The Phnom Penh Post

Disgraced judge ends truncated prison term

- Lay Samean

DISGRACED former Phnom Penh Municipal Court president Ang Maltey was freed from Kandal Provincial Prison yesterday, after serving half of his sentence for corruption.

Maltey’s charge of embezzleme­nt was reduced to the lesser sentence of “unlawful exploitati­on” after it was found he granted bail to police officer-turneddrug trafficker Thav Thavy in exchange for a luxury car – an Audi SUV – which he then gave to his son.

Maltey was also accused by Prime Minister Hun Sen of taking a hefty bribe to grant bail to the parents of businessma­n Thong Sarath – who was accused of orchestrat­ing the assassinat­ion of another tycoon. The Anti-Corruption Unit dropped a probe into the latter allegation.

The former judge had one year of his sentence suspended and a further six months were shaved off by King Norodom Sihamoni during last year’s Water Festival pardons.

Kandal provincial prosecutor Lem Sokunthear, who signed a court order for Maltey’s release, said Maltey left the prison at about 11am yesterday.

“He was freed because he has undergone the punishment already,” he said.

Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin said Maltey’s prison time made him ineligible to be returned to a position in the judiciary. “He has committed the crime, so he cannot work in the state institutio­n anymore,” Malin said.

Mam Sitha, director of the Independen­t Anti-Corruption Committee in Cambodia, said Maltey got off lightly compared to political prisoners and land activists – an inequality that was cause for criticism. “What he has done is a serious mistake, and the punishment should be heavier than this to set a model for other officials,” she said.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Preap Kol agreed the sentence was too lenient.

“It would really send a wrong message if the former judge [was] re-appointed to any government position after he walked out of jail,” he said.

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