Malaysian suspect in illegal e-cigarette trade case in Singapore to appear in court next week for charges including fraud and obstruction of justice

Sep.15
Malaysian suspect in illegal e-cigarette trade case in Singapore to appear in court next week for charges including fraud and obstruction of justice
Malaysian suspect accused of illegal e-cigarette trading in Singapore to face court next week for fraud and obstruction charges.

Key points:

 

·The Malaysian suspect accused of illegal e-cigarette transactions in Singapore is scheduled to appear in court next week for disguising his identity and renting a warehouse to store illegal e-cigarettes. 

·Charges include deception and obstructing justice.

 


 

2First, on September 15, 2025 - According to Malay Mail's report on September 14, a 34-year-old Malaysian man named Chua Wee Ming, accused of being involved in illegal e-cigarette transactions in Singapore, has been detained for nearly a year on multiple charges. The suspect was arrested on October 10, 2024, during a nationwide law enforcement operation in Singapore and is facing multiple charges including fraud and obstruction of justice.

 

Court documents reveal that in May 2022, the suspect's name first appeared in a commercial unit theft case. At that time, warehouse manager Lim Zhi Wei initially told the police that the stolen items were information technology devices, but investigators later discovered that the missing items were e-cigarettes worth $470,000 (approximately $370,000 USD).

 

In 2023, the suspect's name resurfaced. At that time, he had rented a warehouse in the Ulan district under the identity of a Singaporean man who owed 80,000 Singapore dollars (approximately 60,000 US dollars) in gambling debts, to store e-cigarette products. The Singaporean man was arrested at the Woodlands Checkpoint while attempting to smuggle e-cigarettes from Malaysia into Singapore.

 

Subsequently, the suspect instructed the man to rent a warehouse in the name of the suspect for the purpose of an e-cigarette business. The warehouse was later raided by authorities in April 2024, leading to the seizure of e-cigarette products worth 5.2 million Singapore dollars (approximately 4.06 million US dollars). Two Thai workers responsible for packaging the products were arrested.

 

Investigators stated that two Thai workers and three other accomplices were recruited via the communication platform Line to handle the distribution of e-cigarettes.

 

Tsai Weiming will appear in court again on September 25th for a pre-trial conference regarding the case.

 

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