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Ex-AIA agent charged over fake $6.2m policy

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May 11, 2011



Ex-AIA agent charged over fake $6.2m policy


She faces 19 charges; bail cut from $2m to $300k on appeal


By Lorna Tan, Senior Correspondent

Sally Low Ai Ming, 34, allegedly told a businessman he could apply for an "AIA Thank You" policy when such a product did not exist. This led him to remit US$5.06 million to AIA. -- ST FILE PHOTO

A FORMER AIA insurance agent who allegedly sold a fake US$5 million (S$6.2 million) insurance policy is facing fraud and cheating charges, including using forged documents.

The charges were laid against Sally Low Ai Ming, 34, at the Subordinate Court last Friday and bail set at $2 million. She failed to raise the cash and was remanded at Changi Women's Prison.

She broke down when she appeared in court yesterday to ask that the bail be reduced to $200,000. Her mother also cried. Bail was revised to $300,000 but Low has to surrender her passport and report weekly to the authorities.

The charges - four of cheating, 11 of fraudulent use of forged documents and four of moving crime proceeds to bank accounts and to partially pay for a property - stem from a police report made more than a year ago by a customer who bought a fake 'AIA Thank You' policy from Low in November 2002.

Low allegedly told semi-retired businessman Ong Han Ling, 72, that he could apply for the policy when she knew such a product did not exist. The act of deception led him to remit US$5.06 million to AIA, according to the charge sheet.

Low also allegedly told Mr Ong that two computer errors at AIA caused three policies to be issued in his name and that of his wife. It is claimed that Low then caused these policies to be surrendered and the three sums - about US$5.29 million, US$1 million and $1 million - were delivered to her on behalf of AIA.

There were in fact no computer errors.

The 11 fraud charges include using forged AIA documents such as sales illustration forms, application forms, a letter of confirmation and a statement of account.

Low was also charged with transferring the crime proceeds to a bank account outside Singapore and to another person's account, and using the money to fund a down payment on a Sentosa Cove condo.

The 'Thank You' policy was supposed to make a maturity payout - which included annual fixed returns of up to 7 per cent - after five years.

Mr Ong, who is also pursuing a civil suit against Low, alleges that she used the premium meant for the 'Thank You' policy to buy four AIA plans under his name and that of his wife and their daughter, all without their knowledge.

Mr Ong is suing Low for about $3.6 million plus the loss of use of his funds.

The $3.6 million is the amount outstanding after Low made restitution to Mr Ong for payouts due to him under the policies she had taken out in his name.

In March last year, Mr Ong's lawyers had obtained an injunction to freeze Low's assets. These included proceeds from the sale of a condominium in Cairnhill and funds in several bank accounts in Singapore and Indonesia.

In his lawsuit, Mr Ong said he found out from AIA that the 'Thank You' policy was fake only when he made inquiries about the maturity payouts due in January 2008.

Low has counterclaimed, alleging in court documents that she was merely an accomplice in an elaborate ploy conceived by Mr Ong to defraud AIA.

She said she had approached Mr Ong to buy more policies in 2002 in order to further her ambition of becoming a top agent but he devised a plan to defraud AIA and share half the gains.

A former top agent at AIA, Low earned more than $300,000 in annual commissions from new policies in 1999 and 2000. She was sacked by the insurer in September 2009.

[email protected]

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Insurance agent was a high-flier





A former high-flying agent at insurer AIA, Ms Sally Low Ai Ming was profiled in a rags-to-riches story by The Sunday Times in March 2001.

She was 24 then, and hailed as 'one of the world's youngest and most successful insurance agents'.
The story told of the meteoric rise in her insurance career after she graduated from the National University of Singapore with a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Ms Low, now 33, joined the insurance industry in 1998. Her boss, who managed the AIA agency she worked in, was Mr Rayner Lee. Mr Lee is married to an AIA super agent, Ms Mary Chen, a former leading actress from Taiwan.

It was reported that in 1999 and the year after, Ms Low earned more than $300,000 in annual commission from new policies. That placed her at the Top of the Table (TOT) - the highest recognition for Million Dollar Round Table agents.

In fact, she was one of just six agents - out of around 20,000 from Singapore - who qualified for that distinction then. She was believed to be among the youngest, if not the youngest, TOT agents in the world in 2000.

Despite her success, it was reported that Ms Low continued to lead a humble lifestyle, getting around mostly by bus and train. Home then was a Housing Board flat in Eunos where she lived with her mother, grandmother and younger brother.

Ms Low had said that she became an insurance agent because she badly wanted to provide well for her family after her father walked out on them.

To pay her way through university, she worked part-time as a salesgirl.

In the 2001 article, Ms Low was also praised by Ms Chen for her after-sales service. When her clients were busy or out of town, she would take their children shopping or to school.

A decade later, Ms Low has been sacked by AIA and is currently embroiled in a high-profile lawsuit with a former client.

When contacted last Friday, she said she is currently unemployed and is living in a Housing Board flat with her mother in Toa Payoh.

Lorna Tan
 
Bro , what happen to this case . No pic no sound ???



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This Ex AIA already got 11 months ...



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Insurance agent gets 11 months' jail


Straits TimesDate22 Dec 2012

Author: Selina Lum

He cheated clients of more than $100,000 and forged documents

AN INSURANCE agent who conned clients out of more than $100,000 by scams including selling them poor or non-existent policies was jailed for 11 months yesterday.

Lim Boon Wah, who was later sacked by AIA, told the clients how certain policies boasted attractive returns and convinced them to hand over their money - which he either pocketed or used to buy actual policies with less attractive returns to meet his agency's promotion quota.

Lim also misappropriated money that clients had entrusted to him to pay for premiums on their insurance policies. To cover his tracks, he forged various documents so they would not find out that their premiums had not been paid. The fake documents included letters that were purportedly from AIA, telling clients that it had received the premium payments.

He also filled out change-of-address forms so they would not receive notifications from AIA about their unpaid premiums.

Yesterday, Lim, 38, pleaded guilty in a district court to five charges of misappropriation, cheating and forgery. A further 21 charges were taken into consideration.

His offences, which took place between 2005 and 2010, involved about $105,000 defrauded from eight clients. He has since repaid $12,300.

The court heard that in January 2010, two clients lodged a complaint against him for forgery.

AIA sacked him and reported him to the police, who gave him a stern warning.

In October 2010, Lim turned himself in to the police after he learnt that AIA had received a complaint from another client, Mr Wee Wai Hung.

In February 2010, Mr Wee had withdrawn about $35,000 from his policy, intending to invest the money elsewhere. He later changed his mind and asked Lim to put the money back into his policy but Lim pocketed the funds.

Lim's first victim was Ms Sophia Tang who, in 2005, received three coupons from AIA amounting to $5,000 which were returns from her existing policies.

Lim lied to Ms Tang that there was another policy she could invest in which would yield higher interest payments.

Ms Tang then wrote out a cheque for $15,000 for the supposedly higher-interest policy but Lim took the money.

Pleading for leniency, Lim's lawyer, Ms Nadia Yeo, said that her client used the money to service his credit card debts and bank loans, and to pay for his family's expenses.

He also used money from some of his clients to repay the money he took from other clients.

She said Lim had reported his offences to the police, and that several of the victims have forgiven him for his mistakes and even vouched for his character.









This story was printed from channelnewsasia.com

TITLE: Ex-insurance agent who sold fake US$5m policy pleads guilty

By Claire Huang


POSTED: 04 Dec 2013 18:23


URL: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/ex-insurance-agent-who/909466.html

A former AIA insurance agent accused of selling a fake US$5 million policy, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to 19 offences,

including cheating and using forged documents.

SINGAPORE: A former AIA insurance agent accused of selling a fake US$5 million policy, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to 19 offences,

including cheating and using forged documents.

37-year-old Sally Low Ai Ming admitted to cheating 73-year-old Indonesian Ong Han Ling.

She had sold the businessman a policy called "AIA Thank You" in November 2002, when there was no such policy.

Mr Ong made five telegraphic transfers in November 2002 to pay for the policy.

Subsequently, he received three policy documents from Low, confirming the application for the fake policy to be approved.

Low then used part of the money transferred to AIA to purchase policies for Mr Ong and his wife, without their knowledge and consent.

In purchasing those policies, Low submitted forged documents to AIA.

In January 2005, Low lied that AIA computers had crashed and informed Mr Ong that his name was mistakenly used to buy a particular policy,

valued at S$5 million.

She told Mr Ong he had to pay AIA for the principal sum of about S$5.3 million but he could keep the profit of some S$887,000.

He did, and he issued a cheque to Low.

After getting her hands on the money, Low transferred the sum to the bank account of a company registered in the British Virgin Islands.

Court documents state the account is beneficially owned by Low.

Low's deception came to light between late 2007 and 2008, when Mr Ong decided to reinvest the money and returns in a new "AIA Thank You" policy.

He contacted AIA directly and discovered Low's plot.

AIA suspected that Low might have cheated Mr Ong and made a police report.

Low has since been declared a bankrupt.

Her case will be mentioned again in two weeks.

- CNA/nd
 
This is Sally Low Ai Ming...................

581425.jpg
 
i noticed a lot of commercial crimes committed by women on a whole, are either spinsters or over aged women who are not married. they lack some balance in their character, and really in need of sex...very badly...
 
i noticed a lot of commercial crimes committed by women on a whole, are either spinsters or over aged women who are not married. they lack some balance in their character, and really in need of sex...very badly...

here's your opportunity of creating a door to door sextisfaction business. :o
 
How come thru the years I am getting the feeling that..

Sinkie have all becum cheaters and when caught would plead mental problem this and that?
 
this is just a trick to get off the hook or at least leniently...:eek:

How come thru the years I am getting the feeling that..

Sinkie have all becum cheaters and when caught would plead mental problem this and that?
 
This is Sally Low Ai Ming...................

View attachment 13283



This is truly a sad case. In her yesteryears she was a go-getter, full of drive and enthusiasm. She would stand at bustling streets in joo chiat, lavender, marina bay, and do cold pick-ups right on the spot. If you're a guy she can even corner you all the way to a small alley and sell you insurance right there and then.

She was so good she made it to MDRT within first couple of years, and shortly thereafter, Top of the Table (TOT). Her mummy Chen Ming Li was damn proud of her. CML herself was a star, if not THE star in AIA, with world-renowned track record, with many years MDRT/TOT under her brown leather belt. Sally was her star pupil needless to say.

In those heydays, Sally would be pimping policies out in the hot sun, and customers will be falling by her feet like mown wheat, whilst mummy Li would be entertaining high society guests from the world over in posh hotels, raking in business like a bulldozer ploughing through a field of maize.

I guess greed gets to many people and Sally was not spared because of the tremendous pressure and expectations placed on her due to her initial success in life. Sometimes young people cannot handle that sudden burst of success so early in life and the pressure to continue and exceed previous performance can be so overwhelming that they start to look for shortcuts. I guess that's what may have happened to Sally.
 
This is truly a sad case. In her yesteryears she was a go-getter, full of drive and enthusiasm. She would stand at bustling streets in joo chiat, lavender, marina bay, and do cold pick-ups right on the spot. If you're a guy she can even corner you all the way to a small alley and sell you insurance right there and then.

She was so good she made it to MDRT within first couple of years, and shortly thereafter, Top of the Table (TOT). Her mummy Chen Ming Li was damn proud of her. CML herself was a star, if not THE star in AIA, with world-renowned track record, with many years MDRT/TOT under her brown leather belt. Sally was her star pupil needless to say.

In those heydays, Sally would be pimping policies out in the hot sun, and customers will be falling by her feet like mown wheat, whilst mummy Li would be entertaining high society guests from the world over in posh hotels, raking in business like a bulldozer ploughing through a field of maize.

I guess greed gets to many people and Sally was not spared because of the tremendous pressure and expectations placed on her due to her initial success in life. Sometimes young people cannot handle that sudden burst of success so early in life and the pressure to continue and exceed previous performance can be so overwhelming that they start to look for shortcuts. I guess that's what may have happened to Sally.

Write a whole lot of crap excuses for her having to resort to criminal behavior.

You must as well work for CPF board and convince all the peasants that they are NOT being conned out right!
 
Write a whole lot of crap excuses for her having to resort to criminal behavior.

You must as well work for CPF board and convince all the peasants that they are NOT being conned out right!



Bro cut her some slack. I've seen many such cases. She's been duly punished.

Anyway what's this allegedly rich Indonesian businessman doing buying a nonexisting policy from her? A person who can buy a $5 million dollar policy ought to be smart enough to do his own diligence, unless of course his mind was focussed on something else ...
 
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