SINGAPORE - A peeping Tom who was found loitering in female toilets was jailed for a week on Wednesday.
Sales executive Francis Peh Jing Rong, 27, was found by a staff member standing at the wash basins of the second level bathrooms at Holiday Inn Atrium on September 15 last year. He had been banned from entering the hotel the previous year.
On the evening of Jan 20 this year, he trespassed into the female toilet on the 17th level of Singapore Land Tower at Raffles Place.
A female tenant had complained that there was a man in the Level 17 toilet. Two security officers waited outside the toilet and minutes later, Peh came out and was detained.
Peh pleaded guilty to two counts of criminal trespass. He was allowed to defer sentence until Dec 28 to sort out his work and spend Christmas with his family.
In 2013 he was fined a total of $3,000 in 2013 for criminal trespass and insulting modesty.
His lawyer Louis Joseph urged District Judge Ng Peng Hong to consider giving his client the maximum fine of $1,500 on the basis that Peh suffers from a psychiatric ailment. He said Peh is receiving counselling and willing to be treated for his voyeuristic disorder.
DPP Lum said voyeurism is not a mitigating factor, adding that Peh was in full control of his actions and knew what he was doing.
Peh could have been jailed for up to three months and/or fined up to $1,500 on each charge.
Sales executive Francis Peh Jing Rong, 27, was found by a staff member standing at the wash basins of the second level bathrooms at Holiday Inn Atrium on September 15 last year. He had been banned from entering the hotel the previous year.
On the evening of Jan 20 this year, he trespassed into the female toilet on the 17th level of Singapore Land Tower at Raffles Place.
A female tenant had complained that there was a man in the Level 17 toilet. Two security officers waited outside the toilet and minutes later, Peh came out and was detained.
Peh pleaded guilty to two counts of criminal trespass. He was allowed to defer sentence until Dec 28 to sort out his work and spend Christmas with his family.
In 2013 he was fined a total of $3,000 in 2013 for criminal trespass and insulting modesty.
His lawyer Louis Joseph urged District Judge Ng Peng Hong to consider giving his client the maximum fine of $1,500 on the basis that Peh suffers from a psychiatric ailment. He said Peh is receiving counselling and willing to be treated for his voyeuristic disorder.
DPP Lum said voyeurism is not a mitigating factor, adding that Peh was in full control of his actions and knew what he was doing.
Peh could have been jailed for up to three months and/or fined up to $1,500 on each charge.