Singapore police arrested six men and four women from Sing Joo Road on Monday, Apr 30 for their alleged involvement in the online gambling case. Reports said that all the accused are aged between 39 and 66.
The police stated in a news release, which was published on Wednesday, May 2 that they arrested the suspects of the online gambling case, during an enforcement operation conducted by the Central Police Division to catch online gamblers.
When police nabbed those 10 suspects, they have found a total cash amounted to $685 and seized 13 computers. The further police investigation is on-going.
This the second online gambling arrested took place in the south-east Asian country. Earlier, police launched another search operation to capture punters from theirgambling dens on March 23. They arrested seven men and three women, aged between 44 and 64, under the Common Gambling House Act. They targeted Petain Road and Jalan Besar Road to conduct this operation. During the investigation, officers found 27 computers and a total cash of $5,469.
As per the Common Gambling House Act (Chapter 49), any person who,
- being the owner or occupier or having the user temporarily or otherwise thereof keeps or uses a place as a common gaming house;
- permits a place of which he is the owner or occupier or of which he has the user temporarily or otherwise to be kept or used by another person as a common gaming house;
- has the care or management of or in any manner assists in the management of a place kept or used as a common gaming house;
- announces or publishes or causes to be announced or published, either orally or by means of any print, writing, design, sign or otherwise, that any place is opened, kept or used as a common gaming house, or in any other manner invites or solicits any person to commit a breach of section 7, 8 or 9; or
- conducts in or through any newspaper or any other periodical publication, or in connection with any trade or business or the sale of any article to the public —
(i) any competition in which prizes are offered for forecasts of the results either of a future event or of a past event the result of which is not yet ascertained or not yet generally known; or
(ii) any other competition success in which does not depend to a substantial degree upon the exercise of skill,
–shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine of not less than $5,000 and not more than $50,000 and shall also be punished with imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 years. The law also states that in some cases police can arrest any suspect without having any warrant.