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Slap people - 4 weeks' jail. Bomb threat - no charge!

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
SG's double-standard of justice for foreigners.


Man gets 4 weeks’ jail for assaulting SIA cabin crew member; bomb threat charge withdrawn​

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La Andy Hien Duc is expected to be deported on Saturday. PHOTOS: VERATHEAPE/TWITTER
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Shaffiq Alkhatib
Court Correspondent

Nov 4, 2022

SINGAPORE - An American man who had falsely claimed there was a bomb on board a Singapore Airlines (SIA) flight was sentenced to four weeks’ jail on Friday after he pleaded guilty to an assault charge for slapping an air steward.
Grocery packer La Andy Hien Duc, 37, who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia after his arrest, was also given a stern warning over the bomb threat he made on board SQ33 from San Francisco to Singapore in September.
A harassment charge linked to this offence was withdrawn, and Hien Duc was given a discharge amounting to an acquittal.
This means he cannot be charged again with the same offence.
As the sentence will be backdated, Hien Duc, who has spent more than a month in remand, is expected to be deported on Saturday.
He was one of 208 passengers on board SQ33 which was scheduled to leave San Francisco at 10.05pm on Sept 26 (Sept 27, 1.05pm Singapore time).
The flight was scheduled to arrive in Singapore at around 5am on Sept 28.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Lim Ying Min said Hien Duc had knowingly consumed a chocolate bar infused with cannabis before boarding the place at San Francisco International Airport.
Court documents did not state if the drug affected his condition during the flight.
He was travelling alone and had intended to transit in Singapore before taking another flight to Phuket, Thailand.

DPP Lim said en route to Singapore, Hien Duc heard a voice in his head telling him that there was a bomb on the plane.
The voice also told him to shout and alert the others in the plane.
The DPP said: “The accused thus shouted ‘There is a bomb on the plane’ at least twice, which was heard by the nearby passengers.
“He claimed he then saw a white light in one of the overhead compartments and heard the voice in his head telling him that the bomb was in a bag at that overhead compartment.”
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Flight data from tracking site Flightradar24 showed the plane made three loops over the South China Sea, before continuing on to Singapore. PHOTO: FLIGHTRADAR24
Hien Duc got out of his seat and opened an overhead compartment about four rows ahead, taking out a bag belonging to a 31-year-old Malaysian man.
Another passenger, a 36-year-old American man, heard the commotion and alerted the cabin crew.
An air steward came forward and asked Hien Duc to clarify his claims about the bomb.
The prosecutor told the court: “The accused replied that he had a vision of a bomb inside a bag and pointed to the bag he took.
“The victim checked the said bag and found mostly food. After ascertaining that there was no bomb in the bag, the victim returned the bag to (the Malaysian man).”
Hien Duc then told the steward to check all the bags inside the aircraft. The steward assured him that he would handle the matter and told him to return to his seat.
MORE ON THIS TOPIC
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How RSAF personnel responded to bomb threat on SIA flight in the middle of the night
Instead of doing so, Hien Duc dashed towards another overhead compartment to take out another bag.
The steward and one of his colleagues then escorted him to the galley at the rear of the plane, where the pair held his arms and tried to calm him down.
Hien Duc then slapped the steward’s left cheek.
DPP Lim said: “Upon seeing the accused turn violent, the victim and (his colleague) quickly held on to the accused to prevent him from hitting anyone else.
“For the safety of the passengers, the crew members restrained the accused using straps and vacated the passenger seats nearest to him. The accused became compliant. He was closely monitored for the rest of the flight.”
Police were alerted to the bomb threat and the plane was escorted to Changi Airport by Republic of Singapore Air Force fighter jets.
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Police were alerted to the alleged bomb threat and SQ33 was escorted to Changi Airport by Republic of Singapore Air Force fighter jets. ST PHOTO: FELINE LIM
SQ33 landed at a remote location at Changi Airport and police escorted Hien Duc out of the plane.
The Airport Police Division and Special Operations Command’s K-9 Unit, as well as the Singapore Armed Forces’ Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Explosives Defence Group, were mobilised to investigate the matter.
The threat turned out to be false.
There was a delay in disembarkation due to additional security measures. The crew members and passengers were finally allowed to leave the plane at 9.11am, more than four hours after the plane was scheduled to land in Singapore.

Defence lawyer Johannes Hadi said that his client had not been diagnosed with schizophrenia when he was in the United States.
The lawyer added that Hien Duc had thought that he was a holy deity and had wanted to go to Phuket to “do battle with evil forces”.
For voluntarily causing hurt, an offender can be jailed up to three years and fined up to $5,000.
For using threatening words likely to cause alarm, an offender can be fined up to $5,000.
 

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
209 passengers and 17 crew members on board inconvenienced.
Flight delayed
RSAF on alert.
Two RSAF fighter jets scrambled, burning up thousands of dollars of fuel during a period of high oil price
Police activated
SQ33 headed to an isolated part of the airport for security checks after landing, and was then towed to Terminal 3 after security checks were completed.
In the end: NO CHARGE!

Fighter jets escort SIA plane to Changi Airport, man arrested for allegedly making bomb threat​

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Passengers from SQ33 leaving the airport at around 9.40am Singapore time on Sept 28, 2022. ST PHOTO: FELINE LIM
Aqil Hamzah and Amanda Lee

SEP 28, 2022


SINGAPORE - A 37-year-old man has been arrested for allegedly making a bomb threat on board a Singapore Airlines (SIA) flight from San Francisco that landed in Singapore early on Wednesday morning.
The Straits Times understands that the man arrested is a foreign national.
Flight SQ33, which left San Francisco at 10.26pm on Monday (Tuesday, 1.26pm Singapore time) with 209 passengers and 17 crew members on board, was escorted by two RSAF fighter jets before landing at Changi Airport at about 5.50am on Wednesday, the Republic of Singapore Air Force and police said in a statement.
The police were informed of the threat at about 2.40am on Wednesday, the statement added.
An SIA spokesman in response to queries said SQ33 headed to an isolated part of the airport for security checks after landing, and was then towed to Terminal 3 after security checks were completed.
The Defence Ministry (Mindef) in a Facebook post on Wednesday said: “Teams from the Singapore Army’s Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Explosives Defence Group and Airport Police Division were on site to verify the claims.
“The threat was subsequently verified to be false, and the suspicious person has been arrested.”

Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen in a Twitter post said the air force activated two F-16 fighter jets to escort flight SQ33.
The police statement said preliminary investigations indicated that the passenger had allegedly claimed that there was a bomb in a hand-carry bag, and had assaulted the crew.
“He was restrained by the crew, and subsequently arrested... for suspected consumption of controlled drugs. Police investigations are ongoing,” it added.

When flight SQ33 reached Terminal 3 at about 9.20am, passengers looked tired as they disembarked from the plane.
They were quickly ushered away to collect their luggage, which had been diverted from its original belt.
One Singapore-based expatriate passenger told ST that she was not aware of the full threat, although she knew of the fighter jet escorts.
She said: “We knew it was something different than somebody being drunk and disorderly because they landed us in the middle of nowhere and then we sat on the tarmac for three hours or so.”
An SIA spokesman said it is helping customers with the rebooking for any onward connections that they may have missed.
Under anti-terror rules, it is an offence for a person to make false claims about carrying out an act of terrorism.
Those found guilty can be punished with a maximum fine of $500,000 or a maximum jail term of 10 years or both.
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SQ33 left San Francisco at 10.26pm on Monday and landed at Changi Airport at about 5.50am on Wednesday. PHOTO: FLIGHTRADAR24
In March 2019, a woman and a child were held for questioning after the pilot of SQ Flight 423 - from Mumbai to Singapore - raised a bomb threat alert.
The aircraft was escorted safely back to Changi Airport by two RSAF F-16 fighter jets.
In April 2018, a passenger on a Hat Yai-bound Scoot flight joked that he had a bomb in the bag.
The plane made a U-turn, with fighter jets from the RSAF scrambling to escort it back. Hsu Chun Meng was later fined $4,500 for breaching the Protection from Harassment Act by using threatening words to cause alarm.
 

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Only stern warning

American who made bomb threat on SIA flight to get stern warning​

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The plane was escorted to Changi Airport by RSAF fighter jets after American Hien Duc's bomb threat on Sept 28. PHOTOS: VERA@VERATHEAPE/TWITTER
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Jessie Lim

OCT 27, 2022

SINGAPORE - The 37-year-old man who claimed there was a bomb on board a Singapore Airlines (SIA) flight is set to receive a stern warning for using threatening words.
Deputy Public Prosecutor Lim Ying Min said on Thursday that the prosecution intends to issue a stern warning to Hien Duc after reviewing a report from the Institute of Mental Health (IMH).
American Hien Duc was one of 208 passengers on board SQ33, which left San Francisco at 10.26pm on Sept 26 (1.26pm on Sept 27, Singapore time). The flight was scheduled to arrive in Singapore at 5am on Sept 28.
In her written submissions, DPP Lim had said a psychiatrist from IMH had assessed that Hien Duc posed a danger to the public.
She added: “The stressors of being in a foreign country, including the fact that he has no fixed place to stay and no one to monitor his compliance with his medications, are risk factors for relapse.”
Hien Duc’s lawyer Johannes Hadi, from Eugene Thuraisingam law firm, told The Straits Times his client has been diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Hien Duc is also expected to plead guilty to a charge of slapping a man while on board SQ33.

Preliminary investigations revealed that nearly six hours before the plane’s arrival in Singapore, he claimed there was a bomb in a hand-carry bag.
He then grabbed another passenger’s luggage from the cabin’s overhead compartment.
When a cabin crew tried to intervene and restrain him, Hien Duc allegedly assaulted him.
Checks by the cabin crew did not reveal any suspicious items in the passenger’s luggage.
Police were alerted to the alleged bomb threat and the plane was escorted to Changi Airport by Republic of Singapore Air Force fighter jets.
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Police were alerted to the alleged bomb threat and SQ33 was escorted to Changi Airport by Republic of Singapore Air Force fighter jets. ST PHOTO: FELINE LIM
The Airport Police Division and Special Operations Command’s K-9 Unit, as well as the Singapore Armed Forces’ Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Explosives Defence Group, were mobilised to investigate, and the threat turned out to be false.
Hien Duc will return to court to plead guilty on Nov 4. For voluntarily causing hurt, he can be jailed up to three years, fined up to $5,000, or both. For using threatening words likely to cause alarm, he can be fined up to $5,000.
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Vietnamese and bombs don't really go hand in hand. They're normally associated with landmines instead..... :biggrin:
 

A Singaporean

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Loyal
Foreigners must be given special privileges otherwise they will come to Sickipoora to create good jobs for Sinkies.
 

bobby

Alfrescian
Loyal
Grocery packer La Andy Hien Duc, 37

He should be hired as an FT in SIngapore....
 
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