The Borneo Post

1MDB: Admissibil­ity of audio recording violates Najib’s right to a fair trial – Defence

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The admission of an audio recording of an alleged conversati­on between Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak and a leader from the Middle East could violate the former premier’s fundamenta­l rights to a fair trial, the High Court heard yesterday.

Najib’s lead defence counsel Tan Sri Muhammad Shafee Abdullah submi ed that should the audio recording be admi ed as evidence in the former’s trial involving the alleged misappropr­iation of RM2.3 billion from the 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) fund, it has also indirectly violated Najib’s rights to privacy as enshrined in Article 5(1) of the Federal Constituti­on (FC).

Speaking on the rights of a fair trial, Muhammad Shafee contended that there are concerns over the legality of the method used by the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission (MACC) to obtain the audio recording.

“It is perhaps appropriat­e at this stage to consider the ma ers that must be establishe­d when introducin­g a recording including whether the compact disc (CD) was not tampered with or altered in any way and it should be establishe­d in whose possession the CD was at all times.

“MACC may have not complied with provisions under Section 43 of its own Act on how to legally obtain the audio recording…it must be construed as unconstitu­tional because it infringes the accused’s rights to privacy, a right to a fair trial under Article 5(1) of the FC because the same allows the admissibil­ity of evidence which negates the accused’s right to privacy,” said the lawyer.

The lawyer was responding to an applicatio­n made by ad hoc prosecutor Datuk Seri Gopal Sri Ram, who sought to admit an audio recording to rebut the former prime minister’s defence that the monies which went into his personal bank accounts were donations.

The said audio recording was played in court last week via a CD, during the 42nd prosecutio­n witness examinatio­n-in-chief, former Treasury secretaryg­eneral Tan Sri Mohd Irwan Serigar Abdullah who identified one of the voices as sounding like Najib.

The voice allegedly sounded like Najib had addressed the other individual as ‘Your Highness’ and spoke about the need to resolve an impasse regarding 1MDB and Internatio­nal Petroleum Investment Co (IPIC) which was said to be embarrassi­ng to both Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Sri Ram said that the recording should be admissible under Section 41(A) of the MACC Act and that it was a “special provision” which took precedence over Section 65 of the Evidence Act that dealt with documentar­y evidence.

“For that purpose, we also submit that a recording of this nature is a document. My Lord, even if the audio was obtained irregularl­y or illegally, it will still be admissible,” said the prosecutor.

Muhammad Shafee countered that Section 41(A) of the MACC Act only came into force in Oct 2018 and it cannot be applied retrospect­ively as the charges faced by Najib stem from 2011 to 2014.

“The prosecutio­n’s argument that just because the audio recording was obtained under Section 41(A), it is ought to be admi ed was ‘simplistic’.

“Section 43 of the same act had laid out the procedures to follow in order to obtain the audio recording. Can MACC simply tap into any conversati­on without obeying their own law?” the lawyer asked.

The hearing of the submission­s before Judge Datuk Collin Lawrence Sequerah will continue this morning, while the trial resumes in the a ernoon with The Edge Media Group chairman Tan Sri Tong Kooi Ong set to take the stand.

Najib, 69, is facing four charges of using his position to obtain bribes totalling RM2.3 billion from 1MDB funds and 21 charges of money laundering involving the same amount.

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