
Man jailed for illegally transferring money
The Kota Kinabalu Court Complex.
KOTA KINABALU (May 20): A labourer was sentenced to four years' jail by a Sessions Court here on Tuesday for illegally transferring RM10,000 from a woman's account to another woman's account.
Judge Amir Shah Amir Hassan imposed the sentence on Sylvester Ak Drem, 25, after the latter pleaded guilty to a charge under Section 424C (2) of the Penal Code.
The indictment provides for a jail term of up to 10 years or a fine of up to RM150,000 or both, upon conviction.
Sylvester had committed the offence at a bank branch in Tuaran on November 20, 2024.
The court heard that the victim had asked assistance from Sylvester, who is her husband's brother-in-law, to withdraw RM200 for an ATM machine, and after that Sylvester had returned back her ATM card and gave RM200 to her.
However, a few days later when the victim wanted to withdraw cash, she found that balance in her bank account had decreased.
She then applied for her account to be checked and learnt that there was a transaction involving RM10,000 done on the day she asked for help from the accused to withdraw money.
Investigation revealed that Sylvester had transferred the money from the victim's account to his mother's bank account which matched CCTV recordings at the bank branch on the incident day.
During the proceedings on Tuesday, when the court inquired where was the money, Sylvester answered that he had spent it all.
In his decision, the judge explained that he had taken into consideration that he did not impose a fine punishment because the facts of the case stated that Sylvester had promised to pay back the money, however until a police report was lodged, he had not paid any.
The judge also said that he was made to understand that this was the first case in Sabah.
The prosecution had informed that there was no reported case in Sabah since the law was gazetted last year.
In pleading for a lenient sentence, the unrepresented Sylvester said that he is married and has a child.
In reply, the prosecution pressed for a deterrent sentence to serve as a lesson to Sylvester and to would-be offenders to not committing a similar offence.
Earlier, Tuaran district police vhief Superintendent Noraidin Ag Maidin said the accused was arrested around 6.30pm on May 16 following a complaint from the victims.
'Investigations found that on November 20, 2024, the suspect transferred RM10,000 from his in-law's bank account into his mother's bank account without their knowledge or consent.
'The suspect then withdrew the money using his mother's ATM card which was in his possession without his mother's consent,' said Noraidin.
Noraidin said the accused was the first person in Sabah to be charged under this section after it was introduced through an amendment Act 574 and approved by the Malaysian Parliament in July 2024, and came into effect on October 30, 2024.
'Section 424C(2) provides for punishment for individuals involved in transactions using payment instruments or accounts belonging to others at financial institutions without permission. This measure was taken in response to the increase in cases of online fraud and misuse of bank accounts, including cases of mule account holders.
'Police view such cases seriously including any form of misuse of accounts and financial payment instruments, whether involving outside parties or family members.
'Offences such as this are not only illegal, but also undermine trust in family and financial institutions,' he said.
Noraidin advised the public to keep their bank information and bank cards safe and never allow third parties to access their bank accounts, including family members or close friends.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
4 hours ago
- New Straits Times
TH Travel denies link with fake haj package programme
KUALA LUMPUR: TH Travel & Services Sdn Bhd (TH Travel) has denied it's connection with a fake programme known as "Program Haji Infaq Masyarakat" which allegedly offers TH Travel-managed haj packages priced at RM123,990 with an initial payment of as little as RM10,000. TH Travel, in a statement, said the company has never appointed any individual, external company or business entity to promote, manage or receive payment on behalf of TH Travel for any haj or umrah packages. The statement said that as a haj and umrah travel agency registered and fully regulated by the Lembaga Tabung Haji (TH), all payments related to registration and deposits for haj packages operated by TH Travel can only be made through TH's official account. "TH Travel does not offer subsidised or externally sponsored packages that require pilgrims to pay into unofficial or individual accounts. "TH Travel is not involved in any form of fundraising through cleaning companies, cake businesses or third party intermediaries," the statement said. TH Travel takes seriously the misuse of the company's name and reputation to deceive Muslims intending to perform the Haj pilgrimage. "We understand that a police report has been lodged and an investigation is underway by the authorities and TH Travel is prepared to provide full cooperation to the Royal Malaysia Police and the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) in handling this case," the statement said. – BERNAMA


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
TH Travel denies any link with fake haj package programme
KUALA LUMPUR: TH Travel & Services Sdn Bhd (TH Travel) denies any connection with a fake programme known as "Program Haji Infaq Masyarakat" which allegedly offers TH Travel-managed haj packages priced at RM123,990 with an initial payment of as little as RM10,000. TH Travel, in a statement Saturday (June 7), said the company has never appointed any individual, external company or business entity to promote, manage or receive payment on behalf of TH Travel for any haj or umrah packages. The statement said that as a haj and umrah travel agency registered and fully regulated by Lembaga Tabung Haji (TH), all payments related to registration and deposits for hajj packages operated by TH Travel can only be made through TH's official account. "TH Travel does not offer subsidised or externally sponsored packages that require pilgrims to pay into unofficial or individual accounts. "TH Travel is not involved in any form of fundraising through cleaning companies, cake businesses or third party intermediaries," the statement said. TH Travel takes seriously the misuse of the company's name and reputation to deceive Muslims intending to perform the Hajj pilgrimage. "We understand that a police report has been lodged and an investigation is underway by the authorities and TH Travel is prepared to provide full cooperation to the Royal Malaysia Police and the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) in handling this case," the statement said. - Bernama


New Straits Times
4 hours ago
- New Straits Times
NST Leader: Unpaid traffic summonses
Malaysian vehicle owners particularly resent paying traffic summonses for illegal parking, unless forced by police action. Motorists tend to view summonses in three informal categories. First, local council tickets are often ignored due to their perceived lack of enforcement power. Second, traffic police summonses have more legal weight, as non-payment can lead to arrest warrants. Still, many ignore them, especially for illegal parking. RTD summonses, however, are usually taken seriously, as they block road tax and licence renewals until the summonses are paid. Even then, the most stubborn ignore police and RTD's annual flat rate amnesty offers. RTD said that it collected only RM56 million from 374,024 summonses, far below the potential amount, which could have been double or triple that amount. This suggests that many drivers aren't deterred by blacklisting — they continue driving without insurance, road tax or licences. The police discount, valid until June 30, offers a flat RM150 rate for speeding and traffic light violations — similar to RTD's offer. Here lies the problem. Motorists' blase attitude towards these offers reflects a contempt for traffic laws and penalties. This contempt has translated into more serious traffic offences, and more tragic accidents. Since the discounts don't improve road safety, it's time to scrap them and revive tougher penalties that deter offenders. Sure, that would mean more officers and working hours to round up offenders. Police may have to return to making "house calls" on offenders but it's a necessary price to forcibly change an entrenched mindset. There is a plausible solution: integrate data sharing between the traffic police, RTD, Land Public Transport Commission (SPAD) and, while we are at it, the local councils. Under this integration, summonses imposed by traffic police and local councils are automatically recorded by the RTD and SPAD, which immediately blacklist drivers and vehicles with outstanding summonses. Alas, this may not happen in the near future because these agencies and their processes operate independently with little push to exchange data and information. Even when traffic police files a request to the RTD to blacklist certain offenders, the process is tedious and inefficient. Still, this logical and unified system isn't sidelined just yet: there are still efforts to combine the Automated Awareness Safety System, the Automated Enforcement System and the Kejara points demerit system. There's only one problem: this initiative had been lumbering for more than a decade and it is still lumbering.