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He cheated victims of nearly $1.5million to pay off debts, maintain gambling habits
Top grad turns serial gambler
By Arul John
April 27, 2010
A 37-year-old man was sentenced to five years' jail on April 8 after pleading guilty to seven charges of cheating and two of not informing people that he was an undischarged bankrupt when he borrowed money from them.
The reason for Soon Bock Kiat's predicament: The one-time high-flyer was a "closet" gambler and had resorted to borrowing and a life of crime to feed his addiction.
The first-class honours accountancy graduate became an addict after he won $200,000 in
4D soon after he graduated.
He started gambling on 4D, football pools and at casinos but his luck did not hold out.
The one-time director of a health-care products distribution firm would then make bigger bets and began borrowing from friends and moneylenders – including $300,000 from his mother-in-law.
After being declared a bankrupt in February 2005, Soon convinced three of his subordinates in the company to invest in bogus investment schemes, called Lobang schemes, which he claimed could yield returns of between 15 per cent and 200 per cent.
One of them lodged a police report when he realised that Soon had cheated him.
In all, Soon repaid his victims only about $324,000 of the nearly $1.5million he cheated them of or borrowed from them.
Nineteen other charges were taken into consideration.
Top grad turns serial gambler
By Arul John
April 27, 2010
A 37-year-old man was sentenced to five years' jail on April 8 after pleading guilty to seven charges of cheating and two of not informing people that he was an undischarged bankrupt when he borrowed money from them.
The reason for Soon Bock Kiat's predicament: The one-time high-flyer was a "closet" gambler and had resorted to borrowing and a life of crime to feed his addiction.
The first-class honours accountancy graduate became an addict after he won $200,000 in
4D soon after he graduated.
He started gambling on 4D, football pools and at casinos but his luck did not hold out.
The one-time director of a health-care products distribution firm would then make bigger bets and began borrowing from friends and moneylenders – including $300,000 from his mother-in-law.
After being declared a bankrupt in February 2005, Soon convinced three of his subordinates in the company to invest in bogus investment schemes, called Lobang schemes, which he claimed could yield returns of between 15 per cent and 200 per cent.
One of them lodged a police report when he realised that Soon had cheated him.
In all, Soon repaid his victims only about $324,000 of the nearly $1.5million he cheated them of or borrowed from them.
Nineteen other charges were taken into consideration.