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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>High-rise drama in Woodlands raid
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><TR>Suspect shimmies 3 floors down to another flat in bid to escape CNB officers </TR><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Kimberly Spykerman
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SCDF officers (left) setting up safety nets to prevent the suspect (above) from jumping out of the flat he was hiding in. -- PHOTO: LIANHE WANBAO
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->IN A desperate bid to evade capture in a drug raid, a man climbed out of his 12th-
floor kitchen window and shimmied down the side of his block and into another resident's home three floors below.
The man, in his late 20s and sporting tinted blonde hair, attempted the death-defying but ultimately unsuccessful escape after Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) officers came knocking on the door of his flat in Woodlands Avenue 9 on Thursday afternoon.
After getting into his neighbour's unit on the ninth floor through its open kitchen window, the suspect locked the front door of the flat and squeezed into a small cupboard under the kitchen stove. The cupboard was barely half a metre long and a metre wide.
The officers, who broke into the suspect's flat and found it empty, sealed off the block, and spent about four hours combing each level for the fugitive.
Officers from the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) were also called in for the manhunt, and they set up safety nets along the outside of the block in case the man attempted to jump from the open window.
After several hours of searching, the CNB officers zoomed in on the one unit in the entire block which had an open kitchen window. They then called the home owner, administrative clerk Jessie Lim, 43, at her workplace.
They told her that a wanted man was thought to be in her home. She initially dismissed the call as the work of a prankster, thinking it too outlandish to be true.
But she knew her son, Elliott, 17, was at home at the time, and grew worried.
'I didn't believe it at first, I thought it was some conman calling me so I hung up on him a few times. But I started getting worried when they told me that my son might be in danger,' said Madam Lim. 'My first thought was that whatever he wants he can take, as long as he leaves my son alone.'
=> Sth is wrong with the way the poodles handle the case?
Elliott, meanwhile, was blissfully unaware that there was an intruder in his home - he was absorbed in a computer game that he was playing in his bedroom.
It was only when he received calls from both his mother and a police officer, telling him to stay in his room and lock the door, that he realised something was afoot. He said: 'I was shocked, but I just locked myself in, no questions asked.'
=> No wonder the Old Fart is bent on replacing Sporns with FTrash!
CNB officers then broke into the flat and nabbed the suspect.
When The Straits Times visited the flat yesterday evening, the grilles of the kitchen window were firmly locked.
Said Madam Lim: 'I'm keeping them locked from now on.' [email protected]
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><TR>Suspect shimmies 3 floors down to another flat in bid to escape CNB officers </TR><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Kimberly Spykerman
</TD></TR><!-- show image if available --><TR vAlign=bottom><TD width=330>

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SCDF officers (left) setting up safety nets to prevent the suspect (above) from jumping out of the flat he was hiding in. -- PHOTO: LIANHE WANBAO
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->IN A desperate bid to evade capture in a drug raid, a man climbed out of his 12th-
floor kitchen window and shimmied down the side of his block and into another resident's home three floors below.
The man, in his late 20s and sporting tinted blonde hair, attempted the death-defying but ultimately unsuccessful escape after Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) officers came knocking on the door of his flat in Woodlands Avenue 9 on Thursday afternoon.
After getting into his neighbour's unit on the ninth floor through its open kitchen window, the suspect locked the front door of the flat and squeezed into a small cupboard under the kitchen stove. The cupboard was barely half a metre long and a metre wide.
The officers, who broke into the suspect's flat and found it empty, sealed off the block, and spent about four hours combing each level for the fugitive.
Officers from the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) were also called in for the manhunt, and they set up safety nets along the outside of the block in case the man attempted to jump from the open window.
After several hours of searching, the CNB officers zoomed in on the one unit in the entire block which had an open kitchen window. They then called the home owner, administrative clerk Jessie Lim, 43, at her workplace.
They told her that a wanted man was thought to be in her home. She initially dismissed the call as the work of a prankster, thinking it too outlandish to be true.
But she knew her son, Elliott, 17, was at home at the time, and grew worried.
'I didn't believe it at first, I thought it was some conman calling me so I hung up on him a few times. But I started getting worried when they told me that my son might be in danger,' said Madam Lim. 'My first thought was that whatever he wants he can take, as long as he leaves my son alone.'
=> Sth is wrong with the way the poodles handle the case?
Elliott, meanwhile, was blissfully unaware that there was an intruder in his home - he was absorbed in a computer game that he was playing in his bedroom.
It was only when he received calls from both his mother and a police officer, telling him to stay in his room and lock the door, that he realised something was afoot. He said: 'I was shocked, but I just locked myself in, no questions asked.'
=> No wonder the Old Fart is bent on replacing Sporns with FTrash!
CNB officers then broke into the flat and nabbed the suspect.
When The Straits Times visited the flat yesterday evening, the grilles of the kitchen window were firmly locked.
Said Madam Lim: 'I'm keeping them locked from now on.' [email protected]