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Ex-M1 staff 'embezzled $2m'

S

San Zang

Guest

Nov 23, 2010

Ex-M1 staff 'embezzled $2m'

A FORMER employee of Singapore telco M1 allegedly embezzled $2 million and splurged the money on Porsches, luxury watches, and even a $200,000 live stingray, reported The Business Times on Tuesday. According to court documents seen by BT, M1 claims Matthew Yeo Kay Keng, 35, sold 3,414 handsets to resellers and pocketed $2.09 million from the sales.

Mr Yeo is said to have spent the money on two Porsches, luxury watches including three Rolexes and four Audemars Piguets, a $160,000 Arowana and the $200,000 stingray. A former account manager with M1, Mr Yeo allegedly made the sales when he was employed between January 2008 and November 2010.

BT reported that M1 dismissed him on Nov 15 and sued him the next day for breach of his employment agreement, breach of duty of fidelity, fraudulent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment.
The telco is asking the court to award it damages as well as interests and costs. Mr Yeo has seven days to respond to the summons. The BT report said he was taken into police custody after being dismissed, but was unable to confirm if he is still remanded.

 
S

San Zang

Guest

M1 says ex-employee embezzled $2m and splurged on Porsches, Rolexes, Audemars Piguets and $200,000 live stingray

(SINGAPORE) First there was the Lamborghini man, now there's the Porsche man - as yet another tale of suspected embezzlement and lavish spending comes to light.

BT has learnt that Singapore telco, M1, is suing a former employee for having allegedly made off with some $2 million of its money - money which Matthew Yeo Kay Keng, 35, is said to have spent on two Porsches and an array of luxury watches, including three Rolexes and four Audemars Piguets, and a $200,000 live stingray.

According to court documents inspected by BT yesterday, M1 claims its former account manager sold 3,414 handsets to resellers, when he was employed between January 2008 and November this year, and pocketed the cash - $2.09 million of it.

M1 dismissed Mr Yeo on Nov 15 and filed a writ of summons against him the next day. The telco is suing Mr Yeo for breach of his employment agreement, breach of duty of fidelity, fraudulent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment. And it is asking the court to award it damages - which may or may not include restitution from Mr Yeo - as well as interests and costs.

M1 also obtained a court injunction against Mr Yeo on Nov 18, which prohibits him from removing any of his assets from Singapore, disposing of any of them or doing anything that might diminish their value - up to the value of $2.09 million, excluding interest accrued.

Mr Yeo - who has seven days to respond to the writ of summons - has not yet filed his defence. He was in police custody after being dismissed by M1, but BT was unable to confirm if he remains so.

The alleged crime was discovered earlier this month, when M1 conducted a review of its employees' sales performance, according to the affidavit prepared by the telco's chief financial officer, Lee Kok Chew. Mr Yeo had been employed as a sales executive from December 1997 to October 2006, before leaving and rejoining as an account manager in the corporate sales department in January 2008.

According to Mr Lee's affidavit, Mr Yeo - whose duties were to meet with corporate clients and earn commission from the sales made - was found to have an unsatisfactory sales record, in that his subscription sales were low. M1 then conducted a check on a number of Mr Yeo's clients and found that the number of handsets reportedly sold by Mr Yeo were far greater than the actual number of subscriptions keyed into M1's system.

It then discovered that Mr Yeo had generated stock order forms for non-existent orders supposedly placed by his customers. The handsets were then allegedly sold by him to resellers for cash, which he pocketed.

Mr Lee, in his affidavit, said the company then conducted an interview with Mr Yeo on Nov 15 - during which Mr Yeo is said to have admitted to wrongfully and dishonestly taking the handsets for his own benefit. Mr Yeo then reportedly told the company that he received about $2 million from the sale of such handsets, of which he spent $230,000 on a Porsche in August this year, which he traded in for a $430,000 Porsche in October.

Mr Yeo is also said to have told M1 that he also spent the money on a Patek Philippe watch worth $50,000, three Rolex watches worth $8,000 each, and four Audemars Piguet watches worth between $15,000 and $30,000 each. He also allegedly claimed that he had only $500 in his UOB account, and that he was willing to sell his car, watches and fish - an Arowana worth $160,000 and a stingray worth $200,000 - to make up for what he had done.

Mr Lee's affidavit said M1 subsequently found discrepancies in Mr Yeo's statements. It found that he has several other bank accounts - with Maybank and Standard Chartered - as well as shares in a securities account with the Singapore Exchange.

The telco also found that Mr Yeo had been transferring money offshore - a total of $47,300 to a Yang Chi Kit in Hong Kong, a discovery which likely prompted M1 to obtain an injunction against the former account manager.

The injunction prohibits Mr Yeo from dealing in or disposing of his assets worldwide. The assets include his Porsche and his collection of high-end watches - which, in addition to those mentioned before, also include one Hublot, one Panerai, several IWCs, and one Porsche design watch - which are collectively estimated to be worth $621,000, and other brands of watches estimated to be worth $300,000. Other assets include his Floravale condominium, the cash in his various bank accounts, his shares, and his fish.

Mr Yeo is, however, allowed to spend $1,000 a week on his ordinary living expenses and a 'reasonable sum' on legal advice and representation. The injunction states that the unencumbered value of the assets that remain here must be at least $2.09 million.

News of this suit comes just days after it was revealed that Koh Seah Wee, a former senior executive of the Singapore Land Authority - who conspired to steal some $12 million from the statutory board - is suspected to also have stolen from another place of work, the Intellectual Property of Singapore, and to have spent part of that money on a $1.6 million Lamborghini.


 
S

San Zang

Guest
Ex-M1 employee under probe for possible S$2m theft


Ex-M1 employee under probe for possible S$2m theft
By Cheow Xin Yi, TODAY |
Posted: 24 November 2010 0006 hrs
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M1 logo
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SINGAPORE: Police are investigating a possible criminal embezzlement of S$2 million worth of handsets by a former employee of telco M1.

The money was allegedly then used to buy Porsches, luxury watches and a
S$200,000 live stingray.

Matthew Yeo Kay Keng, a former M1 account manager, is now out on bail after being released from police custody.

A police spokesperson said Mr Yeo is being probed for cheating and criminal breach of trust-related offences.

It is believed that the Commercial Affairs Department has been roped in to help, with possible collusion as one area of investigation.

M1 is also suing Mr Yeo for breach of employment agreement and fraudulent misrepresentation, among others, and is asking for damages, the Business Times reported on Tuesday.

At the heart of the telco's claims - filed in High Court by law firm Drew & Napier last Tuesday, one day after M1 dismissed Mr Yeo - are 3,414 handsets.

M1 is alleging that Mr Yeo had generated stock order forms for non-existent orders supposedly placed by his customers and sold the handsets to resellers for S$2.09 million.

The alleged crime was said to have been uncovered earlier this month, when M1 did a review of its employees' sales performance, including Mr Yeo's.

He had been employed as a sales executive from December 1997 to October 2006, before leaving and rejoining in January 2008 as an account manager.

Despite the news, telco analysts and the market alike shrugged off the alleged loss, with M1's share price rising 0.44 percent on Tuesday.

Analysts told MediaCorp the amount would not have a significant financial impact on M1 and that the incident was not indicative of a systemic gap in the industry.

"Fraud could happen in any company and any industry. I don't think it's a telco-specific issue at all. There's the handset correlation, but a lot of people could also steal pens and papers from companies," said Nomura Securities telco analyst Sachin Gupta.

Noting that Mr Yeo was reported to have left M1 and returned, corporate governance watcher Ho Yew Kee said the former probably understood the system and knew how to exploit any possible loophole.

Even with internal controls, fraud would be even harder to prevent if there was collusion, added the National University of Singapore associate professor.

When contacted, one of the other telco players emphasised that it had a "zero tolerance approach to fraud". A SingTel spokesperson said, "SingTel has in place a whistleblower programme for any concerns relating to suspicion of fraud or other unethical activities to be reported. We also conduct regular fraud and control awareness training for our employees to heighten their vigilance against fraud."

- TODAY/ir

 
S

San Zang

Guest
Ex-M1 staff stole phones


Nov 24, 2010

3,400 PHONES STOLEN
Ex-M1 staff stole phones

By Chua Hian Hou

ST_18322481.jpg


-- PHOTO: M1

SINGAPORE telco M1 is alleging that a former employee stole 3,414 high-end smartphones and enjoyed the high life - driving luxury cars and wearing designer watches - with the $2.09 million he got from selling them. According to court papers filed by M1 last week, Mr Matthew Yeo Kay Keng had allegedly been stealing handsets for the last three years. He had also apparently got bolder over time.

Mr Yeo, said M1, had taken 154 handsets in 2008. But by 2009, he had quadrupled his annual loot to 625; this spiked again to 2,635 this year. His alleged crime spree came to light earlier this month, when a performance audit found a discrepancy between what the 35-year-old account manager was supposed to make for the company and what MI was really taking in.

This was because Mr Yeo, who deals with corporate clients - selling their staff handsets and phone subscriptions - had allegedly been cooking up fake sales orders. With these fake orders, he would collect handsets and then sell them off for his own benefit.


Read the full story in Wednesday's edition of The Straits Times.

 

Blanka

Alfrescian
Loyal

Ex-M1 staff who "stole phones" ordered to pay S$2.06m
By Leong Wee Keat |
Posted: 08 February 2011 1937 hrs
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Singapore's Supreme Court building
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Singapore - The High Court has granted telco M1 a default judgment against a former employee who allegedly took 3,092 phones and enjoyed the high life with the profits made from selling them.

In a closed-door hearing last week, the Court also ordered Matthew Yeo Kay Keng, 35, to pay S$2.06 million in damages to M1.

The High Court's decision comes after he had failed to enter his defence by January 14 to contest M1's claims in its civil suit.

Yeo, who sold M1 handsets and phone subscriptions to corporate clients, had allegedly been cooking up fake sales orders over three years.

He would then collect handsets and sell them off for his personal profit. On November 15, the day he returned from a S$10,000 Japan holiday, he confessed to taking the handsets after M1 discovered the discrepancies.

Sworn statements by M1 chief financial officer Lee Kok Chew said Yeo admitted to taking the phones.

Yeo had also disclosed his spending spree. He bought a S$230,000 Porsche sports car in August, before upgrading to another S$430,000 model two months later.

Yeo also bought a S$50,000 Patek Philippe watch and four Audemars Piguet watches that cost between S$15,000 and S$30,000 each.

He has apparently said he would sell his watches, car, a S$200,000 stingray and S$160,000 worth of arowanas to compensate M1.

He claimed the items were worth around S$1.6 million. In his statement to M1, Yeo said he took the phones because of "materialism" and his "weakness for cars and watches".

He added: "I have used this dishonest and wrongful method to get more handsets lately to get more money and provide better for the family."

- CNA/ir

 
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