
Spanish police ask for suspected killer of Audrey Fang to be deported to Singapore
Spanish police ask for suspected killer of Audrey Fang to be deported to Singapore
Source: Straits Times
Article Date: 04 May 2025
Author: Lok Jian Wen
If request is approved, he could face murder trial in S'pore, and possible death penalty.
Mitchell Ong, the suspect in the fatal stabbing of fellow Singaporean Audrey Fang in Spain, faces being deported to be tried in Singapore, after the Spanish immigration authorities submitted the request to a court.
His lawyer, Ms Maria Jesus Ruiz de Castaneda, told The Straits Times she is opposing the request.
'Nothing has been decided. We have been asked to make presentations regarding the request for expulsion,' she said, adding that there is no clarity at the moment on when the presiding judge will make a decision.
The deportation request was made by Spain's General Commissariat for Aliens and Borders, a national police agency that manages immigration and border control matters, reported the Spanish media.
If it is approved by the Spanish court, Ong, who is currently incarcerated in the Sangonera la Verde prison in Murcia, could be tried in Singapore, where he may face the death penalty if charged with murder.
Both the public prosecutor's office and private prosecution – represented by lawyer Manuel Martinez on behalf of the Fang family in February – announced their intention to charge Ong with murder.
A murder charge in Spain carries a jail sentence ranging from 15 years to 25 years.
The Spanish immigration authority also requested that Ong be banned from returning to Spain for 10 years.
The private lawyer representing the Fang family is in agreement with the deportation request, reported Spanish daily La Opinion de Murcia.
Ong's lawyer told La Opinion that expulsion would be a violation of the rule of law and international treaties Spain has signed and ratified.
'He is involved in ongoing criminal proceedings in Spain, where he must be tried with due process,' Ms Ruiz de Castaneda said. 'Expulsion would be contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights, the principle of non-refoulement and Spain's commitments against the death penalty.'
She had previously called for the case to be dismissed, saying all necessary evidence had to be examined and that Ong 'firmly and consistently' insisted he did not kill Ms Fang.
Ong has been in custody since April 16, 2024, after Ms Fang was found dead near a parking area for lorries in the town of Abanilla on April 10 that year.
Two of Ms Fang's friends told a Spanish court on June 26, 2024, that Ms Fang and Ong had met on a social dating network.
Mr Martinez, representing Ms Fang's family in court, said she had told her friends she was planning to meet Ong in Spain during her holiday.
Ms Fang, a 39-year-old architect, left Singapore on April 4 to travel alone to Xabia in the Valencia region of Spain. She was supposed to return eight days later but became uncontactable on April 10.
She died from knife wounds and head trauma.
DNA from two men was found on her clothes, La Opinion reported in March, raising the possibility that more than one person was involved in her death.
Ong, who was previously an insurance agent with AIA, was also found to have been nominated as the sole beneficiary of Ms Fang's Central Provident Fund savings, with the accounts reportedly containing around $498,000.
Source: The Straits Times © SPH Media Limited. Permission required for reproduction.
Print
Hashtags

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


New Paper
11 hours ago
- New Paper
Repeat offender who cheated 61 victims of over $310k gets 2½ years' jail
A man who was released from jail in December 2022 did not learn his lesson and devised a scheme to con multiple contractors, cheating 61 victims of more than $310,000 in total. Court documents stated that Arivalagan Muthusamy had committed earlier offences - forgery for the purpose of cheating in 2013 and computer misuse offences in a syndicate which was involved in gold and cryptocurrency scams in 2021. He was under a remission order when he committed some of his latest offences. As part of the order, he was supposed to keep himself out of trouble from Dec 17, 2022 to March 28, 2023. However, the unemployed Singaporean went on to cheat multiple victims, including firms dealing with flooring works and air-conditioning units, before he was arrested on July 4, 2023. He was charged in court the next day. On June 4, the 40-year-old, who has made no restitution, was sentenced to 2½ years' jail after he pleaded guilty to 21 counts of cheating involving nearly $154,000 in total. The 21 companies were each cheated of between around $5,400 and $10,000. More than 40 charges linked to remaining victims and ill-gotten gains were considered during Arivalagan's sentencing. He must also spend an additional 88 days behind bars after breaching the remission order. Deputy Public Prosecutor Maximilian Chew told the court that in late 2022, Arivalagan learnt of scams conducted against contractors and decided to commit similar offences. As part of his ruse, he would contact a contractor, claiming that he needed certain works to be carried out at certain premises, usually a commercial building like a shopping mall. He would then redirect the victim to a "contact person", purportedly someone with the building management of such properties. After that, Arivalagan would falsely present himself as a representative of the building management and ask the victim to pay a sum of money, for items such as security deposits. He would provide bank account details for such a purpose. To execute the scams, Arivalagan needed multiple mobile phone numbers to contact the victims. He also needed multiple bank accounts to receive the scam proceeds. To get them, he approached two men - Thomas Sng Jian Wen, 35, a stall assistant, and Ahammed Md Riaz, 29, a construction worker - and asked them to procure bank accounts from their own contacts. DPP Chew said that Sng, a Singaporean, and Ahammed, a Bangladeshi, agreed to be part of the plan, knowing that the bank accounts would be used to perpetrate scams. Court documents did not disclose the outcome of the cases involving Sng and Ahammed. DPP Chew said that Arivalagan cheated two companies of $10,000 each. In February 2023, he contacted one of them, claiming that he required epoxy flooring and painting works at the Capital Tower building in the Tanjong Pagar area. He told the victim to pay $10,000 to the "building management of the premises" for a purported "permit-to-work" and provided a bank account number. The victim complied. Arivalagan used a similar method to cheat the other victims. On June 4, DPP Chew asked the court to sentence Arivalagan to an aggregate sentence of 2½ years' imprisonment, with an additional sentence of 88 days behind bars. Stressing that the offences were planned and premeditated, he added: "The accused also roped in Thomas and Riaz to procure bank accounts belonging to others to receive the proceeds of the scams. "Not only there is a group element to the offences, such money mule activities are also additional offences themselves and which warrant the imposition of a strong deterrent sentence." For each count of cheating, an offender can be jailed for up to 10 years and fined.

Straits Times
11 hours ago
- Straits Times
Singaporean businessman nabbed before flight at Bangkok airport over suspected tax evasion
David Liu was about to board a flight to Singapore on June 2 when he was arrested in the Thai capital. PHOTO: FACEBOOK/CIBTHAILAND Singaporean businessman nabbed before flight at Bangkok airport over suspected tax evasion SINGAPORE – A Singaporean businessman who was about to fly back home was arrested at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport over suspected tax evasion to the tune of more than 5.2 million baht (S$205,000), Thai police said on June 4. He was identified by the Thai police's Economic Crime Suppression Division (ECD) as David Liu, 71, a former director of media analytics company Isentia Monitoring Services (Thailand). Liu was about to board a flight to Singapore on June 2 when he was arrested in the Thai capital, said ECD commander Thatphum Charuprat. He was arrested for allegedly trying to evade by fraud or deceit value-added tax payable by Isentia. Investigations had found that the Singaporean was an authorised director of the media company from July to October 2015. According to an annual report by Isentia, Liu was appointed as the Asia chief executive of the Sydney-headquartered media intelligence company on June 1, 2015. He left Isentia in 2019, according to a post on LinkedIn, where he is now listed as CEO of a data intelligence firm. He admitted to previously being the director of Isentia, but denied wrongdoing, the Bangkok Post reported, citing ECD commander Thatphum Charuprat at a media briefing. Thailand's Revenue Department had filed a complaint against Isentia after discovering an incorrect tax filing of zero tax returns despite the company being found to have generated revenue. But no company representative responded after a police summons was issued, said the police. The suspected damages against the state in lost revenue was nearly 5.24 million baht, said the ECD. An arrest warrant was subsequently issued by the Phra Khanong Criminal Court. Liu was tracked by the police and arrested at Suvarnabhumi Airport before he boarded his flight. If convicted, he faces a fine of up to 200,000 baht and a seven-year prison term. The Straits Times has contacted Isentia for comment. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


Straits Times
12 hours ago
- Straits Times
Eldercare staff fined $10k each after elderly man in wheelchair died from fall off van platform
Myanmar national Moe Thadar, then 49, was a healthcare assistant at the time, while Singaporean Kwa Kim Seng, then 67, was employed as a van driver. Eldercare staff fined $10k each after elderly man in wheelchair died from fall off van platform Shaffiq Alkhatib The Straits Times June 3, 2025 Two employees of an eldercare services provider were helping clients board its van when one of the senior citizens fell off the vehicle's wheelchair lift platform and his head struck the ground. Mr Hassan Mohamed Karchi Arsan Osman, 76, was unconscious when he was taken to the National University Hospital on Feb 3, 2021, and died of a head injury at 9.35pm that day. On June 3, Active Global Respite Care was fined $7,000 after it was convicted of an offence under the Workplace Safety and Health (Risk Management) Regulations. Court documents stated that it failed to implement safety control measures and safe work procedures governing the use of the wheelchair lift at the rear of the van. Two people, who were working for the company when the incident took place, were each fined $10,000 in December 2023. Myanmar national Moe Thadar, then 49, was a healthcare assistant at the time, while Singaporean Kwa Kim Seng, then 67, was employed as a van driver. They failed to ensure that the brakes of Mr Hassan's wheelchair were engaged, causing his death. For the current case, Ministry of Manpower prosecutor Kimberly Boo told the court that Active Global Respite Care owned two vans used for transporting elderly clients between their homes and a senior care centre at Block 31A Ghim Moh Link. A healthcare assistant would be present in each van to assist with the transportation. Each van was installed with a wheelchair lift, allowing wheelchair users to get into the vehicle through a platform that could be raised. At around 4.40pm on Feb 3, 2021, Moe Thadar and Kwa were helping the clients to board one of the vans at the senior care centre's pickup point. Ms Boo said: "When Moe wheeled (Mr Hassan) from the pickup point onto the wheelchair lift platform, she failed to engage the brakes of (his) wheelchair. "As Moe was walking away, she told Kwa, 'uncle, hold', in order to inform him that (Mr Hassan) was ready to be lifted. Kwa proceeded to raise the wheelchair lift platform while chatting with a colleague." As the platform was reaching the top of the lift, in line with the van, Kwa did not wait for a healthcare assistant inside the van to grab hold of the wheelchair. Kwa released his grip on Mr Hassan's wheelchair, which rolled backwards and off the platform. Mr Hassan's head struck the ground when he fell. He was pronounced dead later that day. Ms Boo told the court that prior to the incident, Active Global Respite Care had no documented risk assessment on the transportation of its clients using a van with a wheelchair lift. She added that on the day of the incident, multiple control measures to minimise safety risks to Mr Hassan were not implemented. These included ensuring that wheelchair brakes were engaged before activating the wheelchair lift. Defence lawyers Gloria James-Civetta and Noelle Teoh, who represented Active Global Respite Care, on June 3 pleaded for their client to be given a fine of not more than $5,000. The pair from Gloria James-Civetta & Co added: "The incident was an isolated and unprecedented occurrence that tragically resulted in the passing of the late Mr Hassan. "Prior to the incident on Feb 3, 2021, Active Global had operated in Singapore for several years without any record of similar serious incidents or accidents. It is also noted that the late Mr Hassan had successfully completed nearly 500 rides with Active Global over the course of his engagement, without issue." The lawyers stated in court documents that since the incident, their client has taken immediate and proactive measures to address any gaps in its safety protocols. This includes updating its standard operating procedure in June 2021 to further enhance clients' safety during transportation. It also deployed additional manpower to act as traffic marshals at the drop-off and pickup points of its centres, the court heard. Click here to contribute a story or submit it to our WhatsApp Get more of Stomp's latest updates by following us on: