- Joined
- Nov 14, 2008
- Messages
- 10,030
- Points
- 113
still want to fuck for free.............
Talk cock lah.
This loser got a vindictive personality even when he was Sub Court judge. A trouble maker in short.
When they 'deport' him to NUS his trouble making just won't stop and he brings the trouble to himself when his prick took over his thinking. LoL
Previously, the Singapore Attorney-General and two Supreme Court judges – the trial judge who convicted him during trial, and the appellate judge who acquitted him on appeal – declared NUS to be a public body, despite arguments by the NUS that it was ‘autonomous’. On that basis, the more onerous criminal presumption of guilt was automatically invoked against Tey during the criminal trial.
In the court document, Tey says that he expects “judicial consistency – and thus judicial fairness – in the Singapore Supreme Court’s approach to and treatment of the status of the NUS as a public body”.
Two Singapore Supreme Court judges, in agreeing with the Attorney-General’s Chambers which drafted the NUS statute, had declared the NUS a public body and invoked the onerous criminal presumption of guilt against Tey. Tey is now asking the same Supreme Court to similarly treat the NUS as a public body in according him the public law rights that he is entitled to.
Tey requests that his former university “to do what is right, and live up to the international reputation it aspires to” – carry out proper investigations and hold a fair hearing at the very least, and not dismiss him without regard to due process.
In the court document, Tey says that he expects “judicial consistency – and thus judicial fairness – in the Singapore Supreme Court’s approach to and treatment of the status of the NUS as a public body”.
Two Singapore Supreme Court judges, in agreeing with the Attorney-General’s Chambers which drafted the NUS statute, had declared the NUS a public body and invoked the onerous criminal presumption of guilt against Tey. Tey is now asking the same Supreme Court to similarly treat the NUS as a public body in according him the public law rights that he is entitled to.
Tey requests that his former university “to do what is right, and live up to the international reputation it aspires to” – carry out proper investigations and hold a fair hearing at the very least, and not dismiss him without regard to due process.
Local human rights lawyer, M Ravi will be acting as Tey’s counsel.[/b]
That is to say, Tey wants to face the music and want to tell all the secrets behind this malicious persecution and politically motivated trial.
my question is:
is public allowed to hear and observe NUS internal trial? I am only a commoner
Tey needs a proper hearing from nus wrt to dismissal. His reputation is at stake.
Just like Roy's case, what Roy was accused of would make it hard for him to get another job if the new workplace wanted to call ttsh with regard to their ex employee's performance.
lim swee say needs to mediate btwn tey well hang and NUS to resolve this tripartiate dispute. i suggest it be held asap at ding tai fung.