Former City Harvest church leader Chew Eng Han arrested at sea while trying to flee Singapore

Published Wed, Feb 21, 2018 · 09:28 AM
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[SINGAPORE] Former City Harvest Church (CHC) fund manager Chew Eng Han, convicted of misusing church funds, was nabbed at sea on Wednesday morning (Feb 21) trying to leave Singapore by boat.

Chew, 57, was due to begin his jail term of three years and four months for his role in the largest case of misuse of charitable funds in Singapore's history.

Chew was arrested with a 53-year-old Tan Poh Teck at about 8.47am on board a motorised sampan, said the police at a briefing on Wednesday afternoon at the Loyang Police Coast Guard Base, giving details of Chew's arrest.

Tan was piloting the sampan.

Preliminary investigations suggest that the duo were trying to leave Singapore illegally from Pulau Ubin to Malaysia.

Chew, who is married with two children aged 17 and 27, was found with about $5,000 in cash and fishing equipment.

Both men have been arrested for attempting to leave Singapore unlawfully at Unauthorised Point of Departure under Chapter 133 of the Immigration Act.

Those found guilty of this offence could face a maximum fine of $2,000 or a maximum jail term of six months, or both.

At about 3.40pm on Wednesday, the police also arrested a Chew Eng Soon, 61, for abetting the offence. Those convicted of abetting an offence can face a maximum fine of $6,000 and a maximum jail term of six months.

While CHC founder Kong Hee and four other former leaders started their sentences in April after the High Court cut their jail terms for misusing millions in church funds, Chew has been on bail as he sought multiple deferments pending the Court of Appeal's final decision.

Even after his jail term - which was reduced from six years - was upheld by the Court of Appeal on Feb 1, he asked to defer the start of his sentence till after the Chinese New Year.

He was ordered to surrender to the State Courts on Thursday (Feb 22).

Unlike in the United States and Britain, the act of absconding is not a separate criminal offence in Singapore, say lawyers.

However, when an accused person jumps bail, the bail money will be usually forfeited unless the bailor is able to convince the court otherwise.

Chew was a member of the church since 2013 and was previously the church board's vice-president and treasurer.

He served on the finance committee from 2006 to 2007, and is one of two principal shareholders of investment firm Amac Capital Partners. He left the board after Amac was appointed as the church's fund manager.

He was also a director of music production company Xtron Productions from 2003 to 2004.

The six CHC leaders had channelled $24 million from the church's building fund into Xtron and glass maker Firna in the form of sham bonds, to fund the popstar career of Kong's wife, Ms Ho Yeow Sun, in a church mission known as the Crossover Project. They then misused a further $26 million to cover up the misdeed.

Chew left the church completely in 2013, later telling the court that one reason for his departure was because Kong "deceived the people closest to (him)".

The church filed a civil suit against Amac and Chew for almost $21 million in unreturned investments. Chew has since thrown in the towel.

When he took the stand during the long-running trial in 2015, Chew, who conducted his own defence, said he was responsible for the structuring of the financial instrument but not the usage of the proceeds.

He told the court that if any funds had been misused as alleged, the blame lay with other church leaders who had discretion over how the money was spent.

He cited e-mails and mobile text messages to establish that Kong, deputy senior pastor Tan Ye Peng, and former finance manager Serina Wee were the key decision makers of the allocation of money.

Chew also told the court that he and his family had donated $1 million to the church."I'm not a taker to the church. I'm a giver, and thieves don't give to the owners of the property," he had said.

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