SINGAPORE: The lead defence lawyer for Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh on Tuesday (Nov 4) sought to convince a High Court judge that the trial judge had โignoredโ crucial pieces of evidence in convicting Singh of two counts of lying to a parliamentary committee.
Singh, 49, is appealing against his conviction and sentence โ a S$14,000 (US$10,700) fine โ stemming from how he dealt with a lie told by then-party member Raeesah Khan.
However, Justice Steven Chong found issues with several of the arguments put forth by Singhโs lawyer, Mr Andre Jumabhoy, and questioned him repeatedly about points he was making over about two-and-a-half hours on Tuesday morning.
Justice Chong also questioned several of the points made by lead prosecutor, Deputy Attorney-General Goh Yihan, asking him to address why the second charge was framed in a certain way. He reserved judgment to an unspecified date after hours of arguments.
BACKGROUND
Ms Khan had lied in parliament on Aug 3, 2021, about accompanying a rape victim to a police station, where the police allegedly made unsavoury remarks about the victim.
When questioned about it again in parliament by Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam, Ms Khan doubled down on her lie.
She confessed that her anecdote was false in a statement in parliament on Nov 1, 2021, and a Committee of Privileges later recommended that Singh and then WP Member of Parliament Faisal Manap be referred to the public prosecutor for further investigations.
Mr Faisal was issued a police advisory but was not charged. Singh was given two charges, which he contested in a highly publicised trial.
MR JUMABHOY'S ARGUMENTS
On Tuesday, Justice Chong opened by telling Mr Jumabhoy to address two key statements that led to the findings made by the trial judge.
These are: Ms Khan's claim that Singh had told her at a meeting on Aug 8, 2021, that the untruth was something they had to "take to the grave", and what Singh meant when he told Ms Khan, "I will not judge you".
Mr Jumabhoy said Ms Khan had given three accounts on the "take to the grave" statement, but she was inconsistent.
To this, Justice Chong said the fact that she did not use "take to the grave" consistently in the three versions does not mean it was not said.
He told Mr Jumabhoy that he had to "breach the logic" and address how Ms Khan's inaccuracies affected the authenticity of a statement she made contemporaneously on Aug 8, 2021.
Ms Khan had texted her aides, Ms Loh Pei Ying and Mr Yudhisthra Nathan on Aug 8, 2021 stating that the WP leaders, including Singh, had agreed that the best course of action was to take the information to the grave.
Mr Jumabhoy made several arguments, including that there was no consistency in what Ms Khan said and that she left out in her messages to her aides that Singh said they were "not going to do anything" about the lie.
At one point, Justice Chong told the lawyer: "Sometimes, you know, when a witness recites the same evidence over and over again, judges sometimes hold it against a witness for parroting a statement.
"So when a witness says something which is not entirely consistent, not entirely inconsistent either, it is for the judge to decide how that would impact on the witness' overall credibility. And that's the function of the judge. But I don't have that advantage. I have to examine this case on the basis of the transcript."
He told Mr Jumabhoy that he was not wrong to say there were differences.
However, the question for him to consider was whether those differences are so material that he should doubt Ms Khan's credibility and find that what she said in her message to her aides was actually false.
"I think your submission about the differences ... might carry some persuasion if there was no WhatsApp message (from Ms Khan to her aides)," said Justice Chong.ย
"You cannot ignore the fact that ... immediately after the meeting (with WP leaders on Aug 8, 2021), she wrote that message to MS Loh and Mr Nathan."
The judge added: "Your case must be - she lied to her two aides. Or, actually, they all proactively, pre-emptively concocted this, this kind of alibi in anticipation that at some stage in the future, the truth might be exposed, and therefore, better pin the blame on somebody else first."
Mr Jumabhoy said he would not "go so far as to say that", but the judge said that is the "logical extension of the argument".
"I think what they wanted to do, and certainly what Ms Khan wanted to do, was to spare herself the national embarrassment of having to come out and say - I've lied," said Mr Jumabhoy.ย
"This is a perfectly logical and, you might say reasonable position, for her to take in relation to her self-preservation."
WHY DID SINGH DO NOTHING?
Justice Chong then questioned Mr Jumabhoy about Singh's conduct in the period between Aug 8, 2021 and Oct 3, 2021. This was after the WP leaders met Ms Khan on Aug 8, 2021, and before Singh met Ms Khan again on Oct 3, 2021.
"I think in your submission, you have emphasised that this untruth was actually quite a serious, grave matter," said Justice Chong.
"And one would expect, that if the decision was made on Aug 8 that you should take ownership, or at some point in time you have to come clean, it is expected that steps will be taken about drafting what to say, when to say and in what forum the untruth should be clarified.ย
"But what I find unusual is that it is common ground that nothing was done in that critical eight-week period."
He said it was Singh's evidence that there was "nothing much to prepare" because all that had to be done was to set up on Oct 4, 2021, when parliament sat and say the anecdote was a lie.
Justice Chong told Mr Jumabhoy that he needed to contrast this with what actually happened when they decided to clarify the lie, having drafts exchanged, in-person meetings and a need for Ms Khan to go before the WP's central committee to read a prepared statement.
"In that period ... is that consistent? With someone who wanted the truth to be clarified? Or someone who was prepared to let it be buried?" asked Justice Chong.
In response to Mr Jumabhoy's answers, the judge said he could accept that Singh would be sensitive, given the context that Ms Khan was the subject of sexual assault herself.
"I accept that because the normal reaction of a person would be to be sensitive, to empathise with Ms Khan, that you do not harass her repeatedly," said Justice Chong. "But we are not there. We are dealing with a case that has a complete absence of any discussion."
Mr Jumabhoy then explained that Ms Khan's lie was not the only thing Singh had on his agenda at that point - he had other things which were "as pressing if not more so", and Ms Khan was not attending parliament in that period as she had shingles.
In response, the judge said: "I don't think it can be seriously denied that the office of an opposition member, especially the Leader of the Opposition, will be busy. There's no question about that.ย
"The question is - was he so busy that he didn't deal with this pretty important pressing matter at all?"
He said that even if Singh felt he should allow Ms Khan some space, in the interim period, there was no discussion with the other party leaders either.
"During this period, there was no discussion with Ms Loh, or Mr Nathan - I don't think they had shingles at that time," said the judge. "And shingles, as you know, it's like chickenpox. It's not life-threatening."
He added that he knew "something about shingles" and said "you can still function".
Justice Chong went on to say that steps were taken immediately after the WP leaders had a meeting with Mr Low Thia Khiang on Oct 11, 2021.
He asked that if there was a basis for the trial judge to find that the view changed around Oct 11 or Oct 12, 2021, that the party had to come clean and clarify the truth, and if it occurred after the meeting with Mr Low, then would it not be logical that prior to that, the position was not to clarify the untruth.
"That would be logical, yes," acknowledged Mr Jumabhoy.
Pritam Singh's appeal: Defence argues trial judge 'ignored' crucial evidence in convicting WP chief
SINGAPORE: The lead defence lawyer for Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh on Tuesday (Nov 4) sought to convince a High Court judge that the trial judge had โignoredโ crucial pieces of evidence in convicting Singh of two counts of lying to a parliamentary committee.
Singh, 49, is appealing against his conviction and sentence โ a S$14,000 (US$10,700) fine โ stemming from how he dealt with a lie told by then-party member Raeesah Khan.
However, Justice Steven Chong found issues with several of the arguments put forth by Singhโs lawyer, Mr Andre Jumabhoy, and questioned him repeatedly about points he was making over about two-and-a-half hours on Tuesday morning.
Justice Chong also questioned several of the points made by lead prosecutor, Deputy Attorney-General Goh Yihan, asking him to address why the second charge was framed in a certain way. He reserved judgment to an unspecified date after hours of arguments.
BACKGROUND
Ms Khan had lied in parliament on Aug 3, 2021, about accompanying a rape victim to a police station, where the police allegedly made unsavoury remarks about the victim.
When questioned about it again in parliament by Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam, Ms Khan doubled down on her lie.
She confessed that her anecdote was false in a statement in parliament on Nov 1, 2021, and a Committee of Privileges later recommended that Singh and then WP Member of Parliament Faisal Manap be referred to the public prosecutor for further investigations.
Mr Faisal was issued a police advisory but was not charged. Singh was given two charges, which he contested in a highly publicised trial.
MR JUMABHOY'S ARGUMENTS
On Tuesday, Justice Chong opened by telling Mr Jumabhoy to address two key statements that led to the findings made by the trial judge.
These are: Ms Khan's claim that Singh had told her at a meeting on Aug 8, 2021, that the untruth was something they had to "take to the grave", and what Singh meant when he told Ms Khan, "I will not judge you".
Mr Jumabhoy said Ms Khan had given three accounts on the "take to the grave" statement, but she was inconsistent.
To this, Justice Chong said the fact that she did not use "take to the grave" consistently in the three versions does not mean it was not said.
He told Mr Jumabhoy that he had to "breach the logic" and address how Ms Khan's inaccuracies affected the authenticity of a statement she made contemporaneously on Aug 8, 2021.
Ms Khan had texted her aides, Ms Loh Pei Ying and Mr Yudhisthra Nathan on Aug 8, 2021 stating that the WP leaders, including Singh, had agreed that the best course of action was to take the information to the grave.
Mr Jumabhoy made several arguments, including that there was no consistency in what Ms Khan said and that she left out in her messages to her aides that Singh said they were "not going to do anything" about the lie.
At one point, Justice Chong told the lawyer: "Sometimes, you know, when a witness recites the same evidence over and over again, judges sometimes hold it against a witness for parroting a statement.
"So when a witness says something which is not entirely consistent, not entirely inconsistent either, it is for the judge to decide how that would impact on the witness' overall credibility. And that's the function of the judge. But I don't have that advantage. I have to examine this case on the basis of the transcript."
He told Mr Jumabhoy that he was not wrong to say there were differences.
However, the question for him to consider was whether those differences are so material that he should doubt Ms Khan's credibility and find that what she said in her message to her aides was actually false.
"I think your submission about the differences ... might carry some persuasion if there was no WhatsApp message (from Ms Khan to her aides)," said Justice Chong.ย
"You cannot ignore the fact that ... immediately after the meeting (with WP leaders on Aug 8, 2021), she wrote that message to MS Loh and Mr Nathan."
The judge added: "Your case must be - she lied to her two aides. Or, actually, they all proactively, pre-emptively concocted this, this kind of alibi in anticipation that at some stage in the future, the truth might be exposed, and therefore, better pin the blame on somebody else first."
Mr Jumabhoy said he would not "go so far as to say that", but the judge said that is the "logical extension of the argument".
"I think what they wanted to do, and certainly what Ms Khan wanted to do, was to spare herself the national embarrassment of having to come out and say - I've lied," said Mr Jumabhoy.ย
"This is a perfectly logical and, you might say reasonable position, for her to take in relation to her self-preservation."
WHY DID SINGH DO NOTHING?
Justice Chong then questioned Mr Jumabhoy about Singh's conduct in the period between Aug 8, 2021 and Oct 3, 2021. This was after the WP leaders met Ms Khan on Aug 8, 2021, and before Singh met Ms Khan again on Oct 3, 2021.
"I think in your submission, you have emphasised that this untruth was actually quite a serious, grave matter," said Justice Chong.
"And one would expect, that if the decision was made on Aug 8 that you should take ownership, or at some point in time you have to come clean, it is expected that steps will be taken about drafting what to say, when to say and in what forum the untruth should be clarified.ย
"But what I find unusual is that it is common ground that nothing was done in that critical eight-week period."
He said it was Singh's evidence that there was "nothing much to prepare" because all that had to be done was to set up on Oct 4, 2021, when parliament sat and say the anecdote was a lie.
Justice Chong told Mr Jumabhoy that he needed to contrast this with what actually happened when they decided to clarify the lie, having drafts exchanged, in-person meetings and a need for Ms Khan to go before the WP's central committee to read a prepared statement.
"In that period ... is that consistent? With someone who wanted the truth to be clarified? Or someone who was prepared to let it be buried?" asked Justice Chong.
In response to Mr Jumabhoy's answers, the judge said he could accept that Singh would be sensitive, given the context that Ms Khan was the subject of sexual assault herself.
"I accept that because the normal reaction of a person would be to be sensitive, to empathise with Ms Khan, that you do not harass her repeatedly," said Justice Chong. "But we are not there. We are dealing with a case that has a complete absence of any discussion."
Mr Jumabhoy then explained that Ms Khan's lie was not the only thing Singh had on his agenda at that point - he had other things which were "as pressing if not more so", and Ms Khan was not attending parliament in that period as she had shingles.
In response, the judge said: "I don't think it can be seriously denied that the office of an opposition member, especially the Leader of the Opposition, will be busy. There's no question about that.ย
"The question is - was he so busy that he didn't deal with this pretty important pressing matter at all?"
He said that even if Singh felt he should allow Ms Khan some space, in the interim period, there was no discussion with the other party leaders either.
"During this period, there was no discussion with Ms Loh, or Mr Nathan - I don't think they had shingles at that time," said the judge. "And shingles, as you know, it's like chickenpox. It's not life-threatening."
He added that he knew "something about shingles" and said "you can still function".
Justice Chong went on to say that steps were taken immediately after the WP leaders had a meeting with Mr Low Thia Khiang on Oct 11, 2021.
He asked that if there was a basis for the trial judge to find that the view changed around Oct 11 or Oct 12, 2021, that the party had to come clean and clarify the truth, and if it occurred after the meeting with Mr Low, then would it not be logical that prior to that, the position was not to clarify the untruth.
"That would be logical, yes," acknowledged Mr Jumabhoy.
A lot more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/pritam-singh-appeal-defence-argue-trial-judge-ignored-evidence-5443946