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[Singapore] - Remember Felicia Teo, the teenage girl who went missing at Marine Parade in 2007? Today in Dec 2020, they just found her murderers!

UltimaOnline

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Today, the Singapore Police Force finally solved the 13 year old murder of Felicia Teo! Turns out these 2 men (one of them outside Singapore currently still at large) murdered her.

https://sg.yahoo.com/news/man-charged-murder-felicia-teo-teen-vanished-064036701.html

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SINGAPORE — A 35-year-old man has been charged for his suspected involvement in the murder of a 19-year-old student who went missing more than a decade ago.

The fate of Felicia Teo Wei Ling, who went missing in 2007, was finally revealed on Thursday (17 December) when Singaporean Ahmad Danial Mohamed Rafa’ee appeared in court via videolink.

He was charged with murdering Teo with common intention with another man, 32-year-old Ragil Putra Setia Sukmarahjana. Both men were the last people to see Teo alive, according to past media reports.

According to the charge sheet, the murder took place between 1.39am and 7.20am on 30 June 2007 – the day of her disappearance – at a flat in Block 19 Marine Terrace. No details were given on how the crime was carried out.

The two men are also believed to have disposed of Teo’s body, which the police are currently still searching for. Ragil is not in Singapore and the police are attempting to locate him.

Ahmad, who goes by the name Danial Enemiko in his social media accounts, is listed as a Creative Manager at Razer a Singapore-founded electronics company, since April this year.

Ahmad’s LinkedIn page states that he studied at Lasalle College of the Arts - same as Teo - from 2000 to 2004. He specialised in Communication Design and Advertising there.

Ahmad, who appeared bespectacled and dressed in a grey shirt with his hair loose, is currently on medical leave and will continue to be remanded after it ends. The prosecution applied to have him taken out for investigations during his remand period. He will return to court on 24 December.

The case so far
According to a police press release, Teo was last seen on 30 June 2007 at Ragil’s flat along Marine Terrace. Past media reports said she visited the flat following a party at the LaSalle College of the Arts campus.

Ragil and Ahmad, who was also at the flat, both reportedly said that Teo left the home in a huff at around 2am after they complained about her mobile phone’s jarring ringtone.

The police said that officers interviewed Ragil and Ahmad after Teo was reported missing by her mother on 3 July 2007. The men claimed that Teo had left the flat of her own volition and no incriminating evidence was found after a search of the flat.

While CCTV footage captured Teo entering a lift at Ragil’s block with two men to go up, it did not catch her leaving the 10th floor flat. Searches conducted by family and friends also turned up fruitless.

As the police did not find any evidence linking Ragil and Ahmad to Teo’s disappearance, the case was classified as a missing persons case and a police gazette was issued to locate her. A property gazette was also issued for properties believed to be in her possession when she was reported missing.

The police then carried out regular reviews of the case but no fresh leads turned up during checks of her bank accounts, social media accounts, travel records and e-mails, or from interviews with family members.

During the police’s most recent review in July this year, the case was referred to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) due to the length of time it had remained unresolved.

While tracing the properties believed to be in Teo’s possession, the CID managed to uncover new leads. Investigations also revealed that Teo had died before her mother lodged the police report.

Ahmad was arrested on Tuesday. If found guilty of murder, he potentially faces the death penalty.

https://sg.yahoo.com/news/man-charged-murder-felicia-teo-teen-vanished-064036701.html
 
Last edited:

Scrooball (clone)

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DUH!

CCTV show girl taking lift up. Never show her coming down. Didn't suspect the 2 idiot friends who went up with her?!

Only Singapore Poodle Force can be so gong cheebyes! I bet if they re-open all the cold cases now, sure can solve all the crimes.

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Scrooball (clone)

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Felicia Teo murder case: What’s known about the suspects so far
By DARYL CHOO
Published DECEMBER 17, 2020
Updated DECEMBER 17, 2020
358 SHARES

https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/felicia-teo-murder-case-whats-known-about-suspects-so-far

Social Media
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Ahmad Danial Mohamed Rafa’ee (left) and Ragil Putra Setia Sukmarahjana (right) are the two suspects identified in the alleged murder of 19-year-old Felicia Teo Wei Ling who went missing 13 years ago.

SINGAPORE — The two suspects identified in the alleged murder of 19-year-old Felicia Teo Wei Ling, who went missing 13 years ago, are Ahmad Danial Mohamed Rafa’ee and Ragil Putra Setia Sukmarahjana.All three had attended the Lasalle College of the Arts, based on the two suspects’ social media accounts. A close friend of Teo’s, who declined to be named, told TODAY on Thursday (Dec 17) that Ragil and Teo, who were about the same age, first got to know each other in Lasalle. Ragil later introduced her to Ahmad, who was a few years older.A bespectacled Ahmad, 35, was charged via video link on Thursday with murdering Teo, after new leads in police investigations surfaced this year.

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Clad in a grey T-shirt and sporting unkempt hair, he appeared expressionless when the charge was read to him.The police are searching for 32-year-old Ragil.Ahmad Danial Mohamed Rafa’ee, 35, appeared in court via a video link. He was clad in a grey T-shirt and sported unkempt hair. Illustration: Anam Musta'ein/TODAY

Based on the charge sheet, the pair are accused of murdering Teo in a Housing and Development Board flat at Block 19 Marine Terrace between 1.39am and 7.20am on June 30, 2007.

TODAY reported in 2007 that Teo had gone to the flat after a party at Lasalle, where she was studying for a diploma in fine art.Ahmad, who goes by the name Danial Enemiko on his social media accounts, studied for a diploma in communication design and advertising at Lasalle from 2000 to 2004, based on his LinkedIn page.The two men’s LinkedIn and Facebook pages, seen by TODAY on Thursday morning, went offline later in the day.Ahmad was listed on his LinkedIn page as a creative manager at gaming firm Razer.

When contacted by TODAY on Thursday, a Razer spokesperson confirmed his employment and said that the company will provide assistance to the authorities if needed.Ahmad, who was arrested on Tuesday, will be held at the Tanglin and Central police divisions and will return to court on Dec 24.Ragil’s LinkedIn page stated that he graduated from Lasalle in 2011 with an honours degree in video art. He studied there from 2006 to 2011.

14-year-old charged with murdering 49-year-old fatherHe has held various filmmaking jobs based in Jakarta, Indonesia and was last listed as a director’s assistant on his LinkedIn page.Teo’s family has requested privacy following Ahmad’s arrest.In an interview with TODAY in July 2007, almost a month after Teo went missing, her mother Jennifer Tai said that they tried looking for her in various parts of Singapore as well as in Johor Baru across the Causeway.The family had retrieved Teo’s phone records from Singtel, which showed the last text message sent from her mobile phone was at 2.37am to an unidentified male friend on the day she disappeared.

Ms Vicki Yong, an ex-classmate of Teo’s at the now-defunct Monk's Hill Secondary School, said that she received the news about her close friend’s alleged murder with a heavy heart.“I guess we were all hoping that maybe if we never hear from her again, at least she might be happy somewhere else, although we were extremely sure it was not a runaway case,” the 32-year-old educator said. “But there was still that hope, you know?”
Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/felicia-teo-murder-case-whats-known-about-suspects-so-far
 

Scrooball (clone)

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No body no case.

There was the infamous Sunny Ang case whereby he was convicted even though the body was not found.

https://www.asiaone.com/singapore/sunny-ang-and-perfect-murder

Sunny Ang and 'the perfect murder'
FEBRUARY 24, 2015PUBLISHED AT 6:30 AMByHOE PEI SHANTHE STRAITS TIMES
Sunnyang_main.jpg


It appeared to be the perfect murder - there were no witnesses, and there was not even a body.
Yet, one-time Grand Prix driver Sunny Ang was sentenced to hang for killing his barmaid girlfriend, Ms Jenny Cheok.

It appeared to be the perfect murder - there were no witnesses, and there was not even a body.

Yet, one-time Grand Prix driver Sunny Ang was sentenced to hang for killing his barmaid girlfriend, Ms Jenny Cheok.


One of Singapore's most sensational murder cases, it marked the first time the prosecution had won a case that was based entirely on circumstantial evidence.

Ang was one of the last murderers to be sent to the gallows by a jury; Singapore abolished jury trials in 1969.

This week in 1965, the preliminary inquiry for the case was heard, and the court was told that Ang stood to gain some $400,000 from the death of his girlfriend.

They had met in 1963 at the bar where she worked. She was 22 and he, 24.

Ang came from a middle-class background and had been selected to train as a pilot under a government scholarship programme, but his poor conduct during training cost him that dream.

He took part in the 1961 Grand Prix, but landed in trouble later for killing a pedestrian through negligent driving, and attempted burglary. He was also declared a bankrupt.

Ms Cheok was a single mother of two who had not finished primary school.


On Aug 27, 1963, the couple went on a diving trip near Sisters' Islands and Ms Cheok disappeared.

Her body was never found.

All that was left was a single flipper she had worn, and its heel strap was found to have been severed cleanly at the top and bottom, likely by a knife or razor blade.

An expert witness would tell Ang's trial that the loss of the flipper would have resulted in a diver's loss of equilibrium and affected the person's mobility.

As an inexperienced diver, Ms Cheok would have panicked and drowned in the strong currents.

Ang, a skilled diver, stood to gain from the payouts of insurance policies he had begun buying for her two months before the dive trip.

He also had a will drawn up in which she left her entire estate to his mother.

In one piece of circumstantial evidence, it was revealed that an insurance policy worth about $150,000 had expired on the day before the diving trip, but Ang extended it just three hours before they got on the boat.

When Ms Cheok failed to surface after her dive, Ang did not seem worried and did not enter the water to look for her.

Within 24 hours, he tried to make full insurance claims.

In May 1965, Ang was sentenced to hang after the jury turned in a unanimous guilty verdict.

The prosecution was led by Mr Francis Seow, who went on to become solicitor-general and an opposition politician.

Ang was defended by Mr Punch Coomaraswamy, who later became a high court judge and diplomat.

Ang failed in his appeal and plea for clemency, and was hanged on Feb 6, 1967.
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
There was the infamous Sunny Ang case whereby he was convicted even though the body was not found.

https://www.asiaone.com/singapore/sunny-ang-and-perfect-murder

Sunny Ang and 'the perfect murder'
FEBRUARY 24, 2015PUBLISHED AT 6:30 AMByHOE PEI SHANTHE STRAITS TIMES
Sunnyang_main.jpg


It appeared to be the perfect murder - there were no witnesses, and there was not even a body.
Yet, one-time Grand Prix driver Sunny Ang was sentenced to hang for killing his barmaid girlfriend, Ms Jenny Cheok.

It appeared to be the perfect murder - there were no witnesses, and there was not even a body.

Yet, one-time Grand Prix driver Sunny Ang was sentenced to hang for killing his barmaid girlfriend, Ms Jenny Cheok.


One of Singapore's most sensational murder cases, it marked the first time the prosecution had won a case that was based entirely on circumstantial evidence.

Ang was one of the last murderers to be sent to the gallows by a jury; Singapore abolished jury trials in 1969.

This week in 1965, the preliminary inquiry for the case was heard, and the court was told that Ang stood to gain some $400,000 from the death of his girlfriend.

They had met in 1963 at the bar where she worked. She was 22 and he, 24.

Ang came from a middle-class background and had been selected to train as a pilot under a government scholarship programme, but his poor conduct during training cost him that dream.

He took part in the 1961 Grand Prix, but landed in trouble later for killing a pedestrian through negligent driving, and attempted burglary. He was also declared a bankrupt.

Ms Cheok was a single mother of two who had not finished primary school.


On Aug 27, 1963, the couple went on a diving trip near Sisters' Islands and Ms Cheok disappeared.

Her body was never found.

All that was left was a single flipper she had worn, and its heel strap was found to have been severed cleanly at the top and bottom, likely by a knife or razor blade.

An expert witness would tell Ang's trial that the loss of the flipper would have resulted in a diver's loss of equilibrium and affected the person's mobility.

As an inexperienced diver, Ms Cheok would have panicked and drowned in the strong currents.

Ang, a skilled diver, stood to gain from the payouts of insurance policies he had begun buying for her two months before the dive trip.

He also had a will drawn up in which she left her entire estate to his mother.

In one piece of circumstantial evidence, it was revealed that an insurance policy worth about $150,000 had expired on the day before the diving trip, but Ang extended it just three hours before they got on the boat.

When Ms Cheok failed to surface after her dive, Ang did not seem worried and did not enter the water to look for her.

Within 24 hours, he tried to make full insurance claims.

In May 1965, Ang was sentenced to hang after the jury turned in a unanimous guilty verdict.

The prosecution was led by Mr Francis Seow, who went on to become solicitor-general and an opposition politician.

Ang was defended by Mr Punch Coomaraswamy, who later became a high court judge and diplomat.

Ang failed in his appeal and plea for clemency, and was hanged on Feb 6, 1967.
This crime the perpetrator was too obvious. He should have waited.
This is similar to Thaksin abolishing taxes for the sale of his company to temasek. Thaksin could have waited for say one year before selling but he had to sell the company the day after parliament approve the abolishment.
 

gingerlyn

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
@syed putra pls share with us the murderer is belong to which group of Malay Muslim ? Are they pure Malay or kacang puteh without strong Muslim belief ? Do they attend Friday mosque session regularly ?
 
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