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  Air stewardess accused of cheating bag lovers of $500,000 in online scam
Posted by: pianist - 21-06-2014, 11:29 PM - Forum: Others - No Replies

AsiaOne

Saturday, Jun 21, 2014


SINGAPORE - A 30-year-old air stewardess has been reportedly selling designer bags online and convincing customers to pay an initial deposit - only to never actually sell the bags.

Some victims have lodged police reports, while others have gone to the Small Claims Tribunals with for a total sum as high as $500,000.

Lianhe Wanbao reported that since last October, there have been several Internet users claiming to have been scammed in a similar manner.

One of the victims, who uses the online nickname of Pinkmama85, agreed to share her side of the story. The 29-year old woman said that in July last year, she came across the stewardess' online offer of selling designer bags at a discounted price. Taken in by the offer, she placed an order for five bags and transferred $30,000 to the stewardess' bank account.

Later in September, she received a bag from the stewardess worth $15,000. Attempts to contact the stewardess on the other bags were either brushed off or ignored. In November, the seller became uncontactable.

She later learned that she was not the only victim when online research unveiled other victims. One of them told her that she had lost $10,000 to the scammer.

Not wanting others to fall prey to the purported scam, some of the victims have uploaded and shared a photo of the stewardess online, hoping that other victims might come forward too.

The uploaded photo shows a sweet-looking air stewardess in her uniform.

Lianhe Wanbao reported that it is common for flight attendants to leverage on their business trips abroad to purchase brand name products at cheaper prices for others. With designer bags easily costing three to four thousand dollars each, selling them back in Singapore allows these attendants to earn a commission on these purchases.

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  Two jailed for cheating elderly of $440K
Posted by: Lancelot - 21-06-2014, 02:56 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (1)

http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapo...k-20140619

SINGAPORE - Two Chinese nationals who were part of a group of five who cheated two elderly folk of their life savings, amounting to nearly $440,000, were jailed on Thursday. Li Lianying, 50, was given four years and 10 months on two charges, while Li Peng, 45, was jailed for three years and five months on one count. They had admitted to scheming with Li Cai Hong, 45, Li Lian Ying, 40, and Li Tu Wang, 43, to deceiving Madam Goh Kah Keow, 72, of cash and jewellery totalling $401,450 at Roxy Square in East Coast Road on Nov 20 last year. They had also cheated Madam Chua Peck Har, 66, of cash and jewellery totalling $37,550 at People's Park Complex on Nov 19. - See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapo...ZpCnr.dpuf

Are these 2 on social visit pass or they are PR here ?

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  Woman caught urinating in Pinnacle lift
Posted by: pianist - 21-06-2014, 07:18 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (26)

seems like quite a number of stressed residents in hot sg?
does town council has to put up a warning sign that the lift is under survelliance, in this case dunno whether there is an outrage in a woman's modesty bo?

Clement Yap
The New Paper
Saturday, Jun 21, 2014

SINGAPORE - At 8.22pm on May 23, a woman steps into Lift E at Block 1E in The Pinnacle@Duxton. She is alone.

She squats down. When she gets up, there is a pool of urine of the floor.

This indiscretion was captured by the closed-circuit television camera in the lift. Residents were appalled.

It professional Dennis Kwan, 40, said: "I was surprised and shocked. I have been living here for four years and this is the first time this has happened.

"The fact that it is an adult is even more astonishing. I would have expected the culprit to be a pet or a child.

"Those of us living on the higher floors had to hold our breath all the way down."

Dr Irene Sim, a 32-year-old dentist whose husband came across the pool of urine, said: "I thought it was from a pet.

"Pinnacle is a nice estate and this shouldn't happen here. The lift was sticky and the stench persisted."

Financial services consultant Clara Tan, 25, said her extended family was complaining about the stench, which lasted about a week. "There are public toilets in the nearby coffee shops. There must be something wrong with her - a mature adult - to do this. I avoided that particular lift after that."

The Tanjong Pagar Town Council later put up posters with caught two screengrabs of the CCTV footage. They showed the woman from the back.

Mentioning how the incident had "caused much inconvenience to the residents", the posters, which are in English and Chinese, "encourage all residents to take ownership of the common property".

The town council's public relations manager Shirley Aloysius said the Lift Surveillance System (LSS) was in place to deter crime and anti-social behaviour.

The aim of the posters was to seek help identifying the culprit as well as to deter such cases, she added.

Although the culprit has not been caught, the urination in the lift has stopped since the posters were put up.

Such images may be sent as evidence to the National Environmental Agency for prosecution, The Straits Times reported last year.

Those caught urinating in public places can be fined up to $150 under the Environmental Public Health Act. Recalcitrant offenders may be charged in court.

MP for Tanjong Pagar GRC, Dr Lily Neo, told The New Paper yesterday that the residents find such behaviour annoying.

"There were a few complaints in May by residents. The town council only follows through on complaints when there are quite a few of them. Only then do we check the CCTV footage," she said.

It is not known if the woman was responsible for the other incidents.

PROBLEMS

Dr Neo added: "We had problems stopping the urination in the lift.

"Only when we have no choice do we publish a picture in the hope that somebody would own up.

"This was not a case of elderly people who could not control themselves. She did it on purpose.

"It was not our intention to shame anybody, which is why we don't show their faces. We are just trying to solve residents' problems. "We want to raise awareness and hope whoever is responsible will own up quickly.

"We want to be gracious and kind and not try to shame."

Dr Neo recalled a previous incident where a similar poster prompted the culprit, a 15-year-old boy, to own up and apologise.

PREVIOUS INCIDENT

Last year, the Tampines Town Council put up notices with images of two culprits taken from closed-circuit television footage after several complaints by residents at Block 366, Tampines Street 34.

One of the pictures showed the back view of a man smoking in a lift at about 5am on Jan 14.

The other showed a bare-bottomed woman squatting and, it is believed, urinating at around noon on Jan 15.

The images were blurred.

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  How to be 1st in queue?
Posted by: Jacmar - 19-06-2014, 02:06 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (14)

I have been queuing for weeks to sell a stock. although the stock price that I asked has been hit on many days but yet my sell is not executed as I am always behind many others ahead of me even though I keyed in to sell the day before after the mkt closed. anybody got any suggestions? my broker is KE and DBSv.

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  Angela Merkel loves her football
Posted by: BlueKelah - 19-06-2014, 10:46 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (2)

Was quite surprised when I saw her in the stands the other day. Looks like the economic issues back in Europe will have to take a backseat for a while...

Angela Merkel Germany Fan

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  Who is Morph Investments?
Posted by: BlueKelah - 18-06-2014, 08:06 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (6)

Just something interesting I thought of asking whilst waiting for the match between AU and Netherlands. Most of you should have heard about this company and their deep value holdings.

Anyone with any idea? Is this a private fund or a individual? anyway to find out who this company is registered to?

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  A simple program to download historical stock price and update Excel
Posted by: gzbkel - 18-06-2014, 07:23 PM - Forum: Others - No Replies

I wrote a simple application to calculate volume-weighted average stock price for multiple quarters and populate an Excel file.
I use it to calculate historical PE, dividend yield and so on.
I would like to share it in case anyone else finds this useful.

*Requires Excel 2010 or 2013*

Your excel file must follow this format:
- Each column stores information about one period (Quarter, half-year, etc).
- Columns must be ordered from most recent (left) to oldest (right).
- You need a row named "Period End Date" that contains the end date of the period in dd/MM/yyyy format. Row number does not matter.
- You need an row named "Historical Price". The tool will update this row. Row number does not matter.

See \TestTool\Sample\C38U.xlsx for an example. (Required rows highlighted in blue)
*Excel files downloaded from DBS Vickers Clarity already satisfy the first three conditions, so you only need to add an empty "Historical Price" row somewhere.

To use:
1) Download the ZIP file and extract somewhere on your PC.
2) Double-click <unzip folder>\TestTool\bin\Debug\TestTool.exe.
3) In the [Symbol] box, type in the stock symbol without ".SI". Currently only works on SGX-listed stocks.
4) In the [Fin report offset], type in the approx. number of days the company usually releases the financial reports after the end of the period.
The purpose is to adjust the period to get price average after quarterly reports have been priced in.
You can leave it as 0 if you can't be bothered.
5) In the [Excel filepath] box, paste the path of your excel file to update. For demo, use \TestTool\Sample\C38U.xlsx.
6) Click [Go] to update the excel file. A message box appears when update is complete.
7) Click [Open].

Some notes:
1) The program helps you to backup the excel file before modifying it. (You can also backup yourself for double safety)
2) Tool tries to get stock price data from both yahoo and google. The website with more data is used.
3) Price calculated is the volume-weighted average for the period. Formula is:
Sum of ((Low+High)/2 x Volume) for all days in the period/Total volume in the period.
The period is offset by the value you type in [Fin report offset].
For example, if [Fin report offset] is set to 20 and the period is 2014/1/1 to 2014/3/31, resultant period will be 2014/1/21 - 2013/4/20.
4) Tool currently only updates first sheet in the Excel.

The software is provided "as is", without warranty of any kind.
Let me know if you have suggestions or find bugs.
Source code is included so feel free to customize if you are familar with C#.



Attached Files
.zip   TestTool.zip (Size: 1.26 MB / Downloads: 22)
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  Staff suspended after $5 million goes missing from co-op's accounts
Posted by: Lancelot - 14-06-2014, 07:11 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (3)

SINGAPORE - The Singapore Statutory Boards Employees' Co-operative Thrift and Loan Society said that it has suspended two staff after discovering in October last year that they had misappropriated the co-operative's funds. About $5 million has been reported missing from its accounts. Police confirmed on Friday that a report had been lodged and said they are looking into the matter. Members of the co-op were informed of the missing funds at its annual general meeting on Saturday morning at the Singapore Khalsa Association. - See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapo...wlXUR.dpuf

http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapo...o-ops-acco

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  Catherine Lim - A Follow-up on the letter to PM Lee
Posted by: Lancelot - 14-06-2014, 09:23 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (28)

In the past week, my open letter to the PM generated tremendous interest not only on my website but on other media sites as well. Since I could not respond personally to all those who took the trouble to write in, but would like to answer the questions asked and the comments made, whether supportive or critical, I have decided to make a general response on my website. I shall use the format of a hypothetical interview based on a brisk Q and A, as this will make for quick and easy reading.

Q: Has the PM replied to your letter to him?
A: No. An open letter doesn’t normally elicit a reply which a private, personal one presumably would. But I didn’t want to do the latter, as I wanted to share my views with as many fellow Singaporeans as possible.

Q: Why did you use this Open Letter format, a marked departure from your usual, formal-essay type commentaries?
A: To convey a sense of directness and urgency, in keeping with the seriousness of the issue discussed in the letter.

Q: Was the Roy Ngerng defamation suit the direct cause of your writing the letter?
A: Actually, it was a series of happenings in the political scene which I had been observing with increasing dismay, culminating with the defamation suit.

In any society, change is always brought about by the vocal minority who act, not the silent majority who don’t.

Q: Some people are saying that in describing the present situation as a ‘crisis’, you’re being too alarmist since it involves only a minority.
A: It is a crisis, or at least a crisis-in-the-making because if the disgruntlement of a minority of 40% of the electorate in the years leading to the 2011 General Election, had actually resulted in the worst ever performance of the PAP, shocking everybody, its increasingly bolder and more aggressive manifestation today could have even more drastic consequences. In any society, change is always brought about by the vocal minority who act, not the silent majority who don’t.

Q: Graffiti and mass protests are common in every country. Why see them as a ‘crisis’?
A: In Singapore, they are unique and are becoming a new phenomenon in the political landscape. Unlike in other countries where they are an everyday thing, here they signal a degree of resentment never seen before. And one senses, uneasily, that this could be just the beginning.

Q: Shouldn’t Singaporeans be grateful when they compare themselves with people in countries where there is grinding poverty and squalor?
A: It is human nature to compare both downwards and upwards. Those who come home from their travels after seeing standards of living so much below theirs, are usually the grateful haves who can afford frequent travelling abroad. The have-nots see themselves stuck in their own, very real poverty and do a resentful upwards comparison with their well-to-do neighbours. Overall, there is general indignation against the ‘millionaire ministers’ up there. Lastly, there is a growing sub-group of young, struggling professionals who cannot afford to have their own cars and apartments and do the same bitter comparison with their better-off counterparts in other countries.

Hence, this commonly used ‘you-should-consider-yourself-so-lucky’ argument is a double-edged sword and may not be so convincing after all.

Q: Do you fear any reprisal from the top for this letter?
A: I hope not. I’ve been doing this sort of thing for twenty years now.

No sensible, thinking Singaporean would ever say, ‘As long as the PAP leaders prove to be much better than the rogue governments in the world, we should give them carte blanche to do as they please!’Q: The PAP leadership, for all its faults, is a far better government than the horribly corrupt and incompetent ones we see in so many countries in the world today.
A: I think it’s far more useful to benchmark PAP performance against their own promises about improving the well-being of the people and their own past excellent records, than to use some external criteria. No sensible, thinking Singaporean would ever say, ‘As long as the PAP leaders prove to be much better than the rogue governments in the world, we should give them carte blanche to do as they please!’

Q: Surely people are more concerned about bread-and-butter issues, than the human rights of the political detainees you mentioned.
A: Actually human rights which may seem to be remote ideological abstractions are linked to practical, bread-and-butter matters. Indeed, in the end, without the first, you can’t have the second. It was precisely the PAP’s habit of ignoring the voices of the few calling for the right of free expression and open debate, that had led them, in the first place, to have a sense of power and entitlement that, in turn, enabled them to decide, pass, and enact, with greatest ease, one policy after another. Some of these policies badly affected the people’s bread-and-butter, such as the policy allowing an influx of foreign workers.

It’s a long causal chain that people get to see eventually.

Q: Many of your readers have expressed appreciation for your having said so well what they themselves think and feel.
A: I want to thank them for their kind, warm encouragement. I love writing, and the special challenge of exploring and exploiting the vast resources of the English language to express my thoughts and feelings clearly, cogently and, if possible, elegantly.

Q: A few readers have complained about your use of ‘flowery’ words.
A: I try to use words that are precise in meaning and connotation, are just right for their context and convey exactly the intended mood and emotion. Also I avoid repeating key words, and look for good synonyms to use, for better stylistic effect. That means sometimes using words that appear too scholarly, academic, even rarefied, thus giving the impression of pedantry (which is probably what those readers meant by ‘floweriness’)

What I had meant was the nightmarish scenario of a final showdown between the government and the people, when each side might be pushed to resort to extreme measures which they would later regret.Q: At the end of your letter, you spoke about an ‘alternative’ that could be ‘just too scary’. Some thought you meant the opposition coming into power. What exactly did you mean?
A: I think my use of the word ‘alternative’ must have immediately made some readers think of ‘an alternative government’, that is, the opposition. What I had meant was the nightmarish scenario of a final showdown between the government and the people, when each side might be pushed to resort to extreme measures which they would later regret.

Q: Isn’t your letter just a bit too long?
A: I was amused by the comment from one reader that this very lengthy letter would surely fail in its purpose because it would put the PM to sleep halfway! Well, I shall have to explain that the topic of my political writing is usually the major one of the rather complex PAP government-people relationship. This topic entails much detailed exposition and analysis, necessarily resulting in a long commentary. (I am glad that my website manager has very skilfully reduced the tedious effect of the lengthy text by breaking it up with quotes that are tastefully highlighted in blue)

Q: How would you answer those who ask you to get into politics?
A: With an alarmed No! I simply don’t have the talent, temperament or inclination to be a politician.

Q: If you were asked to give your i) most pessimistic ii) most optimistic prediction of this ‘crisis of trust’, what would they be?
A: i) Most pessimistic. The PAP returns to the old, relentless knuckleduster approach and crushes dissident voices so completely that they will never be a threat again.

ii) Most optimistic: The PAP comes to the conclusion that the best legacy which they can leave their successors is to regain and build up the trust of the people, and musters the necessary political will to do this.



Catherine Lim

*The writer blogs at http://catherinelim.sg/

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  Body in suitcase: Pakistani men were selling tissue paper here
Posted by: pianist - 13-06-2014, 11:59 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (31)

Now I understand & appreciate why NEA decides to require permit & issue tax for people who wants to sell tissue in sg.

MyPaper

Friday, Jun 13, 2014

SINGAPORE - Three impoverished Pakistani men checked into a lodge in Rowell Road last month, and survived by selling tissue paper.

Yesterday, two of them were arrested in connection with the murder of the third man, whose body was found stuffed in a suitcase on Wednesday, with his legs severed.

Police were on their trail quickly.

At about 11am yesterday, the officers showed up at 24-hour shopping centre Mustafa Centre.

The specific question that was asked of Raja, who works in the hardware department, was: "Did anyone buy a saw worth $119?"

And the 55-year-old recalled that someone had.

Mr Raja was then taken to a security room where he identified the man on surveillance-camera footage.

The suspects, Rashid, 43, and Rizwan, 25, were arrested in Rowell Road, at about 3pm yesterday.

The owner of the lodge, who did not want to be named, told My Paper yesterday that Rashid and the victim, Mohamed Noor, 59, had stayed in the same room since arriving in the middle of last month.

Rizwan had arrived later in the month and stayed separately.

The three men would usually leave the lodge in the morning, and return in the evening to pay their rent - $18 per person per night.

The three men were to leave Singapore this month.

The last time the owner saw the suspects was on Wednesday, around 6pm, when the bloody luggage was found.

"They did everything as per normal. That's something hard to digest," the owner said.

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