The New Zealand Herald

Scorned man emailed classmates

Pharmacist censured after mass-sending ‘intimate’ document detailing relationsh­ip with Otago uni student

- Ruby Spink

Ascorned manager upset that his former employee had a boyfriend sent a 48-page document via email detailing his relationsh­ip with the woman to her classmates.

Pharmacist John Ing Joon Tiong was fined $11,000 by the Health Practition­ers Disciplina­ry Tribunal at a hearing in Wellington yesterday.

Tiong and the woman, whose name was suppressed, worked together for a time in 2014 at a pharmacy where he was a manager and she was an assistant. He was her supervisor.

Tiong sought a romantic relationsh­ip with the woman, who was 23 at the time. He was 25.

He asked her if she had a boyfriend on two occasions, which she denied, the tribunal heard.

The pair had kissed and stayed overnight together but did not have sex, said counsel Anita Miller for the Pharmacy Council’s Profession­al Conduct Committee.

The woman stopped working at the pharmacy and returned to the University of Otago, where she was a student, at the start of 2015. She and Tiong kept in touch.

However things turned in February 2015 when Tiong discovered she had had a boyfriend the whole time they’d known each other, and told him that she wanted to develop things with the boyfriend instead.

Miller said that to get back at her, Tiong contacted the woman’s parents via email saying she’d lied to him about wanting a relationsh­ip, and about going to church.

In August 2015, he also googled the woman’s fourth-year pharmacy class list, logged into his old email account at the University of Otago, where he had also been a student, and found the contact details of her classmates.

He sent a 48-page document attached to an email to her entire class chroniclin­g his interactio­ns with her. At times, he wrote as if he was speaking directly to her, and at other times, about her.

Miller described the emails as “exceedingl­y intimate and personal”.

He wrote, “I’d like to caress her . . . stroke hands, legs, hair ... “I will teach you everything. “She asked me pharmacy questions after work . . . she always calls me boss and I call her boss ...

“Work undermined our relationsh­ip.

“I talked to [ the woman] about things in pharmacy as I like the way [she] looks at me with sparkling eyes.”

One of the woman’s classmates described the emails as “extremely inappropri­ate” and that it “sounds like it was written by a madman”, according to the summary of facts read by Miller.

The day after he sent the email, Tiong sent another to the class in an attempt to explain his regret about sending the previous email.

Miller said the emails were an attempt to embarrass her and portray her as dishonest. Upon seeing the emails, she contacted police saying she felt frightened of Tiong, and thought he might fly to Dunedin to hurt her, the hearing heard.

Police issued him an official warning, and the University of Otago’s Pharmacy School brought a complaint against him to the Pharmacy Council.

Following the complaints, Tiong had sought counsellin­g to deal with his anger problems.

The tribunal found him guilty of breaching the Health Practition­ers Competence Assurance Act 2003.

The tribunal censured Tiong, ordered that he must have a profession­al mentor, could not act as a preceptor for two years, and that he must pay 50 per cent of the Profession­al Conduct Committee and the tribunal’s process costs.

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