Latest news with #IlliMarisqaKhalizan


The Star
7 hours ago
- The Star
Food delivery rider gets year's jail, one stroke for mobile phone loan fraud
KUALA LUMPUR: The Magistrate's Court on Friday (June 20) sentenced a food delivery rider to one year's jail and ordered him to be given one stroke of the cane after he pleaded guilty to abetting in defrauding a woman over a loan application for a mobile phone, four months ago. Magistrate Illi Marisqa Khalizan ordered Salman Abdullah, 31, to start serving his sentence from Friday. Salman admitted to abetting a 32-year-old woman in deceiving a credit assessment officer into approving a loan application worth RM8,329 to obtain a mobile phone from a mobile phone distribution company by submitting a fake salary slip from a non-existent company and using a forged Malaysian identity card at a shopping mall on Feb 1. Deputy public prosecutor Syafika Azwa Fikri asked the court to impose a deterrent sentence, but counsel Edwin Tomas pleaded for leniency, saying that his client has no fixed income and has to support four young children. – Bernama

Barnama
7 hours ago
- Barnama
Food Delivery Rider Gets Year's Jail, One Stroke For Mobile Phone Loan Fraud
KUALA LUMPUR, June 20 (Bernama) -- The Magistrate's Court today sentenced a food delivery rider to one year's jail and ordered him to be given one stroke of the cane after he pleaded guilty to abetting in defrauding a woman over a loan application for a mobile phone, four months ago. Magistrate Illi Marisqa Khalizan ordered Salman Abdullah, 31, to start serving his sentence from today. Salman admitted to abetting a 32-year-old woman in deceiving a credit assessment officer into approving a loan application worth RM8,329 to obtain a mobile phone from a mobile phone distribution company by submitting a fake salary slip from a non-existent company and using a forged Malaysian identity card at a shopping mall on Feb 1.


The Sun
8 hours ago
- The Sun
Food delivery rider jailed for loan fraud, gets cane
KUALA LUMPUR: The Magistrate's Court today sentenced a food delivery rider to one year's jail and ordered him to be given one stroke of the cane after he pleaded guilty to abetting in defrauding a woman over a loan application for a mobile phone, four months ago. Magistrate Illi Marisqa Khalizan ordered Salman Abdullah, 31, to start serving his sentence from today. Salman admitted to abetting a 32-year-old woman in deceiving a credit assessment officer into approving a loan application worth RM8,329 to obtain a mobile phone from a mobile phone distribution company by submitting a fake salary slip from a non-existent company and using a forged Malaysian identity card at a shopping mall on Feb 1. DPP Syafika Azwa Fikri asked the court to impose a deterrent sentence, but counsel Edwin Tomas pleaded for leniency, saying that his client has no fixed income and has to support four young children.


The Sun
8 hours ago
- The Sun
Food delivery rider gets year's jail, one stroke for mobile phone loan fraud
KUALA LUMPUR: The Magistrate's Court today sentenced a food delivery rider to one year's jail and ordered him to be given one stroke of the cane after he pleaded guilty to abetting in defrauding a woman over a loan application for a mobile phone, four months ago. Magistrate Illi Marisqa Khalizan ordered Salman Abdullah, 31, to start serving his sentence from today. Salman admitted to abetting a 32-year-old woman in deceiving a credit assessment officer into approving a loan application worth RM8,329 to obtain a mobile phone from a mobile phone distribution company by submitting a fake salary slip from a non-existent company and using a forged Malaysian identity card at a shopping mall on Feb 1. DPP Syafika Azwa Fikri asked the court to impose a deterrent sentence, but counsel Edwin Tomas pleaded for leniency, saying that his client has no fixed income and has to support four young children.


New Straits Times
23-04-2025
- New Straits Times
15 fined for fake birth certs used in MyKad applications
KUALA LUMPUR: Fifteen people have been fined between RM800 and RM3,500 for submitting false information when registering their children's birth certificates and when applying for MyKad at age 12 using the fraudulent documents, at various branches of the National Registration Department (NRD). Eight magistrate's courts handed down the fines to the accused, aged between 50 and 70, after they each pleaded guilty to the offences committed at the NRD offices in Kuala Lumpur, Kepong, Taman Maluri, and Bandar Tun Razak. The group, comprising 12 men and three women, were arrested on April 22 by the enforcement team from the NRD's Putrajaya headquarters under Ops Foster 1.0. A total of 18 charges were brought, with three individuals facing two charges each for offences committed between January 2004 and July 2022. Charges for providing false information in the registration of birth certificates were brought under Section 36(b) of the Births and Deaths Registration Act, which carries a maximum penalty of RM2,000 or imprisonment for up to 12 months, or both, upon conviction. Meanwhile, charges relating to MyKad applications at age 12 using the fraudulent birth certificates were framed under Article 25(1)(b) of the National Registration Regulations, under the National Registration Act, which provides for up to three years' imprisonment or a fine of up to RM20,000, or both. Fines under Section 36(b) ranged from RM800 to RM1,800, while those under Article 25(1)(b) ranged from RM3,000 to RM3,500. The magistrates presiding over the cases were Atiqah Mohamed @ Mohamad Saim, Illi Marisqa Khalizan, M.S. Arunjothy, Aina Azahra Arifin, Amira Abdul Aziz, Farah Nabihah Muhamad Dan, and S. Mageswary. Prosecution was led by NRD officers Nor Fadilah Mat Shaari, Arief Khairee Khairuddin, Mohd Syazlan Hafizi Mat Yaacob, Zulkarnain Ahmad, Tengku Hazmi Taqiuddin Tengku Ab Aziz, Md Shahedan Md Taib, and Mohd Ramzi Adnan. Following the court proceedings, NRD's investigation and enforcement division director Mohammad Khairu Farhan Md Saad said the department would assist the individuals involved in correcting their children's birth certificates and MyKad records — some of whom are below and above the age of 21. "This isn't about punishing them — it's about correcting the false information on documents issued many years ago. We want to make things right," he said. He said that children under 21 must amend birth details such as parental names and place of birth, and obtain an adoption order with their current guardians before applying for citizenship. Those over 21 must first correct their birth details before proceeding with a citizenship application.