Yap Weng Wah
Yap Weng Wah (born 1983), alias Wai Loon or Loon, is a Malaysian serial sex offender, who formerly worked as a quality assurance engineer, and is currently jailed in Singapore for 76 sexual offences committed against 31 teenage boys aged between 11 and 15 in Singapore. He befriended his victims online, had sex with them and filmed his illegal acts. During police investigations, Yap was found to have raped 14 more boys in Malaysia in between his constant trips from Singapore to Malaysia before his arrest.
Yap Weng Wah | |
---|---|
Born | Yap Weng Wah 1983 (age 39–40) |
Criminal charges | Faced a total of 76 charges. Convicted of 11 charges of sexually penetrating a minor below the age of 14 and one charge of sexually penetrating a minor below the age of 16. The remaining 64 charges including:
|
Criminal penalty | Total of 30 years’ imprisonment and 24 strokes of the cane (20 March 2015) |
Criminal status | Currently imprisoned in Singapore |
Yap Weng Wah | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Traditional Chinese | 叶荣华 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 葉榮華 | ||||||||||
|
Yap was diagnosed with hebephilia. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison and 24 strokes of the cane, as he was assessed to remain a danger to society with his high risk of re-offending and the aggravating nature of his crimes. The sexual rampage which Yap unleashed upon Singapore was known to be one of the worst sexual crimes against boys, as well as the worst sexual predation of pubescent boys Singapore had ever seen.
Name
The name "Weng Wah" meant "glory and splendor" in Cantonese. The Chinese translation of Yap's given name, Rong Hua (荣华; Rónghuá), carries the same meaning.
Early life
Childhood and family
Born sometime in 1983, Yap is the eldest of three children, having a brother and a sister. His birthplace and hometown is in Ipoh, Malaysia.
Yap grew up in a single-parent household, as his father left for New Zealand when he was eight years old and presumably never came back.[1] His mother stayed on and raised the three children by herself, sometimes under financial struggles.
Alleged childhood sexual encounter
According to his lawyer, when Yap was in primary school, at the age of 12, he had his first sexual encounter with his male mathematics teacher, who performed both oral sex and anal sex on him. These sexual encounters would occur at least once or twice a week, and it lasted nine months until Yap finished school. According to his lawyer, as attributed to the lack of fatherly love in his childhood, Yap believed that what his sexual acts with the teacher were acts of love and intimacy.[2]
Education and employment in Singapore
Yap went on to further his studies after his graduation from primary school. After undergoing education, Yap became a quality assurance engineer, and later worked as one at ASM Technology in Singapore since 2009. According to a colleague, Yap, who was known as "Travis" at work, was normally a quiet individual at work and never shown any signs of sexual perversions.
Sexual offences
Singapore
While he was working in Singapore, Yap, then 26 years old, began his sexual offences from November 2009 till June 2012, three months before Yap was arrested. In total, Yap had committed the offences to 31 pubescent boys aged between 11 and 15, who were not named to protect their identities.
Modus operandi
Yap typically, through the Internet, looked for boys who lived or who went to school near his rental apartment in New Upper Changi Road, and later in Yishun. He would then befriend his targeted victims online and then pretended to be a 18-year-old polytechnic student under the aliases Wai Loon or Loon. Sometimes, Yap would also say he was from Indonesia.[3]
During these online interactions with those victims who accepted him as online friends, Yap would present himself as an older brother-figure or mentor to gain their trust, and they would chat or message together over several weeks or months. Together with his victims, Yap talked about hobbies, movies, sports and computer games. He would also find a way to bring up the topic of sex in midst of these online conversations.
Yap would then set up physical meetings with the victims under the pretext of giving them gifts, playing computer games, or giving tips about bodybuilding. During these physical meetings, which took place in places like his rented Yishun flat, Woodlands, Hougang, Aljunied and Changi, a chalet at Downtown East, a hotel room in Geylang, and even toilet cubicles at public places like swimming pools and malls, Yap would then convince his victims to allow him to perform oral sex or anal sex on them (without a condom), which went on even if the boys refused, saying they were not homosexual, cried, or were reluctant. Except for one 12-year-old boy, the remaining 30 victims were sexually assaulted in this way during these meetings.[4]
Yap would also use his phone or camera to film himself having sex with the boys.[5] When the boys protested, Yap promised he would delete the footage, but saved these videos to his laptop to re-watch and masturbate to. At the time Yap was captured, the police found a total of 2,218 videos recorded and stored inside Yap's laptop. These videos were also catalogued with the names and ages of the victims, and the year Yap met the victims.
Details
On the 23-page charge sheet filed by the prosecution in relation to the 76 criminal charges made against Yap, 7 charges involved 11-year-olds, 13 dealt with 12-year-olds and 4 with 15-year-olds. The majority of the charges involved boys ages 13 and 14 – 32 and 20 charges respectively. Fifty one charges were related to sexual penetration of a minor below 14 years old, 24 were for minors below 16, and one involved a charge of Yap asking a 12-year-old to film himself performing sex and sending the video to Yap; that 12-year-old boy was the same boy who was the only victim Yap never had sex with.
A select few of these 76 crimes were publicly released in certain articles covering Yap's crimes. One of these crimes took place on 4 February 2010, where in Hougang Swimming Complex, a 13-year-old boy was told to remove his school uniform in a toilet cubicle, where Yap sodomised him and filmed the act. In March 2010, a 15-year-old boy met up with Yap in a hotel, where Yap tried to undress and kiss the boy. Despite the victim's protests, Yap performed oral sex on him. On 25 September 2011, a 14-year-old boy was told to perform oral sex on Yap in a toilet cubicle in the Tampines Stadium.
Another case, which took place on an unspecified date, involved another boy whom Yap met and chatted with for a few months on Facebook before their first physical meeting in a mall. After the duo had lunch and played arcade games, he took the boy to his rented room to watch cartoons online while his landlord was in the living room. Yap later removed the boy's clothes and sexually assaulted him, promising it would not happen again. However each time they met, Yap assaulted him again either before or after taking the boy outdoors to watch movies or eat outside.[6]
Malaysia
While he was preying on pre-teen males in Singapore, Yap had also extended his targets beyond Singapore and into Malaysia, his country of birth. During his yearly visits to Malaysia, Yap would have sex with another 14 boys in Malaysia, all of them also aged below 16. He also filmed these sexual acts like he did in Singapore to the 31 victims he met there. These offences were also brought to light when police arrested Yap in September 2012.[7] However, since the crimes involving these 14 boys were not committed in Singapore, Yap did not face any formal charges related to these 14 boys when he was first arrested and charged.
Arrest and incarceration
Capture and remand
In June 2012, Yap's sexual offences were first discovered when the sister of one of Yap's 11-year-old victims checked her younger brother's mobile phone and found SMS messages between her brother and Yap. The brother and sister thus went to the police.
On 7 September 2012, after receiving a police report from another victim that Yap had sexually penetrated him, 29-year-old Yap was arrested by the police in his Yishun flat. Initially, Yap only confessed to having sex with three boys, but the 2,218 videos uncovered by the police had proven a much larger magnitude of his crimes than the extent Yap was willing to admit. On 8 September 2012, after he was formally charged in court for 76 sex-related charges, Yap was remanded for investigations. The arrest of Yap brought shock to those who knew him, including his colleagues and family back in Malaysia. His arrest and indictment was only reported publicly three years after his trial began.[8]
It was reported that due to Yap's arrest, Yap's family had experienced hard times: his sister was forced to drop out from university to find a job to feed the family, while his brother had to resign from his job to take care of his mother at home, and every week, the family had to spend 6 hours to travel from Ipoh to Singapore each time to visit Yap in prison where he was remanded and pending trial in Singapore.[9]
Trial, conviction and psychiatric reports
On 16 January 2015, two years and four months after his arrest, 31-year-old Yap Weng Wah was brought to trial in the High Court of Singapore, before High Court judge Woo Bih Li. In the beginning of the trial, Yap pleaded guilty to 12 counts of sexual penetration with a minor and agreed to have 64 other charges to be taken into consideration during sentencing. [10]
Bharat Saluja, a psychiatrist from the Institute of Mental Health (IMH), went to court and released a diagnosis report that Yap was suffering from hebephilia, a type of sexual preference for early adolescent children between 11 and 14 years of age. Saluja also testified in court that Yap's risk of reoffending was high. Tommy Tan, the defence's psychiatrist, agreed with Saluja's assessment that Yap had hebephilia and had a high propensity to reoffend. Dr. Tan also stated that Yap showed signs of major depressive disorder, and that, although he was not suicidal, long-term imprisonment would increase Yap's suicide risk.
In his second report, Saluja also testified that while it was hard for him to confidently say that Yap had a paedophilic disorder or paedophilia, a sexual interest in young but mainly prepubescent children, Yap's hunting of pubescent boys for sexual gratification did demonstrate a deviant pattern of sexualized behaviours, a pattern similar to that of high risk sex offenders displaying paedophilic tendencies.[11]
Sentencing submissions
The prosecution sought a sentence of at least 30 years' imprisonment and the legal maximum of 24 strokes of the cane for Yap, describing him as a "clear and present danger to society".[12][13] Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) David Khoo argued that Yap's offences had shown a "high degree" of premeditation and through his exploitation of the Internet, he had clearly targeted a vulnerable group of victims, with whom he carried out the sexual acts unprotected in all cases. Not only had he breached the trust of the boys, Yap had also caused significant harm to his victims during the time of his crimes, and had morally corrupted the boys in the course of these criminal acts, which took place over a prolonged period of time and were committed against a large number of victims. For these above factors, along with the difficulty to detect crimes against children, Khoo asked for Yap to be severely punished under the law. While the prosecution acknowledged that generally, caning would not be imposed in sex-related cases similar to that of Yap's unless there is violence exhibited against the victims, they said that Yap's sexual penetration of the boys "intrinsically constitutes an act of violence" and since the circumstances of Yap's case were so aggravating that they are repulsive to human conscience, they said that caning is necessary.[14]
On the other hand, Yap's lawyer, Daniel Koh, asked for a sentence of not more than 20 years behind bars. Although Koh objected to caning in Yap's case, he conceded that if it was really imposed, he said the caning should consist of anything less than 24 strokes of the cane. Koh urged the court to take into consideration of his client's period of remand, where Yap claimed he wanted to reform and rehabilitate; there is strong familial support for Yap which can assist him in the rehabilitation process. He cited that Yap was a first-time offender and with his credentials, he poses as a promising young man and could contribute to society as a useful and productive individual.[15] Yap, in his mitigation letter to the courts, tearfully pleaded for the courts to be lenient to him, as he said he felt ashamed and remorseful of what he did, and felt sorry to his family, who remained supportive of him throughout the court proceedings despite their shock over his offences and sexual perversions. He also made an apology to all the victims he had harmed in the trial, and cited the childhood rapes he experienced in primary school and his fear of getting near to girls after a female classmate's rejection back from secondary school as factors that made him the person he is today.[16][17]
Sentence and imprisonment
On 20 March 2015, 2 months after his conviction by the High Court, 31-year-old Yap was sentenced to a total of 30 years' imprisonment and 24 strokes of the cane,[18] which was the minimum sentence sought by the prosecution.[19][20] The sentence was backdated to 8 September 2012, the date of Yap's remand.[21]
In his judgement, Justice Woo Bih Li said that Yap's offences were "particularly heinous", and he also cited that other than deterrence, the punishment meted out should also reflect the sentencing principle of “retribution” and the degree of emotional and psychological harm he had caused to his victims. Woo said that he did not believe Yap was genuinely remorseful of his crimes, since from the start he tried to downplay the magnitude of his crimes, which Woo described as "the worst case of sexual offences against pubescent males." In Woo's words, he pointed out that Yap's guilty plea "did not spring from genuine remorse, but from a realisation that his goose was as good as cooked."[22]
The judge also said that the other aggravating circumstances were the high premeditation displayed by Yap and him using the Internet to lure and befriend his victims, earned their trust and breached it while satisfying his deviant sexual urges. He rejected the argument from the defence that Yap was suicidal, as since his suicidal tendencies are phrased in tentative terms, will have to be properly managed by the prison authorities. The filming of these acts by Yap also gave risk to the possibility of the videos falling into the hands of third parties and being circulated. He cited that there is a strong public interest to deter any potential criminals from misusing the Internet to gain access to a large number of potential victims. For these reasons, along with the high possibility reoffending, he sentenced Yap to a lengthy jail term to separate him from society as long as possible.[23][24]
It was reported that while hearing the sentence, Yap teared up and his family were saddened to hear the verdict. The family were given time to talk to Yap before he was led away from court to prison to start serving his sentence. The family declined to be interviewed. There was no appeal filed against the sentence.
Yap is still in prison serving his sentence as of 2021. Provided that he served with good behaviour in prison, Yap would only need to serve at least two-thirds of his 30-year sentence (20 years) before he can be granted an early release, with his possible (early) release date being on 8 September 2032.
Significance
The case of Yap made headlines in Singapore and brought shock to Singaporeans since its revelation. Furthermore, despite being in his early thirties, Yap still possessed boyish looks, and his youthful appearance had made it harder for people to believe that he was the one who had terrorized Singapore through his sexually perverse acts, adding to the sensationalism of the case. Due to the nature of Yap's crimes and his use of the Internet to prey on his victims, there were public advisement warnings (including by the government) made for all people to remind them that there is more to be done to educate young people and parents on online risks, in order to prevent similar crimes from happening again.[25] According to Singapore's national daily newspaper The Straits Times, Yap was one of the top ten people who made headlines nationwide in the year 2015.[26]
In July 2015, The Straits Times published a e-book titled Guilty As Charged: 25 Crimes That Have Shaken Singapore Since 1965, which included the Yap case as one of the top 25 crimes that shocked the nation since its independence in 1965. The book was borne out of collaboration between the Singapore Police Force and the newspaper itself. The e-book was edited by ST News Associate editor Abdul Hafiz Abdul Samad. The paperback edition of the book was published and first hit the bookshelves in end-June 2017. The paperback edition first entered the ST bestseller list on 8 August 2017, a month after its publication.[27][28][29]
Due to its significance, Yap's case was recalled in some news reports in light of certain local and foreign crimes involving online sex predators, paedophiles and underage sex. One instance was a 37-year-old Winnipeg man who preyed on a teenage girl from Singapore, with whom he befriended while playing an online video game, then repeatedly raping her and taking explicit nude photos when she went to Canada to meet him in April 2015.[30] Another crime that recalled the Yap case was 38-year-old Soffiyan Hamzah, who befriended 15 boys below 18 years old from the internet and performed oral sex on these boys. Soffiyan was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment on 3 January 2018 after pleading guilty to 8 out of 83 charges the month before in a district court of Singapore.[31][32] A third case was British paedophile and criminal Mark Bridger, who was convicted of murdering 5-year-old April Jones and sentenced to life imprisonment on a whole life tariff (basically life without parole), for which the case recalled some sexual crimes committed in Singapore and Malaysia, including the case of Yap and his crimes.[33]
Most recently, in August 2021, in light of a recent case where Chock Soon Seng, a former sex offender and private tutor, was sentenced in April 2021 to eight years' corrective training and six strokes of the cane for another series of sexual crimes against male children, the government of Singapore had expressed that there would be tougher measures be implemented to address the future sex crimes in courts, like increasing the current maximum penalties for sexual crimes on minors, and also released their details of assessing the sexual offenders and paedophiles' behaviours before sentencing. Precedent cases like that of Yap Weng Wah and another paedophilic sex offender Lim Hock Hin Kelvin (who was sentenced in 1997 to 40 years' imprisonment for sexually assaulting five male minors) were recalled and laid out as the most significant examples where the courts had imposed harsh penalties on the worst and chronic of sex offenders who showed a high level of re-offending.[34]
See also
References
- "Paedophile caught in Singapore". The Star. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Man, 31, preyed on 31 boys over 3 years". AsiaOne. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Engineer sexually preyed on 31 young boys". The New Paper. 17 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Guilty As Charged: Sex predator Yap Weng Wah preyed on at least 31 young boys". The Straits Times. 18 May 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "3年性侵30男生 色魔'哥哥'还录像". Wanbao (in Chinese). 16 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Guilty As Charged: Sex predator Yap Weng Wah preyed on at least 31 young boys". The Straits Times. 18 May 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Man, 31, preyed on 31 boys over 3 years". AsiaOne. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Man charged for sexual offences against at least 31 boys". TODAY. 17 January 2015.
- "性侵30男生害惨全家 妹弃上大学 代狼兄养家". Wanbao (in Chinese). 17 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Malaysian man convicted of sexual offences against boys". TODAY. 16 January 2015.
- "Public Prosecutor v Yap Weng Wah" (PDF). Singapore Law Watch. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Prosecutors seek 30 years' jail and caning for convicted pedophile". Coconuts Singapore. 16 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Malaysian engineer convicted of sexual offences against 31 boys in Singapore". Yahoo News. 18 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Public Prosecutor v Yap Weng Wah" (PDF). Singapore Law Watch. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Public Prosecutor v Yap Weng Wah" (PDF). Singapore Law Watch. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "性侵30男生害惨全家 妹弃上大学 代狼兄养家". Wanbao (in Chinese). 17 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "网上冒学长"猎物"教健身工程师性侵44未成年少年". 中国报 (in Chinese). 16 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Jurutera dijel 30 tahun, dirotan kerana jadikan 31 remaja mangsa seks". Berita Harian (in Malay). 21 March 2015. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- Lum, Selina (20 March 2015). "Engineer who preyed on 31 young boys gets 30 years' jail, 24 strokes of the cane". The Straits Times. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "3年性侵30男生 工程师监30年24鞭". 东方Online (in Chinese). 20 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Judicial CP - March 2015". Corpun. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Judge admonishes sex predator for lacking genuine remorse". The New Paper. 21 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- Ng, Kelly (20 March 2015). "'Unremorseful' engineer gets 30 years' jail for sex with 31 boys". Today Singapore. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Public Prosecutor v Yap Weng Wah" (PDF). Singapore Law Watch. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Call to educate children, parents on online risks after sexual grooming case". The Straits Times. 18 January 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Grit, greed and gratitude: 10 people who made the headlines in Singapore in 2015". The Straits Times. 30 December 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Guilty As Charged: Shocking crimes that have shaken Singapore since 1965". The Straits Times. 14 May 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Guilty As Charged: 25 crimes that shook Singapore". The Straits Times. 8 August 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Guilty As Charged: Sex predator Yap Weng Wah preyed on at least 31 young boys". The Straits Times. 18 May 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "From online friend to child sex predator: Four recent cases here". The Straits Times. 15 April 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Man admits to eight counts of sex with young boys". The Straits Times. 21 December 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "Jail for serial offender who preyed on boys". The Straits Times. 4 January 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- "A picture of a child sex offender". AsiaOne. 10 May 2015. Archived from the original on October 23, 2017. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
- "Doing more to keep child sex offenders from making same mistake". The Straits Times. 15 August 2021. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
Further reading
- Abdul Samad, Abdul Hafiz (2017). Guilty as Charged: 25 Crimes that Have Shaken Singapore Since 1965. Straits Times Press Pte Ltd. ISBN 978-9814642996.