Loan shark runner with a heart gets jail term cut
Appeals judge notes circumstances that led man to work for loan sharks
Published on May 25, 2012
By By Selina Lum
He was a loan shark runner with a heart.
Before splashing paint on debtors' doors, Ong Chee Eng would dilute the paint with turpentine so that it could be wiped off easily.
The 44-year-old would also use non-permanent whiteboard markers to scrawl on walls near the homes of debtors.
BACKGROUND STORY
He still had conscience
HERE is how Ong took steps to minimise the damage caused by his acts of harassment:
Before splashing paint on doors, he diluted the paint with turpentine so that it could be wiped off easily.
He used non-permanent whiteboard marker to scrawl on the walls of his victims.
After setting fires, he always stayed behind to make sure that they did not get out of control. Once, he moved a shoe rack for fear he might accidentally set it on fire.
BACKGROUND STORY
PUNISHED, NOT CRUSHED
In the interests of the public and as a general deterrence, he should of course be punished severely, but he should not be crushed.
- Justice Chao Hick Tin, on
cutting the jail sentence of loan shark runner Ong Chee Eng
And if he had to set fire to their doors, he would always make it a point to stay behind, just to ensure that the fires did not burn for long.
Once, he even moved a shoe rack belonging to a debtor before setting his door on fire, for fear he may accidentally set it alight.
Read the full story in Friday's edition of The Straits Times.