Raymond Ng, Husband of Anti-Vaccine Group Founder, Charged with Cheating
Raymond Ng, the husband of anti-vaccine group founder Iris Koh, has been charged with cheating 12 people in relation to Vendshare, a vending machine business. Ng, 51, was handed a dozen counts of cheating at a district court on Friday, February 7th. The amount of money involved across all the charges is more than S$60,800 (US$45,000).
The allegations against Ng span the period from August 25, 2019 to October 28, 2020. He is accused of deceiving the 12 people into making payments to Vendshare for co-ownership of coffee vending machines when he knew that this was false. The highest amount allegedly obtained from a single individual was S$13,900.
Vendshare is a live company in the beverage business, according to the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority's business portal. It was previously known as Get Vending and SG Satay, and has a registered address at Pines Industrial Building on Macpherson Road.
Ng remains out on bail of S$15,000. His case will be heard again on March 7th. If found guilty of cheating, Ng could be jailed for up to 10 years and fined for each charge.
Ng has been in the news for his involvement in several civil suits, including a defamation claim against businessman Calvin Cheng. With his wife Koh, he has also filed suits against the National University of Singapore and Meta Platforms, which owns Facebook. He was also mentioned in a coroner's inquiry into the death of Ms Geno Ong. Ms Ong faced multiple lawsuits initiated against her by Ng before her death. The coroner found that she took her own life in part because of escalating legal costs.
7 Comments
Coccinella
“If this is how the media treats business fraud, then every mistake gets blown out of proportion with political angles.”
ZmeeLove
“It’s disappointing that instead of question-asking journalism, we get murder-mystery style linking of unrelated issues.”
Bella Ciao
“It’s refreshing to see that misconduct is getting reported, no matter a person’s affiliations.”
Mariposa
“Nothing proves a wider conspiracy here; this seems like a convenient way to tarnish reputations.”
Rotfront
“Cheating 12 individuals out of their hard-earned money shows it’s time to hold fraudulent businessmen accountable.”
Eugene Alta
“The facts speak for themselves—no one should be allowed to deceive investors and get away with it.”
Katchuka
“It’s the truth that matters here—cheating investors to make money is reprehensible in every sense.”