The Borneo Post

Alleged Malaysian mastermind of brutal Johor murder claims innocence

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BANGKOK: “I am innocent.” This was the immediate impassione­d reaction of the alleged mastermind of last December’s brutal murder in Taman Pelangi, Johor Baharu when a team of policemen cornered him last Wednesday in Chaiyaphum province, about 260km northeast of Thailand.

The arrest of the 36-year- old Malaysian, along with his wife at a house in the compound of a temple in the province had brought an end to a manhunt mounted by the Malaysian and Thai police to arrest one of the most wanted men in Malaysia.

“When the Thai policemen confronted him, he (the alleged mastermind) pleaded innocence and tried in vain to wriggle out of the impending arrest,” a source who has intimate knowledge of the operation to nab the wanted Malaysian, told Bernama here.

Speaking in Thai, the Johorborn suspect who sported a large tattoo of Christiani­ty’s Jesus Christ on his right arm claimed he was nowhere near the murder scene on the night of Dec 17 last year, when the murder occurred.

The man also claimed to be in possession of relevant documents to back up his alibi, said the source who declined identifica­tion.

Despite the suspect’s best attempts to win his freedom, the policemen were not convinced and swiftly took the wanted Malaysian and his wife under their custody, he added.

On Dec 17, a suspected triad member known as ‘Ah Chiu’ was repeatedly stabbed before he was mowed down by a man driving a white BMW car at a petrol station located in Taman Pelangi, Johor Baharu.

The murder was also caught on closed- circuit television camera and became viral on the social media.

Since the murder, the Royal Malaysia Police arrested several individual­s for questionin­g and in January this year, charged two suspects for the crime.

Since escaping to Thailand last December, the tattooed Malaysian suspect according to the source, had turned over a new leaf by embracing a spiritual life and becoming a Buddhist monk at the temple.

However, he claimed that the man’s recent ‘ conversati­on’ to Buddhism was probably a ruse to conceal his past. — Bernama

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