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More evidence that China is full of mad men


Little_prince
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What's the big deal? Seems like something I might have done in a more lawless place if someone were actively intimidating me and physically stronger than me.

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it fake one lar. it just a movie set .

 

you google. i am sure you can't find such behaviour from prc.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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it fake one lar. it just a movie set .

 

you google. i am sure you can't find such behaviour from prc.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ðððððð

Wa u oso know google ha
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I really don't know which part of him looks like MICK DAVIES :XD:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Passport offence: 'Strong deterrent needed'

   st_20161215_vimick15_2809083.jpg?itok=cG

 

 

 

 

Mick Davies entered Singapore using a passport with the name Fu Ching that he had bought in Vietnam.

Judge says S'porean's 5-month jail sentence signals that such activities won't be tolerated

Senior Law Correspondent

There is a strong consideration of public interest in deterring people from misusing passports to enter Singapore, said a district judge as he sentenced a businessman to five months' jail for using a passport that was not his.

"This necessarily requires a strong message to be sent to members of the public that such activities will not be tolerated by the courts," said District Judge Low Wee Ping, noting that there had been seven cases of false passports used so far this year compared with four in 2013.

The fact that Singaporean Mick Davies had paid 55,000 yuan (S$11,300) to procure the document in Vietnam was "clearly an aggravating factor", he added in decision grounds issued last month.

 

Davies, 56, admitted using the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region passport bearing the name Fu Ching that was not issued to him to enter Singapore from Vietnam on July 12. Two related charges were taken into consideration.

Born in Hubei and ranked by Forbes in 2007 as the 70th richest man in China, Davies started a travel business here about a decade ago, to add to his interests which included real estate, tourism and telecoms.

 
 
 
 
 
 

He became a Singapore citizen about five years ago and lives here with his wife and daughter.

About three years ago, he changed his name Lan Shili to Mick Davies. At that time, he had been released from a Hubei prison after serving time for tax evasion.

According to media reports, Davies was a well-known entrepreneur in Hubei who left a government job at 25 to set up a company selling computers with just 270 yuan.

In the current case, the court heard that he left Singapore for Guangzhou in February, but was detained by the Chinese police in relation to a complaint of alleged fraud by a former business partner.

Released on bail, his passport was impounded. In July, he fled to Vietnam illegally, bought a passport there and flew back to Singapore the same month.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Shala Igbal and Ms Michelle Seet from the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority presented a table of precedents to press for a deterrent jail term, pointing out there was no evidence to Davies' claim that he fled China because of threats to his life.

His lawyer Chung Ting Fai saidDavies deeply regretted his actions, which had brought "untold agony and trauma to his family".

Judge Low said eight months' imprisonment was appropriate to signal deterrence but given that Davies had served two months and 23 days in remand, sentenced him to five months' jail. Davies is currently on $80,000 bail pending appeal

 

Edited by Staff69
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Chinese Jaguar driver dies for sake of scam that would have made him US$15,000

 

post-23002-0-54954700-1511798097.jpg

 

 

A businessman in eastern China drowned while trying to fake a car accident to get a payout from an insurance company, state media has reported.

 

The 39-year-old man, identified by his surname Li, devised the scam after realising that he would make more money writing off the Jaguar, which he bought five years ago, than he would from selling it,

 

Thepaper.cn reported on Saturday.

 

The car was insured for 500,000 yuan (US$75,000) but its market value was 400,000 yuan, so he decided to crash the car into a river to claim the higher amount.

 

Using equipment that allowed him to control the car automatically from his mobile phone, he was able to steer the vehicle into a river in Wenling, Zhejiang province, on November 18.

 

For the next stage of the scam he jumped into the river along with a female friend, a 29-year-old named Zhang.

 

Their plan was that Zhang would get out of the water at once, while Li went to remove the incriminating equipment from his car.

 

If all had gone according to plan, Zhang would have called the police when Li safely returned to dry land and told them she had crashed the car while driving.

 

Zhang was later reported to have confessed that he had asked her to take part in the scam because he thought police were more likely to believe that the accident was genuine if a woman said she had been driving.

 

But Zhang was left waiting for him for a long time on the riverbank and began to worry and decided to call for help.

 

Residents found Li in the water and pull him out, but he was already dead by the time police and an ambulance arrived.

 

Zhang later said she believed that Li had become stuck in the car.

 

The pair had thought that the river was only one metre deep, but a clean-up operation a few days before had removed much of the sludge from the riverbed and it was more than twice the depth they had expected.

 

The officer who handled the case said he began to suspect the incident had been planned after finding Zhang could not explain events clearly and he found that her mobile phone and many of her clothes were dry and appeared to have been left on the riverbank.

 

Zhang admitted Li had asked her to help with the scam.

 

It was not reported whether she was facing any action from police.

 

The insurance company did not make any payouts over the incident.

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Chinese Jaguar driver dies for sake of scam that would have made him US$15,000

 

3.jpg

 

A businessman in eastern China drowned while trying to fake a car accident to get a payout from an insurance company, state media has reported.

The 39-year-old man, identified by his surname Li, devised the scam after realising that he would make more money writing off the Jaguar, which he bought five years ago, than he would from selling it,

Thepaper.cn reported on Saturday.

The car was insured for 500,000 yuan (US$75,000) but its market value was 400,000 yuan, so he decided to crash the car into a river to claim the higher amount.

Using equipment that allowed him to control the car automatically from his mobile phone, he was able to steer the vehicle into a river in Wenling, Zhejiang province, on November 18.

For the next stage of the scam he jumped into the river along with a female friend, a 29-year-old named Zhang.

Their plan was that Zhang would get out of the water at once, while Li went to remove the incriminating equipment from his car.

If all had gone according to plan, Zhang would have called the police when Li safely returned to dry land and told them she had crashed the car while driving.

Zhang was later reported to have confessed that he had asked her to take part in the scam because he thought police were more likely to believe that the accident was genuine if a woman said she had been driving.

But Zhang was left waiting for him for a long time on the riverbank and began to worry and decided to call for help.

Residents found Li in the water and pull him out, but he was already dead by the time police and an ambulance arrived.

Zhang later said she believed that Li had become stuck in the car.

The pair had thought that the river was only one metre deep, but a clean-up operation a few days before had removed much of the sludge from the riverbed and it was more than twice the depth they had expected.

The officer who handled the case said he began to suspect the incident had been planned after finding Zhang could not explain events clearly and he found that her mobile phone and many of her clothes were dry and appeared to have been left on the riverbank.

Zhang admitted Li had asked her to help with the scam.

It was not reported whether she was facing any action from police.

The insurance company did not make any payouts over the incident.

He thought he was smart, but he's not smart enough.
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 In July, he fled to Vietnam illegally, bought a passport there and flew back to Singapore the same month.

 

 

ti know of someone that fled china to vietnam and then went to Russia....

 

apparently, it is easy to cross to vietnam from China... just need some walking

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Twincharged

they are here .... must watch video !!

 

Woman taunts man to hit her -- so he really does, in most bizarre fight ever at Hougang

 

A couple engaged in the strangest fight ever at a coffee shop at Block 684, Hougang Avenue 8 yesterday (March 31) at around midnight.

A video of the incident was uploaded by Facebook user Andy Tang, and has already garnered over 400,000 views and almost 8,000 shares.

Several Stompers had also alerted Stomp to the video, in which a series of bizarre things 

 

 

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they are here .... must watch video !!

Woman taunts man to hit her -- so he really does, in most bizarre fight ever at Hougang

A couple engaged in the strangest fight ever at a coffee shop at Block 684, Hougang Avenue 8 yesterday (March 31) at around midnight.

A video of the incident was uploaded by Facebook user Andy Tang, and has already garnered over 400,000 views and almost 8,000 shares.

Several Stompers had also alerted Stomp to the video, in which a series of bizarre things

wah....the delayed action and the slow mo falling down......
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Supercharged

they are here .... must watch video !!

 

Woman taunts man to hit her -- so he really does, in most bizarre fight ever at Hougang

 

A couple engaged in the strangest fight ever at a coffee shop at Block 684, Hougang Avenue 8 yesterday (March 31) at around midnight.

A video of the incident was uploaded by Facebook user Andy Tang, and has already garnered over 400,000 views and almost 8,000 shares.

Several Stompers had also alerted Stomp to the video, in which a series of bizarre things 

 

there's also Hougang in China?

 

or the mad is from China? [confused]

 

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Supersonic

they are here .... must watch video !!

 

Woman taunts man to hit her -- so he really does, in most bizarre fight ever at Hougang

 

A couple engaged in the strangest fight ever at a coffee shop at Block 684, Hougang Avenue 8 yesterday (March 31) at around midnight.

A video of the incident was uploaded by Facebook user Andy Tang, and has already garnered over 400,000 views and almost 8,000 shares.

Several Stompers had also alerted Stomp to the video, in which a series of bizarre things 

 

i saw this video on the news in MY... really sia suay... haha... 

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Twincharged

i saw this video on the news in MY... really sia suay... haha... 

 

can the man say he hit the biatch only because she demanded that he do so ? I mean its all on video ... she kept pestering the man to hit her ... maybe masochist ? [hur]

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duno what to say   [shakehead]

 

Kangaroo in Chinese zoo dies after visitors throw rocks at it
CHINA DAILY/ASIA NEWS NETWORK  Apr 20, 2018
 
kangaroodeath_weibo.jpg?itok=vbtmTgDI
PHOTO: Weibo
 
A kangaroo at an animal park in South China died after being pelted with jagged stones by visitors, while another was injured in a separate incident days later.
 
The incidents both occurred at the Fuzhou Zoo in Fujian province early this month, sparking outrage among animal lovers online, Strait News reported on Thursday.
 
An employee of the zoo's animal rescue centre, surnamed Chen, said the dead kangaroo was a 12-year-old female. She was hit by a sharp stone on April 4 that injured her left foot, which led to massive bleeding the next day.
 
A few days later, a 5-year-old male was injured when a visitor threw part of a brick into the animal's enclosure. The zoo's kangaroo breeder, surnamed Zhang, told Strait News that visitors have been known to throw stones to make the marsupials jump around, or to wake them up if they are sleeping. She said kangaroos usually are active from 8 to 10 am and 3 to 5 pm, and tend to rest under trees the remainder of the day.
 
After learning of the attacks, many netizens called for animal parks to clamp down on uncivilized behaviour.
 
"Animals in the zoo are there to help us better understand them and ourselves. They're not responsible for performing as you wish. Such visitors should be blacklisted," a netizen named "Duomi" wrote on Sina Weibo.
 
The zoo has security cameras in areas with protected animals, but most are pointed toward the enclosures rather than at visitor areas, which means the offenders responsible for the kangaroos' injuries were not caught on camera.
 
The zoo has applied to the Fujian city government for funding to install high-definition surveillance cameras. It also asked people to show love toward the zoo animals and to protect them.
 
Like many other zoos, Fuzhou Zoo separates visitors and kangaroos with wooden fences. Signs warn people not to feed the animals or throw objects.
 
After the two attacks, the zoo reduced the number of kangaroos exposed in the visiting zone. Now, only three kangaroos can be seen by visitors. The body of the dead female kangaroo will be preserved for display.
 
"People feeding animals with human food, or touching or scaring zoo animals, are often seen in China," said Sun Quanhui, chief scientist from World Animal Protection, an international nonprofit animal welfare organisation.
 
He said many visitors are not aware of the potential risks to both visitors and animals that come from breaking the zoo's rules.
 
Apart from raising public awareness about animal protection, those who break the rules and cause severe injuries to animals should be investigated for legal responsibility, he said.

 

 

 

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