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Gardens by the Bay murder: Supervisor says accused did not show up for meeting with victim

This article is more than 12 months old

Supervisor of accused said he asked her to meet him and his girlfriend the day she died

Laundry shop manager Leslie Khoo Kwee Hock called his supervisor one morning to ask for help, saying a woman was on her way to the office at Tuas to create trouble.

Then, in a three-way conference call, Khoo told the woman, senior engineer Cui Yajie, that he would pick her up and they would meet his supervisor.

But the supervisor, Ms Adeline Toh, never got to sort things out between the two on July 12, 2016. After picking up Ms Cui, Khoo drove to a secluded road near Gardens by the Bay, where he strangled the 31-year-old Chinese national.

He later burned her body at Lim Chu Kang Lane 8 over three days until nothing remained.

Khoo, 50, now faces a possible death sentence for murder.

Testifying on the third day of Khoo's trial yesterday, Ms Toh said he and Ms Cui sounded "normal" and "okay" over the phone.

At the time, Ms Cui did not want to give her name to the supervisor, saying it was inconvenient to talk.

Ms Toh said she could hear that Ms Cui was on the MRT.

Khoo said he would pick Ms Cui up from Joo Koon MRT station and meet Ms Toh at Westin Hotel, off Shenton Way, where she was stationed at the time.

Ms Toh said she called Khoo when he did not turn up after nearly three hours.

"He told me the lady did not show up. He said never mind, just forget about it," she said.

The prosecution's case is that Khoo was bent on silencing Ms Cui after she threatened to tell his employer that he did not repay $20,000 that she had handed him to invest in gold.

Khoo, who swindled four other women of $65,000 and misappropriated $24,000 from his company, could not afford being exposed, said prosecutors.

Ms Toh, who described Khoo as a reliable worker, said after news broke about his arrest, the company received many calls from people who said he collected money from them for alleged franchise agreements.

DUPED

In one case, the company returned $15,000 to a woman.

A victim testified how she paid Khoo $11,600 after he duped her and her husband into thinking they had a franchise agreement to run a laundry outlet.

One of Khoo's former girlfriends, who believed he was single and working in the family business, said he suddenly proposed to her in June 2016, though they had broken up a year earlier.

Various reports were also admitted into evidence, including a Health Sciences Authority test that found the DNA of both Khoo and Ms Cui on a toothbrush taken from her home.

COURT & CRIME