This included CCTV footage from February 23 and 27 this yr. The roughly half-hour-long video from February 23 shows Aung punching and pressing on the elderly woman’s face.
She also punched her within the stomach, causing the girl to scream in pain, after which tied her hands to the railing of the bed, deputy prosecutor Chye Jer Yuan told the court.
Aung hit the girl in the pinnacle and stomped on her legs, then punched her within the leg, putting the girl in diapers.
Meet the transgender actor giving the center finger to Singapore’s conservative values
Meet the transgender actor giving the center finger to Singapore’s conservative values
She then immobilized the girl by kneeling on her chest and putting her full weight on her, causing the older woman to cry out in pain again.
The domestic employee slapped the victim on her buttocks and legs after which taped her mouth shut to stop her from crying out in pain.
Chye said the elderly victim was so afraid of the helper at that time that she put her hands as much as defend herself.
Aung then touched her face and knelt on the older woman’s chest, punching her repeatedly within the face in an try to silence her. The woman repeated the phrase “very painful” in Cantonese.
Chye told the court she repeatedly punched the girl within the face while changing the feeding tube, and sounds of slapping may very well be heard on the recording.
In a video dated 4 days later, Aung may be seen pressing the older woman’s arm so hard that she began to wail in pain.
She then stomped on the girl’s thigh to stop her, while punching her within the face and arm, causing the girl to scream “very painful” again.
Aung continued to hit and pull the girl’s arm hard, causing the girl to scream in pain.
To attempt to get her to stop crying, Aung hit her in the pinnacle and mouth, then stomped on her chest to forestall her from moving.
She also bit the girl’s hand and slammed it against the bed rail before continuing to punch her hand and punch the girl within the face.
The aide then removed the surgical tape she had used to tape the girl’s mouth and punched her in the pinnacle, continuing the attack for about half an hour.
The victim’s daughter, who lived together with her and Aung, was unaware of those activities because she was not at home.
After the granddaughter saw the surveillance video sent by her aunt, she went to her grandmother’s house and noticed a wound on the girl’s forearm.
To avoid causing alarm, the granddaughter didn’t confront Aung, but called the police the subsequent day after talking to her family.
She reported that she had seen the helper abusing her grandmother twice on CCTV footage. The granddaughter called the police without Aung’s knowledge.
The grandmother was later taken to hospital for a medical examination.
A Feb. 29 examination within the emergency room showed the girl had bruises on her arms, chest, abdomen and thighs, and she or he had dry, cracked skin on her upper arm.
According to the hospital doctors’ assessment, the girl was bedridden, had poor communication skills and needed a feeding tube.
A Singaporean threatened to slit his wife’s throat and kill their child – he faces 3 months in prison
A Singaporean threatened to slit his wife’s throat and kill their child – he faces 3 months in prison
Chye sought a 24-week prison sentence, arguing that there was “no reason” for Aung to behave the best way she did and that it was not a “one-off” slap or slap but a “series of acts” that lasted about half an hour on two occasions .
Although the injuries sustained weren’t “serious”, he said the victim had been unable to guard herself and report what had happened and due to this fact the crimes may not have come to light had it not been for the CCTV footage.
For each count of voluntarily causing harm, Aung might have been sentenced to up to 3 years in prison or fined as much as S$5,000 ($3,700), or each.
Because Aung’s crime was directed against a vulnerable person, she could also face a more severe penalty of as much as twice the utmost sentence for her crime.







