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Showing posts with label Body. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Body. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

The body of Murder Victims Found In Bags

Unknown | 2:11 AM | | | | Best Blogger Tips







KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 6: The body of a foreign women who are believed to bemurder victims found in a suitcase in a cheap hotel in Jalan Raja Laut, here last night.

Incident occurred at about 11.30 pm when the hotel manager discovered a suitcaseleft in front of the rented room of a foreign man.

Suspicious of the discovery, hotel managers involved in trying to check the luggage, however, surprised to find that it contains the body of a woman before contactingpolice.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Burnt body in Ampang that of college student, body identified

Unknown | 1:58 AM | | | | | Best Blogger Tips



KUALA LUMPUR: Police have confirmed that the body of a woman with 80 per cent burns in Kampung Lembah Jaya Utara, Ampang belonged to a 19-year-old college student.

Ampang Jaya police chief ACP Amiruddin Jamaluddin said the confirmation was made possible after the victim's father identified the body at UKM Medical Centre here.
"The father lodged a report at the Setapak police station two days ago stating that the victim is his daughter who had gone missing for five days.
"He lodged the report after reading news reports on the case and information about the gold bracelet, tiny gold earrings and the remains of the baju kurung worn by the victim," ACP Amiruddin told reporters.
He said the father claimed that his daughter left home to meet a friend. "The victim is a student of a private college in Selayang and police are questioning all her friends to track down the suspect," he said. 

Friday, June 24, 2011

Schoolgirl rakes in more than $12,000 by selling body

Unknown | 6:45 PM | | | | | | | | Best Blogger Tips


The girl is reportedly among many students who use Facebook during the holidays to earn money to buy luxury items.



A SECONDARY school student made RM30,000 (S$12,219) during the year-end school break last year by prostituting herself, China Press reported.

It said the student from Kuala Lumpur charged customers RM250 to RM800 each so that she could indulge in luxury items.

“I have sex at least five times a day. However, I take a week’s break each month,” she told the paper.
The girl said she was cutting down on her sexual services this year as she wanted to prepare for the SPM examinations.

According to the daily, the girl was among many students who used Facebook to earn money through sex and buy luxury items they covet and one even said she had listed her sex service on a website to earn money to buy an iPhone.

Most of them were from Johor Baru, Malacca, Kuala Lumpur and Penang.

Customers are asked to pay up to RM300 per session and RM600 if the customer wanted an overnight sex session.

The paper reported that the girls charged RM3,000 if their custo-mers wanted to have them for a month.

It also said the girls offered telephone sex at RM150 per call and sent a photograph of them in the nude through the mobile phone for RM10 per copy.

The paper’s reporter contacted one of the girls through SMS and Internet messaging service by posing as a customer.

Some girls used Facebook to cheat potential customers – they stopped using their Facebook accounts after getting money from potential customers.

The paper passed on the information it had gathered on the sex service to the Johor police.

The police said they would investigate the matter.


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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Biker's body stuck under car for an hour

Unknown | 12:30 AM | | | | | | | Best Blogger Tips



HE LOVED motorbikes and had been riding one since his polytechnic days.
He used to take pictures of the different motorbikes he owned and post them on his Facebook page.


Mr Ang Chee Peng, 26, was doing what he loved most on Thursday night.
He was riding along Upper East Coast Road when he was involved in an accident with a car.

The driver of the car was making a U-turn towards East Coast Road to pick up his wife and daughter at a bus stop at the time, reported Shin Min Daily News.

Mr Ang was flung from his sports motorbike and ended up pinned under the car.


The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) received a call at 8.38pm and dispatched two fire engines, two fire bikes, an ambulance and two support vehicles to the scene.

When the SCDF officers arrived, Mr Ang, who had serious injuries, no longer had a pulse, the report said.

He was still trapped under the car when paramedics pronounced him dead around 9.30pm.

Some 20 officers took about an hour to extract the body from under the car. They used two airbags and a hydraulic spreader to lift the car to gain access to the body.

The driver of the car, who is in his early 50s, has been arrested for causing death by a rash act and is out on bail.

Mr Ang's motorbike skidded 50m from the accident site. His sports shoes were found 100m away, reported Shin Min Daily News.

One of the headlights of the car fell off and part of the car's body was damaged, the report said.


IN SHOCK

The driver, his wife and his daughter were seen standing by the roadside looking troubled and in shock.

According to the Chinese daily, the driver said he has high blood pressure.

His wife was heard crying and telling her daughter repeatedly: "I've caused trouble to your father. I shouldn't have asked him to come to pick us up."

When The New Paper went to Mr Ang's wake at Marine Terrace yesterday evening, members of his family were teary-eyed.

His mother, clad in a white top and black pants, was heard crying mournfully near his coffin. When approached, they declined to be interviewed.

A relative, who did not want to be identified, said Mr Ang was single.

His friends, some dressed in black, were seen arriving in different groups throughout the evening.

Some of them had studied with him at Temasek Polytechnic. They described him as someone who was "laid-back, outgoing and friendly".

One of them, who wanted to be known only as Jonathan, 25, said: "We've never seen him get angry. He's a good-natured and helpful person."

Mr Ang majored in Internet Computing at Temasek Polytechnic and later worked in the information technology (IT) industry.

A coursemate, Mr Rustin Neo, 25, an IT trainer, said that Mr Ang was a year older than them and the only one with his own transport.

Mr Neo said: "He changed his motorbike quite often."

(From left) SCDF personnel extracting Mr Ang Chee Peng's body from under the car. Undertakers removing Mr Ang's body.
When asked how Mr Ang acquired his bikes, he said: "He's the kind who would save up and won't ask parents for money."

During their polytechnic days, they used to play online games together, said Mr Neo.

"We didn't go out riding as I'm not a motorbike lover."

Mr Ang might have made other friends after they graduated in 2006, Mr Neo said.

"After graduation, we went our separate ways and we seldom met up. We knew about his passing today via an SMS.

"His brother went through his handphone and sent SMSes to all his friends on his phonebook. Among us, we spread the news around," he added.

When asked what Mr Ang was like as a rider, Mr Neo hesitated before replying: "He put on his helmet and rode like most riders.

"He looked like he was a careful rider."

Mr Ang's mother was overheard saying in Mandarin to his polytechnic friends who asked how she was coping: "I won't be okay. He's still my flesh."

She then advised them: "Before you do anything, you must consider your parents."

Mr Ang lived with his parents, elder brother and younger sister in a Marine Terrace flat. They have been living there for the past two years.

His parents have a stall at a nearby market and they always reminded Mr Ang to ride safely, Shin Min reported.

Police investigations are continuing.





Monday, June 20, 2011

Children of murdered M'sian man fly to Papau to claim body

Unknown | 2:42 AM | | | | | | | | Best Blogger Tips


Children of murdered M'sian man fly to Papau to claim body
Department store general manager Wong Tee Tee was driving his Toyota sport utility vehicle in Port Moresby when a group of unidentified men shot at his car at close range.
The 63-year-old Malaysian, who had lived in the Papua New Guinea capital for 20 years, was killed Wednesday.
His two children, who live in Singapore, are flying there Saturday to identify and collect his body.
It is not known why Wong was killed, but the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary's acting deputy commissioner, Fred Yakasa, said that he believes the incident was planned and organised by 'non-Papua New Guineans'.
"It is similar in nature to the attempted murder of another Asian businessman," he said in a statement.
"I assume that there is some level of organised crime syndicate at play somewhere. We do not have the evidence to prove this at this point in time, but I am confident we will in the near future."
The Straits Times understands that Wong married a Singaporean in 1978 and has two grown-up children - a daughter and a son - in Singapore.
When contacted, his son - who wanted to be known only as Ng - asked for privacy and declined to comment on his father and their relationship.
It was unclear when Wong last contacted his family, but his sudden death set off a mad scramble by his friends to contact his next-of-kin.
One of them, Cliff Poh, posted an advertisement in The Straits Times Friday asking to get in touch with Wong's children in Singapore.
The Singaporean, who has business dealings in Papua New Guinea, said he managed to reach Wong's son and daughter yesterday, and will be accompanying them to the Pacific island Saturday.
Papua New Guinea has a sizeable community of Malaysians.
Last year, a similar attempt was made on the life of Malaysian businessman Jason Tan. Two Chinese nationals were later arrested and charged with attempted murder in that case.






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