK Tang boss - kidney case. They send the poor illiterate organ donors into jail within weeks. Then as they start charging the wealthy the time in court gets longer and longer and the sentence gets shorter and shorter.

Wayang wayang and probably slip though the net. After so long probably all forgotten.

Remember to the rich, fine them is no use. Use minister pay as example. You make $2M a year that is $5500 a day. You fine them $20K, that is 4 days work. They will rather pay the 20K than go to jail for a week. Probably cheaper for them.

To the super rick like Tang, they can spend $1k on bottle of wine, $50K on short trip to london. So fine is useless.

Anyway, I have been away on project, any news on that appeal?

Some say "the truth will set you free".
Here we have "money will set you free"

For this ang mor, now he kena charge does it mean he cannot get work permit to work in Singapore? In many countries, if you got criminal record can get work permit.
 
And it's obvious this bastard is here cos of his connections, which would not have happened if there're proper labour laws to prevent trash from being imported!
 
Sporns can never enter mental illness as plea in the kangaroo court. Secondly, Sporns with mental illness can never get a USD45k job, much less a job. Well done, PAPee. Well done, 66%!
 
If peasant steal from Toa Pai Bigshot Company Exec, can use this excuse meh? Will be forgiven meh? Pui!!!!

Consultant psychiatrist Brian Yeo, said Montefiore was found to have a depressive disorder and was always dependent on his father. He also used to take money from his Dad when he needed it.


Ya.. agreed.. thief is thief. If that was the case as the psychiatrist mentioned... just continue to take from his father lor..
 
bam-wongkwaichow.jpg


So what? I foreigner! Ang Moh some more! Now fcuk off, you stinking Sg Peasants!
 
I think the sentence is too excessive. Come on! $28,000 for a 28 yr old young is just beyond belief. $100 fine and suspended is about right. Firstly they are foreign to the country and may not realise the cultural issue. Secondly he heeded the call for foreigners to come to singapore to help pay for the aged as Vivian has put it.

Tampering with the employment letter is just an aberration. This is the very first time that I have heard that a foreigners has tampered with employment details/qualifications. I suspect that a jealous Singaporean colleague who was probably going to lose his job must have done it and fixed him up.

My personal belief is that the magistrate is bias against the poor foreigner and whacked him hard. If we continue with this parochial attitude, foreigners will never be given a chance to assimilate and Singapore will be much poorer for it.

Here is an out of the box solution and I think the majority of Singaporeans and all foreigners will agree with. Everytime a foreigner is alleged to have committed an offence, using a pre-arranged roster, a PAP cadre member will step forward and take the punishment. To be effective, we must go the whole hog - guillotine the chap at Raffles Place at Noon. Foreigners will be happy and I guaranteed you, singaporeans will also be happy. There will be immediate bonding.

ps. all those Singaporeans who went to jail for shoplifting as a mandatory sentencing guideline imposed by the learned CJ Yong for stealing things like bread, lipstick and batteries need to understand that this is nothing personal.
 
not exactly true in whang sung lin's case bro...he got the most jail time apart from the organ trader himself...well technically at least for now as his appeal is still pending while he is out on bail...

Same situation as the relative of CK Tang boss - kidney case. They send the poor illiterate organ donors into jail within weeks. Then as they start charging the wealthy the time in court gets longer and longer and the sentence gets shorter and shorter.

Wayang wayang and probably slip though the net. After so long probably all forgotten.
 
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