Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

Outline · [ Standard ] · Linear+

 Woman win civil suit against colleague for sexual, assault

views
     
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 09:57 AM, updated 7 months ago

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


SINGAPORE - About nine years after she was sexually assaulted by her then colleague from the Ministry of Defence (Mindef), a woman won a suit against her assailant for battery.

The woman had sought legal advice and pursued the civil case after the police decided not to take further action against the man, whom she had dated.

She had filed a police report in 2021 over the 2016 incident.

According to a judgment dated May 23, the woman was awarded $45,000 in general damages, plus interest.

This consisted of $25,000 in compensation for pain and suffering and $20,000 for punitive damages.

She was also awarded $8,697.39 in special damages plus interest, an amount she claimed for medical and related expenses.

The Straits Times is not naming the claimant and defendant to protect the identity of the woman.

According to the claimant, she and her former colleague began a romantic relationship in June 2015, and they were sexually intimate.

While the man wished they could be open about their relationship, the woman asked to keep it secret as she had concerns, including about how their colleagues would perceive them.

The woman said she ended the relationship in December 2015.

While they agreed to remain friends, they still had feelings for each other and continued to hang out together.

According to the woman, the pair and other colleagues went to a club on July 10, 2016. The pair later shared a taxi to return to their homes as they were headed in the same direction.

On the ride home, they became physically intimate, and the woman invited the man over to her place for sex.

When they were in her home, the woman went to shower. After sobering up, she realised she did not want to revisit the past romantic relationship with the man, or give him hope that they were going to get back together.

“She was overwhelmed with regret for having invited him over and for telling him that they would engage in sex,” the judgment said.

After she told the man he should go home, he was taken aback and pleaded with her to get back into a relationship with him.

During a heated conversation, the man was extremely persistent in trying to find out why she did not want to get back together with him, the woman said.

She eventually stopped engaging in the conversation, firmly instructed the man to leave, and went to her bed.

Instead of leaving, the man continued to plead with her. He also removed his shirt and pants and climbed into her bed.

The woman said that before she could react, the man forcefully wrapped his arms around her from behind and restrained her physically.

As she struggled to push his arms away, the man reached into her shorts and sexually assaulted her, she said.

In a state of immense shock and outrage, she said, she pushed his hand away and demanded that he leave immediately, and he did so.

After the incident, she sent text messages to the man to apologise.

In her evidence subsequently, she said she had done so instinctively and tried to converse with the man to de-escalate any tension and return the relationship between them to normalcy.

She said it did not occur to her then that she had been sexually assaulted, and she had not grasped the full gravity of the man’s actions. She said she felt responsible at the time for hurting his feelings, and blamed herself for provoking him into taking out his anger on her.

She said she sought to maintain their friendship after the incident, and there were subsequent occasions when she had revisited their romantic relationship.

She said she believed that she was acting under the warped belief that if the man genuinely loved her and if they entered into a romantic relationship again, then the incident in July 2016 would not matter in the grand scheme of things.

Some time in mid-2017, she was exposed to the rise of the “Me Too” movement.

After reading the stories of various survivors of sexual violence, she realised that she had been sexually assaulted.

She said she had come to understand that the prior romantic relationship between her and the defendant did not negate the fact that she did not give her consent.

She eventually told some of her university friends and a colleague what happened.

On March 2, 2021, the woman wrote an e-mail to the senior management of Mindef, in which she highlighted a sexual assault by a civilian officer.

Mindef strongly encouraged her to file a police report, and she did so. She left Mindef in April 2021.

On Feb 28, 2022, the woman was told that the police had decided not to take further action against the man.

After seeking legal advice, she commenced the civil suit against him in July 2022.

In his defence, the man described their on-and-off romantic relationship as “complicated”, and said he ended his romantic interest around October 2016 after he realised that he was merely someone the woman would turn to whenever she was bored.

He added that he could not recall the exact events that transpired on the day of the incident.

Noting that while the man’s inability to recollect is “superficially plausible”, given that the incident had occurred some years ago, District Judge Sia Aik Kor said she ultimately found this to be lacking in credibility.

She said the woman’s recollection of the events was cogent and convincing, and was corroborated by text messages exchanged between the pair.

The judge also said there was a strong thread of consistency that ran through the woman’s account of the incident with her friends and colleague, which was congruent with her testimony in court.

Her delay in bringing the matter to light had been adequately explained and did not detract from her credibility, the judge added.

The woman explained that she had struggled for the longest time to even begin to describe what had happened to her, as it was extremely embarrassing and shameful to say it out loud.

She also said she felt trapped, as she and the man still shared the same social circles, and she feared that making a report would harm him or cause a rift among their friends.

As for the police’s decision to take no further action, the judge said no evidence was offered as to the reasons behind this decision and that it could not be used to determine if the woman’s claims were true.

“It would be speculative for the court to infer from such a decision that the claimant’s allegations are untrue or fabricated,” she added.

District Judge Sia, however, did not grant the woman all her claims, including one for loss of earnings.

She said the woman failed to prove on a balance of probabilities that her loss of earnings during a period of unemployment after leaving Mindef was caused by the defendant’s act of battery.

Mindef said in a statement that it “had promptly commenced an investigation when the complainant formally surfaced the allegations”.

“From our investigation, we decided to refer the matter to the police due to the serious nature of some of the allegations. The complainant subsequently lodged a police report. Mindef extended support to the complainant during the period of the police investigations,” it said, adding that it is committed to creating a work environment that is respectful and safe for all its personnel.

“Mindef has zero tolerance for workplace harassment and sexual misconduct. All allegations of harassment and sexual misconduct at the workplace will be investigated.”

https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/cour...y-assaulted-her
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 10:02 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(KeyMochi @ Jun 3 2025, 11:01 AM)
This is something straight out of Wattpad
*
Real case laugh.gif
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 10:06 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(St0rmFury @ Jun 3 2025, 11:03 AM)
Holy moly, what a long article.
*
You really have to give credit to Singapore reporters

If Malaysia, 2 paragraph max laugh.gif
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 10:15 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(gundamsp01 @ Jun 3 2025, 11:13 AM)
so, in short, the wimmiz thinks that it is fair for her to sue the guy for rape because she regreted her action to have sex with the guy?

Awesome
*
The lesson here is woman is always right when it comes to this type of incidents

If they say no, you better leave asap and not try your luck anymore
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 10:16 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(karazure @ Jun 3 2025, 11:15 AM)
9 yrs later baru dapat 50k??

kecian
*
She only sue him in 2022
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 11:05 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(empstar2 @ Jun 3 2025, 12:01 PM)
50k x 3.3 =
165k
*
The suit only initiated in 2022 and the judge did not allow her to claim for loss of income

That's why the awarded amount is quite low
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 11:34 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(gundamsp01 @ Jun 3 2025, 12:29 PM)
the evidence is just based on words babbled by the "victim" to the female judge with judge being sympathetic and agreed to whatever she said.. And yes, you all are right, women are freaking parasite mines that is best to be avoided.
*
Even if it's a male judge, woman usually will win when it comes to this type of cases unless the girl perform really badly in court
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 11:39 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(gundamsp01 @ Jun 3 2025, 12:36 PM)
because verbal confession is all that is needed to put a male in jail, true enough.
*
It is about how the accuser and accused act in court when they are questioned

Who can give a better convincing story and how good is the lawyers

The damning evidence is the text messages between the man and the woman

The article is very detail in why the judge awarded to the woman

This post has been edited by 30624770: Jun 3 2025, 11:40 AM
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 11:43 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(gundamsp01 @ Jun 3 2025, 12:41 PM)
the problem now is, no one can say the woman in telling the truth, you know the entire "me too" movement has inappropriately accused many innocent males?
It is baffling by verbal confession and woman who good at telling lies can get away with it.
*
There are text messages between the guy and girl lah

It was not merely the woman's words against the guy's words


TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 12:10 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(gundamsp01 @ Jun 3 2025, 12:47 PM)
how true are those text messages? can it be the girl regreted the action and make the entire situation unfavorable to the male?
But hey, no point to continue the argument, since no one knows the truth.

But lesson learnt as usual, male should avoid female especially intimacy to avoid getting framed with the law being one-sided.
*
Duh? Text messages not true?

Come on lah. Everything goes to court will be verified by the lawyers lah

You think the girl can simply make up text messages

Fact is the court makes decision based on the court case and all the evidence provided

It's not no one knows the truth lah

The court already established the truth
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 01:42 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Etude8891 @ Jun 3 2025, 02:37 PM)
Wrong decision by the court. The woman is wrong.
*
There are lawyers, judges and evidence that determine the case.

You read the article and know better? laugh.gif
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 02:17 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Etude8891 @ Jun 3 2025, 03:13 PM)
Yes because the woman herself invited then say deep regret suddenly meaning using women's privilege of playing the victim right there.
*
Even if the woman invites, she got the last say and if she says no, it means no

So many cases like this and people like you still don't understand?
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 02:31 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Etude8891 @ Jun 3 2025, 03:19 PM)
Cases like this shows something wrong with these laws.
*
There is nothing wrong with the law

Woman is known to change their minds all the time

When they say no, it means no regardless of what happened before

CONSENT is the basis of the law

If you proceed after she says no, then you're just inviting trouble




TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 02:32 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Knnbuccb @ Jun 3 2025, 03:23 PM)
Judge calls the shot. The lawyers of course got one side defending one side prosecuting

The way the lawyers argues his case also plays a part. Sometimes yoi can win if you ague based on this angle but if you choose a diff angle u might not win due to technicalities etc.
That's why sometimes some criminals get charged for something less than they committed because the prosecutors think the more serious charge won't stick... so if they have to find a way to put him in jail they have to chooset a lesser crime.
. The judge is also human and may interpret the laws differently from person to person with their own bias. that's why even sometimes decisions may be overturned.
*
In this case, the text messages is the crucial evidence

Without the text messages, the guy probably still got chance to say its consensual
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 05:01 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Cyberbullies @ Jun 3 2025, 05:42 PM)
Are you sure that the text messages constitute crucial evidence?

At most you can only infer from the messages that .

Read the text messages here: https://archive.is/MJjBk

The b*tch seduced him after that incident and asked him to reconcile twice but he rejected both times because he realised he was a doormat.

She led him on until he called her out on it and now she lost a soldier. So now that she couldn’t control her soldier, she wanted him ruined.

Typical narcissistic b*tch. Can’t control liao then choose destruction. That’s why I hate simps - throw our face je by becoming soldiers to b*tches like this one.

Chronology in my own order as the basis for my conclusion stated above:

25    The Defendant claimed that the Claimant’s attitude towards him and interactions with him after the events of 10 July 2016 were nothing out of the ordinary. They continued to communicate and interact on friendly and cordial terms, some of which were of a sexually intimate nature or initiated by the Claimant. In particular, the Defendant pointed to the Claimant inviting him to go shopping with her on 4 August 2016 and to meet her on 7 August 2016. The Defendant also pointed to the Claimant asking him to give her a wake-up call on 11 August 2016 at around 1 a.m. and inviting him to a house party at her place on 12 August 2016. In or around September 2016, the Claimant also invited him to spend the night at her place and greeted him dressed only in her undergarments. She invited him to stay the night which he did.

22    According to the Defendant, he and the Claimant were peers working as staff officers in the same unit or office between January 2015 and January 2017. By May 2015, he and the Claimant were in a complicated on-and-off romantic relationship. They were sexually intimate and had consensual sexual relations during the on-and-off romantic relationship. Despite this, they did not enter into a formal boyfriend-girlfriend relationship during that period of time as the Claimant refused to commit to one. He only ended his romantic interest in the Claimant in or around October 2016 after he found out that he was merely someone the Claimant would turn to whenever she was bored and that the Claimant regarded him as “very accommodating” in that regard.

27    He and the Claimant had dinner together on 10 January 2017 on the Claimant’s initiative. On 15 January 2017, he and the Claimant met at a bar at Rail Mall where she asked if he would consider giving their relationship one last shot which he rejected.

16    Sometime in mid-2017 (my own words: how convenient that she only suddenly realised it’s sexual assault after he rejected her twice), she was exposed to the rise of the “Me Too” movement, a global social movement against sexual violence. As she read about the stories of various survivors of sexual violence, she came to the sudden realization that she had been sexually assaulted by the Defendant that day.

More inconsistencies but apparently the biased female judge stated it’s “acceptable” lmao:

37    In her AEIC, the Claimant had used the words “You should go home. This isn’t happening.” On the stand, the Claimant stated that this meant that sex was not going to happen. She admitted that she did not use the words “we are not going to have sex”. However, in her letters to Rachel and Eugene, she stated that she specifically said that they were not going to have sex. In the Claimant’s letter to Eugene, she had said that she had told the Defendant NO or GET OUT. On the stand however, she distinctly recalled that she said GET OUT but could not remember whether she also said NO.

There are more inconsistencies in the link so you can read them yourself.

Everything the defendant said is not credible and everything the claimant said is credible even though there are so many inconsistencies lol.

The defendant should appeal.

Her friends’ responses showed what the judge needed to know btw because they knew about her BS:

17    The Claimant did not tell anyone about what had happened until she met up with her university friend group, consisting of Rachel Lai Yanfen (“Rachel”), Choong Hui Ping and Cheah Suet Ping on 28 January 2018. During their lunch, she informed them that she was sexually assaulted by the Defendant back in 2016. As her friends were very quiet and the atmosphere turned extremely dull after that, the Claimant decided to put up a strong front and tried to change the topic.

19    The Claimant subsequently wrote letters to her friends Rachel and Lim Jia Jun Eugene (“Eugene”) on 15 and 22 November 2020 respectively that she had felt hurt that they had not been as supportive as she had hoped when she first told them about the sexual assault. These letters were the first and second instances where she had written down and documented the sexual assault in detail.

Really hope her friends avoid her from now on lol because of how manipulative she is.
*
The defendant texted "I apologize that I got out of control AGAIN"


TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 05:39 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Cyberbullies @ Jun 3 2025, 06:09 PM)
And what does that prove?

“I got out of control again” immediately followed by a message saying “I shouldn’t have thrown a hissy fit and should have left”.

So out of control could have meant the hissy fit when reading the messages as a whole instead of reading the message individually without any context.

Context matters. Read again.
*
Come on lah

In court with this type of evidence

It is already an indirect admission of guilt

Any lawyers would stress this kao kao

The judge verdict was actually quite reasonable
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 06:46 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Cyberbullies @ Jun 3 2025, 07:09 PM)
You basically provided no counter-argument other than saying “this evidence is concrete” without providing the reason why it is “concrete” while I have explained to you in detail why it is not.

Try harder next time or don’t reply at all if you don’t have any counter-argument lol.
*
No counter argument? The case already go to court and the judge already decided the case

What is there to argue? The text clearly show what it meant but some people just won’t agree with no means no and think they are better lawyers than the defendant lawyer

Here we got k lawyers who think they know better whistling.gif

It’s actually so dangerous to see so many ktards don’t understand the definition of rape, sexual assault and CONSENT

This post has been edited by 30624770: Jun 3 2025, 06:47 PM
TS30624770
post Jun 3 2025, 09:44 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
269 posts

Joined: Oct 2021


QUOTE(Cyberbullies @ Jun 3 2025, 10:30 PM)
Do you have comprehension problem?

You said the text is “concrete evidence” and I said it is not. It is as simple as that. It has nothing to do with the outcome of the case.

The sentence “got out of control” is not as incriminating as you think since I explained that it was referring to the “hissy fit”.

We were discussing about whether the text messages were “concrete evidence”, not whether he was guilty or not because that involves discussing about other evidence like her claims and FIR reports and etc (which I did do a brief discussion but that was my view).

In fact my first reply to you was “Are you sure that the text messages constitute crucial evidence?”

If you can’t even differentiate the difference, like I said, don’t bother replying to me lmao because you couldn’t even form your own arguments as to why you think 1 is 1 but could only be a sheep that says “oh, he/she said 1 and so the answer is 1”.

And your statement “the judge already decided the case” seems to imply that there is no appeal available to the defendant, which is not the case here.

Just because a case has been decided does not mean that we can’t present our own views or discuss about it - if like that all defence lawyers can close shop d. Unfortunately I am not a sheep like you who is incapable of thinking for himself.

How much do you know about consent in the context of law anyway? That woman ajak for sex and then told him to leave but instead of making sure he left, she headed straight to her bed - you think that made any sense? She pancing him for several times and when he went for it suddenly she didn’t consent to it? After kena rejected twice?
*
You not a lawyer and thinks you know better. Go offer your help to the guy and appeal the case lah

The judge said said the woman’s recollection of the events was cogent and convincing, and was corroborated by text messages exchanged between the pair.

The judge clearly say that the text is crucial in supporting the girl statement lah. What is there to argue? You know the law better than a judge?

Fact is even if she pancing him several times, it still does not mean she gave CONSENT. A prostitute can also be raped even though she accepted money. In this case the girl changed her mind and clearly says no and she was recovering from drunkenness. So lying on the bed is a norm and not an invitation to piap.

Like I repeatedly say before, it's so dangerous for some ktards to think just because a girl says yes initially, they can't change their mind later.

 

Change to:
| Lo-Fi Version
0.0197sec    0.12    6 queries    GZIP Disabled
Time is now: 4th December 2025 - 11:51 PM