A tutor took part in an elaborate plot in which answers to O-level exam papers
In 2016, six Chinese nationals smuggled mobile phones and Bluetooth devices into exam halls in Singapore, and the answers were whispered to them over skin-coloured earphones which they wore.
The ruse involved exam papers for the English, mathematics and science (physics/chemistry) subjects.
Singaporean Tan Jia Yan, who is no longer a tutor, would also sit the exam as a private candidate and
Yesterday, District Judge Kenneth Yap said the offences had undermined the principles of meritocracy and sentenced Tan, 33, to three years in jail.
Tan,
Two of her alleged accomplices were the centre’s principal, Poh Yuan Nie, 53, also known as Pony Poh, and her niece, Fiona Poh Min, 31, who also taught at the centre.
Both are Singaporeans, while another person who allegedly took part in the operation was Chinese national Feng Riwen, 27. The trio’s cases are still pending. The court heard that another Chinese national, Mr Dong Xin, 30, referred the six students to Zeus to prepare them for the 2016 O-level examination.
Mr Dong and Zeus had signed contracts stating that for every student he referred to the tuition centre, Poh Yuan Nie would receive a deposit of $8,000 and $1,000 in admission fees. The catch was that the money was to be fully refunded if the students failed.
In 2016, before the students sat the exams, Fiona Poh, Tan and Feng attached wearable Bluetooth devices, linked to mobile phones, to the students’ bodies, the court heard.
Tan would have a camera phone stuck to her chest, under her clothes. She would then take the exam as a private candidate and use FaceTime to beam images of the paper to her accomplices at Zeus. Fiona Poh and Feng would work out the answers and convey them to the students, aged between 17 and 20.
The court heard that the “sophisticated cheating operations” ran successfully for three days from Oct 19. But on Oct 24, an alert invigilator thought she could hear transmission sounds coming from one of the students, and reported the matter to her superiors. The student was allowed to finish the paper but was later escorted to the invigilators’ holding room, where he was asked to remove his vest.
Tan is now out on bail of $20,000 and will surrender herself at the State Courts next Monday to begin serving her sentence.