- Joined
- Jul 24, 2008
- Messages
- 33,627
- Points
- 0
Online posting case: Appeal for jail term [h=2]Prosecution says offender intended to incite violence, so fine not enough[/h]
Published on Jun 30, 2012
<IFRAME style="WIDTH: 55px; HEIGHT: 62px" class="twitter-share-button twitter-count-vertical" title="Twitter Tweet Button" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.1340179658.html#_=1341033002148&count=vertical&id=twitter-widget-0&lang=en&original_referer=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.straitstimes.com%2FBreakingNews%2FSingapore%2FStory%2FSTIStory_816942.html&size=m&text=Online%20posting%20case%3A%20Appeal%20for%20jail%20term&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.straitstimes.com%2FBreakingNews%2FSingapore%2FStory%2FSTIStory_816942.html" frameBorder=0 allowTransparency scrolling=no></IFRAME>
4Share
<g:plusone></g:plusone>
Purchase this article for republication
Buy SPH photos
<!--close .storyLeft--><!--start of story image, if any-->
Gary Yue was fined $6,000 for an online posting that the prosecution says was intended to incite violence. -- ST PHOTO: WONG KWAI CHOW
<!--end of story image, if any--><!-- storyAds:start -->
<!-- storyAds:end -->By SELINA LUM
<!--start of story text-->The prosecution on Friday appealed to the High Court to jail a man who had put up an online posting carrying an incitement to violence.
In the first case of its kind, Gary Yue Mun Yew, 36, a former engineer, had been fined $6,000 in March. He had posted a comment on the Facebook wall of sociopolitical platform Temasek Review on National Day in 2010.
In his posting was a link to a YouTube video depicting the assassination of former Egyptian president Anwar Sadat with the comment 'We should re-enact a live version of this on our grandstand during our national's (sic) parade!!!!!!'.
A district judge had found Yue guilty and fined him even though the prosecutors had pressed for a jail term. The judge concluded that Yue's intention was to seek attention rather than incite violence when he made the posting.
[h=5]TO READ THE FULL STORY...[/h]Log in Subscribe
NEXT STORY: Find the best fit, not the best school, for your child
Published on Jun 30, 2012
<IFRAME style="WIDTH: 55px; HEIGHT: 62px" class="twitter-share-button twitter-count-vertical" title="Twitter Tweet Button" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.1340179658.html#_=1341033002148&count=vertical&id=twitter-widget-0&lang=en&original_referer=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.straitstimes.com%2FBreakingNews%2FSingapore%2FStory%2FSTIStory_816942.html&size=m&text=Online%20posting%20case%3A%20Appeal%20for%20jail%20term&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.straitstimes.com%2FBreakingNews%2FSingapore%2FStory%2FSTIStory_816942.html" frameBorder=0 allowTransparency scrolling=no></IFRAME>
4Share
<g:plusone></g:plusone>
0
inShare
inShare


<!--close .storyLeft--><!--start of story image, if any-->

<!--end of story image, if any--><!-- storyAds:start -->

<!-- storyAds:end -->By SELINA LUM
<!--start of story text-->The prosecution on Friday appealed to the High Court to jail a man who had put up an online posting carrying an incitement to violence.
In the first case of its kind, Gary Yue Mun Yew, 36, a former engineer, had been fined $6,000 in March. He had posted a comment on the Facebook wall of sociopolitical platform Temasek Review on National Day in 2010.
In his posting was a link to a YouTube video depicting the assassination of former Egyptian president Anwar Sadat with the comment 'We should re-enact a live version of this on our grandstand during our national's (sic) parade!!!!!!'.
A district judge had found Yue guilty and fined him even though the prosecutors had pressed for a jail term. The judge concluded that Yue's intention was to seek attention rather than incite violence when he made the posting.
[h=5]TO READ THE FULL STORY...[/h]Log in Subscribe
NEXT STORY: Find the best fit, not the best school, for your child