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Article
Dealing with Unreliable Evidence
Singapore Law Watch Commentaries
  • Siyuan CHEN, Singapore Management University
Publication Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
8-2011
Abstract

Muhammad bin Kadar v Public Prosecutor was the culmination of a case described by the Court of Appeal as “extraordinary” and “one of the longest in the Singapore judiciary’s annals”. Two brothers, Muhammad and Ismil, were alleged to have robbed and murdered an old woman in her own flat and in the presence of her bedridden husband. The brothers were both convicted by the High Court and sentenced to death. In acquitting Ismil of all charges, the Court of Appeal rendered a 207-paragraph judgment that canvassed many issues, but space constraints limits this note’s treatment to the issue of whether a court has the discretion to exclude procedurally flawed statements – specifically, long/investigation statements in this context.

Discipline
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International
Citation Information
Siyuan CHEN. "Dealing with Unreliable Evidence" Singapore Law Watch Commentaries (2011) p. 6
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/siyuan_chen/72/