ON HUMAN RIGHTS, JUSTICE AND PEACE ISSUES, LABOUR RIGHTS, MIGRANT RIGHTS, FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE DEATH PENALTY, TOWARDS AN END OF TORTURE, POLICE ABUSES, DISCRIMINATION...
AG/PP Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh, about 56 years old, has been prematurely removed before his RETIREMENT Age. WHY? It is important that the Attorney General/Public Prosecutor be Independent - and that independence must be guaranteed by a security of tenure. In short, he should not be removed before his retirement age of 60.
Odd, that some media report said that Terrirudin was RETIRING - odd, since he was just 56. I thought RETIREMENT AGE was 60.
Ahmad Terrirudin, 56, was appointed as the AG on
Sept 6 last year, succeeding Tan Sri Idrus Harun, whose contractual
appointment ended on Sept 5.
The question is WHY was AG/PP Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh removed by the Prime Minister?
The Attorney General is appointed on the advice of the Prime Minister - Art.145 (1) The Yang
di-Pertuan Agong shall, on the advice of the Prime Minister, appoint a
person who is qualified to be a judge of the Federal Court to be the
Attorney General for the Federation.
A Federal Court Judge too according to Art 122B (1) The Chief
Justice of the Federal Court, the President of the Court of Appeal and
the Chief Judges of the High Courts and (subject to Article 122C) the
other judges of the Federal Court, of the Court of Appeal and of the
High Courts shall be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, acting on
the advice of the Prime Minister, after consulting the Conference of
Rulers.
The King just appoints on the advice of the Prime Minister....hence, all the power of the Prime Minister.
SO, the question is why was AG/PP Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh removed by the PM? A previous AG/PP that was prematurely removed allegedly because he was going to charge Najib on the 1MDB cases.
Was AG/PP Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh removed because he was going to re-charge Zahid Hamidi for the 47 Charges? Was he going to charge PM or some Ministers? Ouestions that are relevant - why was he removed so soon?
Attorney-General’s
Chambers (AGC) appellate and trial division head Mohd Dusuki Mokhtar
has been appointed as the new attorney-general.
In a statement,
Chief Secretary to the Government Shamsul Azri Abu Bakar said Dusuki’s
appointment has received royal assent from the Yang di-Pertuan Agong and
will be effective tomorrow.
He is taking over the office from current AG Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh, who was recently appointed as a Federal Court judge.
“Dusuki,
57, who hails from Kelantan, graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in Law
from the International Islamic University Malaysia and has a Master’s
Degree in Law from the University of Wollongong, Australia.
“He has a wide experience with 31 years of service in the AGC.
“The government also would like to thank Terrirudin for his service as attorney-general,” he said.
Bernama
previously reported that Terrirudin, who was appointed as the
attorney-general on Sept 6 last year, reaches his retirement age today
(Nov 11) and is set to become a Federal Court judge.
On July 9, Free Malaysia Today
reported a source saying that Terrirudin is tipped for appointment as a
Federal Court judge and may later be appointed to occupy the post of
Chief Judge of Malaya, the third-highest post in the judicial hierarchy. Malaysiakini, 11/11/2024
AGC: Outgoing attorney general Terrirudin asks to stop ‘donation drive’ for his retirement gift
Attorney General Tan Sri Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh (left) will be retiring on November 11. — Bernama pic
Tuesday, 05 Nov 2024 6:47 PM MYT
KUALA
LUMPUR, Nov 5 — The donation drive to honour Attorney General (AG) Tan
Sri Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh who is retiring on Nov 11, has been
stopped.
The AG Chambers (AGC) in a statement said that the AG himself had requested for the donation drive to be discontinued.
-Advertisement-
"Although
this donation drive was well-intentioned, the AG has requested for it
to be discontinued,” read the statement, which was issued in response to
the donations allegedly being sought from deputy public prosecutors to
honour the retiring AG.
The matter went viral on Telegram and
other social media platforms after the AGC personnel were allegedly
asked to make monetary contributions to purchase a retirement gift for
Ahmad Terrirudin, in recognition of his many contributions and efforts
to the prosecution division.
The
viral message also said that the donations should be made according to
the donors’ grade, namely Turus (RM500); JUSA A (RM400); JUSA B (RM300)
and JUSA C (RM200), as well as L44 (RM30) and L41 (RM20).
It
is also learnt that the donation drive was also organised in
celebration of Ahmad Terrirudin, who is set to be appointed as a Federal
Court Judge.
Ahmad Terrirudin, 56, was appointed as the AG on
Sept 6 last year, succeeding Tan Sri Idrus Harun, whose contractual
appointment ended on Sept 5.
A
storm is brewing in legal and judicial circles over Anwar Ibrahim's
plan to appoint Attorney-General Ahmad Terrirudin Salleh as a judge of
the Federal Court and Chief Judge of Malaya, raising similar concerns
that the Conference of Rulers expressed not long ago about the prime
minister's powers to appoint senior judges.
MalaysiaNow can now reveal, based on reliable sources, that
Terrirudin's name is not among those recommended by Chief Justice (CJ)
Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat to Anwar to fill the position of Chief Judge of
Malaya.
The position has been vacant since Zabidin Diah retired on Feb 29.
Tengku Maimun is understood to have recommended a list of names to
Anwar, in accordance with Article 122B of the Federal Constitution,
which states that the appointment of judges to top judicial positions
other than that of chief justice shall be made in consultation with the
CJ.
Article 122B also states that it is only after this process that the
prime minister may advise the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, who in turn
consults with the Conference of Rulers.
An official at the Prime Minister's Department declined to comment on
the matter, saying only that the government was not obliged to accept
the CJ's candidates.
This is a far cry from Anwar's own promise to stay out of the appointment of judges, just months after becoming PM.
"We see in the past few years, there have been changes and
appointments in the judiciary, but I haven’t interfered with a single
appointment. I follow the Judicial Appointments Commission’s process and
then the CJ will forward (a name) and I will accept it," he was quoted
as saying in an interview with RTM in January 2023.
The argument that the prime minister is not bound by the advice of
the CJ does not go down well with senior judges, many of whom are still
struggling to move on after a long history of government interference in
the judiciary in recent decades.
"We had to learn the bitter lesson that whilst the independence of
the judiciary can be destroyed in an instant, rebuilding and
reestablishing its independence can take decades," warned a joint letter
signed by past presidents of the Malaysian Bar recently.
"That is the crux of the current concern. There is a fear of renewed
executive interference in the judiciary," said a judicial source privy
to the matter, who spoke to MalaysiaNow on strict condition of
anonymity.
"It is glaring that not a single name put forward by her was
accepted. This defeats the constitutional requirement for
consultations," the source added.
The plan to appoint Teriruddin as a Federal Court judge and then CJM
has been criticised by the legal fraternity, including the former deputy
minister in charge of law and institutional reforms, Ramkarpal Singh.
"Appointing an outsider to one of the country’s most senior judicial
posts would certainly be a step backward and would reflect poorly on the
government’s commitment to judicial reforms," said Ramkarpal, who was
not reappointed to his post following the Cabinet reshuffle late last
year.
Concerns of Malay rulers echoed
Just a week after Anwar was sworn in as prime minister, the
Conference of Rulers had called for curtailing the prime minister's
powers in the appointment of judges.
The Rulers made this clear when they proposed that the prime minister
be stripped of the power to appoint five representatives to the
Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC), a nine-member body that
nominates candidates for appointment to the superior courts.
Four of the nine members of JAC are senior judges, while the remaining five are appointed by the prime minister.
"To ensure the independence of JAC in carrying out its
responsibilities, I propose that the appointment of its five members
should not be made by the prime minister.
"Instead it should be given to other institutions such as the
Malaysian Bar Council, the Sabah Law Society, the Sarawak Bar
Association and the Parliamentary Select Committee," Negeri Sembilan
ruler Tuanku Muhriz Tuanku Munawir had said at the time.
A few months later, Anwar vowed to protect the independence of the judiciary.
"As prime minister, not only have I not encroached upon even a single
inch of the sacred terrain of the judiciary, but I shall defend, at all
costs,the independence of the judiciary," he said at the Asean Law
Conference last year.
Restoring public confidence in the judiciary has been almost a
permanent feature of Pakatan Harapan (PH) election manifestos throughout
the decades.
In 2018, it pledged to ensure the appointment of judges based on
merit and experience and to remove the prime minister's power to
influence the appointment of judges.
"The appointment of the chief justice and the president of the Court
of Appeal through the backdoor as practised by Umno and Barisan Nasional
will be stopped immediately," said the PH manifesto ahead of the 14th
general election.
A similar promise was made during the last general election.
"Harapan will continue to protect the integrity of Malaysia’s
administration by limiting the power of the executive, ensuring the
freedom of our judiciary, and reorganising the political structures of
the country," the coalition said. - Malaysia Now, 1/8/2024
Justice NOT
Served in The Case of Deaf E-Hailing Driver Ong Ing Keong – Prosecution Must
Appeal Sentence to High Court, And Prosecute Others Involved
A Mere
RM1,000 Fine, No Compensation for Victim and the failure of the Court to listen
first to the sufferings of the Victim before sentencing results in INJUSTICE
Justice was certainly NOT served
when the alleged police officer was on 4/11/2024 charged and sentenced to a
mere RM1,000 fine for the crime of assaulting a deaf e-hailing driver Ong Ing
Keong on 28/5/2024, more than 5 months ago, at the front of St Regis Hotel in
Kuala Lumpur where Ong was waiting for passengers. The perpetrator, who was said to be a police
officer, was a part of a security detail of a member of the Malaysian Royalty,
a VVIP.
It is unacceptable that the
victim was not informed in advance of the fact that the perpetrator was going
to be charged in court. Malaysian law acknowledges the right for a crime victim
to be heard before sentence is decided upon and imposed on the perpetrator.
In Malaysia today, one who makes
a police report already has the right to be informed on the status of the
investigation – and reasonably that right should also include prior information
as to when perpetrators of the crime are going to be brought to the court to be
charged. It is an important right especially for victims of said crime.
The Failure to Listen to
The Suffering of Victim Before Sentencing
The fact that the VICTIM was not
even informed of the said court prosecution of the alleged assailant is
shocking, as the presence of the VICTIM in criminal cases is important. The
victim has the right to tell the Court about the impact suffered by him
by reason of the offence, whereby the Court will take into account when
it comes to sentencing.
Malaysia’s Criminal Procedure
Code in Section 183A clearly states, ‘… (1) Before the Court passes sentence
according to law under section 183, the Court shall, upon the request of the
victim of the offence or the victim's family, call upon the victim or a
member of the victim's family to make a statement on the impact of the offence
on the victim or his family…’
The failure to ORDER
perpetrator to pay Compensation to Victim
Criminal Procedure Code in
Section 426 (1A) states that, ‘…Without
prejudice to subsection (1), the Court before which an accused is convicted of
an offence shall, upon the application of the Public Prosecutor, make an order
against the convicted accused for the payment by him, or where the
convicted accused is a child, by his parent or guardian, of a sum to be
fixed by the Court as compensation to a person who is the victim of the offence
committed by the convicted accused in respect of the injury to his person or character,
or loss of his income or property, as a result of the offence committed.
In this case, the victim Ong Ing
Keong, besides suffering soft tissue injury following the sudden attack on him
with a hard punch on the face, where he later had to get treatment at the Kuala
Lumpur Hospital, also would have reasonably suffered loss of income as an
e-hailing driver following the incident and in his quest for justice, mental
trauma or anguish, and other cost including legal fees. Malaysian law provides
that the Court that heard and convicted this assailant could and should have
order payment of compensation to the victim. A compensation to be paid to the
victim would have been just, for a FINE now is just payment to the State – not
the victim.
If the Public Prosecutor, failed
to apply to court for the payment of compensation to the victim, it may be an
indication of lack of concern or even a dereliction of duty to victims of a
crime. Justice demands not just being sentenced for one’s crimes, but also
payment of compensation to victim and even maybe also a public apology by the
perpetrator to the victim. When a criminal does not apologize, that will lead
to higher sentence. A plea of guilt is not an apology to the victim.
When POLICE Breaks the
Law, There Should Be A CUSTODIAL SENTENCE
Police officers are expected to
be law abiding citizens, more so since it is their public duty to enforce the
law. Hence, when law enforcement personnel break the law, it is a very SERIOUS
matter, and warrants a heavy deterrent sentence.
The Court of Appeal, in its
decision ‘We would, however, like to take this opportunity to remind the lower
courts that they should take cases of police officers assaulting anyone very
seriously. When a police officer, be he of whatever rank, is found guilty of
assaulting a member of the public and more so of an arrested person as in this
case, the courts should send a message of the public abhorrence of such acts
- by coming down hard on him and nothing short of a custodial sentence, even
for a first offender, would suffice. [Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Mohd Noor v.
PP[2001] 4 CLJ 9]
What about the Other
Offences?
In this case, there were
allegedly other offences and offenders. There was allegedly a THREAT addressed
to the victim to withdraw the first police report. ‘Ong claimed that the palace representative
gave him two choices, which was to retract the case and they will return his
phone, or go to court…’(Malaysian
Insight, 31/5/2024)
When the crime happened, did the
other persons, including police officers present, make police report of the
crime. Since March 2017, Section 13 of the Criminal Procedure Code imposes an
obligation on ‘Every person aware- (a) of the commission of or the intention of
any other person to commit any offence punishable under the Penal Code or any
other written law; commission of or the intention of any other person to commit
any offence punishable under the Penal Code or any other written law…’.
There are also crimes of
obstruction of justice. In short, everyone who committed crimes in connection
with the assault or ‘abuse of power’ in Ong Ing Keong’s case must be forthwith
charged and tried in court.
In Malaysia, a withdrawal of the
police report does not mean the end of the criminal investigation. Once, law
enforcement is made aware of the alleged crime, they will proceed with the
investigation and/or prosecution of the perpetrator of the crime. It matters
not whether the victim subsequently withdraws his/her police report, or comes
to some ‘financial’ settlement with the perpetrator. A crime will still be
investigated and prosecuted irrespective of any ‘settlement’.
In this case, which has been much
highlighted and is known by the public, it should not be ‘swept under the
carpet’ with regards to the other crimes committed, by the same and/or other
perpetrators.
MADPET (Malaysians Against Death
Penalty and Torture) and others have called for special
offences for law enforcement officers as they are expected to be law abiding
citizens, tasked with the enforcing the law. In this case, the criminal
L/Kpl Muhammad Taufik Ismail, was charged, convicted and sentenced under Section
323 of the Penal Code, which is a general offence of voluntarily causing hurt
that applies for all persons. Taufik was fined RM1,000 in default of 20 days
imprisonment. MADPET is of the opinion that when police or law enforcement
officers commit this crime, more so when on duty, they should be subjected to a
much higher DETTERENT sentences.
Laws like Section 323 of Penal
Code should also be amended, to enable Courts to have discretion to impose
higher sentences depending on the facts and circumstances.
MADPET
calls on the Prosecution to forthwith appeal the sentence to the High Court,
as only the Prosecution, other than the convicted, have the right and ability
to appeal the conviction or sentence.
Alternatively, MADPET calls on any High Court Judge to exercise their
general supervisory and revisionary jurisdiction in the interests of justice.
Section 35 Courts of Judicature Act states
that ‘…the High Court shall have general supervisory and revisionary
jurisdiction over all subor dinate courts, and may in particular, but without
prejudice to the generality of the foregoing provision, if it appears desirable
in the interests of justice, either of its own motion or at the instance
of any party or person interested, at any stage in any matter or
proceeding, whether civil or criminal, in any subordinate court, call for
the record thereof, and may remove the same into the High Court or may give to
the subordinate court such directions as to the further conduct of the same as
justice may require…
MADPET
also call for the immediate termination of L/Kpl Muhammad Taufik Ismail for,
amongst other, the restoration of the image and trust in Malaysian police. Any
law enforcement officer that breaks the law, more so whilst on duty, is best
removed immediately. Police officers on security details of VIPs are also
highly trained, and we do not want to retain officers that resort to violence
rather than words.
MADPET reiterates the call to enact laws that recognizes the right for persons in Malaysia
to be free from torture, cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment save in
accordance to law.
Charles
Hector
For
and on behalf of MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture)
Closure for disabled e-hailing driver with bodyguard's sentence, says lawyer
By NURBAITI HAMDAN
Nation
Monday, 04 Nov 2024
KUALA LUMPUR: After five months, there is finally
closure for disabled e-hailing driver Ong Ing Keong who was assaulted by
a VVIP's bodyguard, says lawyer Zaid Malek.
This comes after
L/Kpl Muhammad Taufik Ismail was fined RM1,000 in default of 20 days
imprisonment on Monday (Nov 4) after he pleaded guilty to voluntarily
causing hurt to Ong in front of the lobby at the St. Regis Hotel at
about 11.40am on May 28.
Zaid
said the proceedings had taken them by surprise as they were unaware
that L/Kpl Muhammad Taufik Ismail would be charged today.
"This is why Ong is not here. But this (outcome) is exactly what he wanted.
“He wanted the aggressor to be brought to court and this had
happened today. It was a simple, straightforward case with ample
dash-cam recording and medical evidence," Zaid told the press.
Zaid, who held a watching brief for Ong, appeared before the Magistrate during the proceedings.
On
Monday, Magistrate Farah Nabihah Muhamad Dan passed the sentence on
L/Kpl Muhammad Taufik, 32, who pleaded guilty to voluntarily causing
hurt on Ong at the lobby of St Regis Hotel, at about 11.40am on May 28.
The charge under Section 323 of the Penal Code carries a
maximum one year jail term or a fine up to RM2,000 or both upon
conviction. - Star, 4/11/2024
Disability group questions anonymity of policeman charged with assaulting deaf driver, wants case revisited
DAWN
says yesterday's court proceeding raises serious questions of integrity
while sending a message that violence from the authorities is
tolerated.
A
prominent support group for the deaf community has expressed
disappointment over the outcome of the case involving a police officer
who assaulted deaf e-hailing driver Ong Ing Keong, and called on
authorities to revisit the case as the transparency required by a court
is in question.
The Deaf Advocacy and Well-being National Organisation, or DAWN, one
of many groups that had been part of a campaign to pressure authorities
to charge the attacker, said Ong was never directly notified on the
identity of Taufik Ismail, a 32-year-old police officer named as the
accused in the charge sheet.
It said the anonymity afforded to the man, who was shielded from the
press by several officers throughout his presence at the Kuala Lumpur
court complex yesterday, raised serious questions about the integrity of
the trial.
"Why was the assailant’s identity protected? Why was the case
resolved with such haste? This absence of transparency fuels concerns
that some individuals or groups may be shielded from accountability due
to their positions," the group said.
"Is Taufik Ismail indeed the individual shown in the CCTV footage from the incident at Hotel St Regis?"
DAWN said without confirmation from Ong or his lawyers, it could not be verified that the right individual had been charged.
"If the authorities are confident in this identification, why was Ong not notified directly?"
"Justice must be seen to be done, and we call for more robust
accountability, genuine protection, and fair treatment of all citizens,
especially those within vulnerable communities," it added.
Yesterday, Taufik, a police officer who is part of Johor regent Tunku
Ismail Sultan Ibrahim's (TMJ) royal entourage, escaped jail after
pleading guilty to assaulting Ong on May 28, in a case that has sparked
public debate over the rule of law in the country.
Instead, the Kuala Lumpur Magistrate's Court sentenced him to a fine
of RM1,000, a decision criticised by Ong's lawyer Zaid Malek, who
compared it to the imprisonment of Abdul Rahim Noor in 2000, after the
former inspector-general of police pleaded guilty to assaulting Anwar
Ibrahim in 1998.
Zaid had quoted the Court of Appeal's reasoning for imprisoning Rahim
despite his guilty plea, in which it stated that it wanted to send a
message to the public that the law does not condone police officers
assaulting members of the public and that "there should be nothing short
of a custodial sentence, even for a first offender, would suffice".
DAWN said the "extraordinarily light punishment" sends the message
that violence is tolerated even by those charged with protecting the
public.
"For five months, Ong and the deaf community waited, hoping the
system would deliver a fair and balanced judgment. However, the outcome
has left many feeling overlooked, disrespected, and unsupported by those
meant to uphold justice.
It said Ong had suffered psychological distress during the five
months that the authorities did not charge the attacker despite video
evidence.
"The court’s decision fails to consider the long-term impact on him
and the resilience shown by the deaf, the disabled, and broader
communities that have stood by Ong.
"This leniency implies that harm done to the public by those in
authority may be easily dismissed, setting a dangerous precedent
enabling further abuses without meaningful consequence."
Taufik was accused of assaulting Ong at the lobby of the St Regis
Hotel in Kuala Lumpur on May 28, an incident that was recorded by Ong's
dashcam.
The video showed Ong waiting for passengers when a man shouted at him to move his car to make way for TMJ's entourage.
Ong then rolled down his car window to speak to the man before he suddenly attacked him with a hard punch on the face.
He was later treated at Kuala Lumpur Hospital for a soft tissue injury.
Public outrage increased when it was revealed that a "palace
representative" had asked Ong to withdraw his complaint lodged with the
Brickfields police station.
Ong rejected a claim by city police chief, Rusdi Mohd Isa, that he
had withdrawn his police report as it was a "misunderstanding".
Instead, Ong disclosed that an officer had given him the choice of
either accepting a sum of money from the palace representative or having
his phone confiscated if the case went to court.
The delay in taking action was also criticised by the government's
Human Rights Commission (Suhakam), which questioned Attorney-General
Ahmad Terrirudin Mohd Salleh over his silence. - Malaysia Now, 5/11/2024
Assaulted deaf e-hailing driver wants justice, says his lawyer
Noel Achariam
Updated 5 months ago ·
Published on 31 May 2024
A
deaf e-hailing driver who was assaulted by a security detail personnel
last Monday wants justice and rejects any compensation, said his
lawyers.
One of his lawyers, Latheefa Koya, told a press conference today that no one has been arrested over the incident.
This comes just as Inspector-General of Police Razarudin Husain said
Bukit Aman will summon all officers involved in investigating the case
to ensure a thorough investigation.
He said all those involved in the earlier investigation will have their statements recorded.
Earlier today, Kuala Lumpur police chief Rusdi Mohd Isa said
investigation into the alleged assault was still going despite earlier
reports that the case was “settled” after the victim allegedly accepted
RM800 from a representative of the assailant.
Latheefa meanwhile said the victim did not agree to settle the case.
“The police have called him tomorrow to give his statement to assist with the investigation.
“We will be accompanying him tomorrow. We want the police to carry on
with the investigation (wait to conclude) before looking any at legal
options,” she said at a press conference in Petaling Jaya today.
Latheefa said that lawyer N Surendran and Lawyers for Liberty
director Zaid Malek will be representing the victim Ong Ing Keong.
Earlier today, Johor Regent Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim has hit out
at attempts to link the royal institution to the alleged assault of an
e-hailing driver.
“I do not condone any illegal action or intimidation. I urge the
authorities to investigate thoroughly the incident where a police
officer escort is alleged to have committed a harmful act.
“I hope the authorities will take action in accordance with the law and give the victim justice,” he said on X.
On Wednesday, police confirmed that the case involving Tunku Ismail’s
bodyguard, who allegedly assaulted a disabled man at a hotel, has been
amicably resolved.
Kuala Lumpur police said that was done after they received another
report from the complainant late yesterday stating that the matter had
resolved the matter amicably, and the victim did not want to prolong the
case.
The Malaysian Deaf Advocacy and Wellbeing Organisation (DAWN) in a
statement yesterday said it was alarming that the victim was allegedly
pressured to settle the case for RM800.
“The victim said he felt pressured to drop the case and be
compensated for his injuries instead of pursuing the matter which would
see his mobile phone confiscated,” Dawn had said.
“He was told that if he were to proceed with the case, his mobile
phone would be confiscated, but if he were to drop it, he would be
compensated for his injuries.
“The question remains: how is the phone related to the assault incident?”
The victim had lodged a police report after he alleged he was assaulted at the hotel entrance as the VIP’s convoy was leaving.
Victim’s version
The victim, Ong. gave his version of events today.
He claimed to have accepted RM800 from a wakil istana (palace
representative) as settlement when he went to lodge a police report.
“After lodging the report, the police said that a palace representative was coming.
“I then asked (the place representative) where the person who hit me was and he said the person was working.”
Ong claimed that the palace representative gave him two choices,
which was to retract the case and they will return his phone, or go to
court.
“The representative said they will pay for hospital treatment or go to court over the matter.
“I wanted the handphone, so I decided to drop the case. The officer then asked how much I wanted in compensation.
“They asked me to settle, and I asked for RM1,000. The place representative then gave RM800.”