Just copy and paste from the sarcastic's link. The report will go else where so I figured might as well paste it here cos it'll be here for a long time.
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Someone got away with murder
COMMENT BY WONG CHUN WAI
SOMEONE out there has got away with murder. We do not know if it is one person or a few people and angry Malaysians want to know who they are, so they can be punished.
But the fact is that 14-year-old Chinese national Xu Jian Huang is dead and his killer or killers remain at large.
Fact number two is that businessman Koh Kim Teck and his bodyguards, Resty Agpalo and Mohamed Najib Zulkifli, have been cleared of the charges.
Fact number three is that Judge Datuk Abdul Kadir Musa, in his 49-page judgment, found there was not too much evidence adduced against all three or for their defence to be called.
He has correctly pointed out that there were unresolved doubts and unanswered questions in the prosecution’s case.
The judgment has not gone down well with most Malaysians and many are outraged, but a judge has made his decision on evidence available.
That is how the law operates and a judge must not be swayed by public sentiments or prejudices. If there is anyone to blame, then it must be the police and the prosecution.
As the judge noted, the prosecution hurt its own case by failing to call a certain Insp Moin.
That was not all, Koh’s driver Mohd Razbean Md Tab, a key witness, has gone missing. That does not speak well of the police at all.
Another key witness, Fang Sui Jing, said to be a girlfriend of Koh, has been deported to China and even the date of her deportation is unknown.
The Chinese national, who was serving a 10-month sentence in Kajang prison for overstaying, was a key witness and yet no attempt was made to keep her until the case was over.
Investigating officer Asst Supt Nor Omar Sapi admitted that he did not make any formal request to the Kajang prison for Fang to be handed over to the police.
Malaysians are left grappling with questions like how a murdered boy could end up in the swimming pool of a heavily guarded bungalow with 23 injury marks.
These are questions the prosecution failed to answer and we are not sure if they will ever be.
But Malaysians, concerned with the increasing crime rate, are upset that the prosecution and police have failed to resolve a series of high profile murder cases.
The public would like to think that our police are efficient and they have proven able to live up to our expectations when it comes to serious crime.
But when our defenders of public order keep losing their cases, especially murders, then Malaysian taxpayers have a right to ask what they are doing.
What are our investigators and prosecutors doing when they keep losing in the courts?
When judges throw out their cases, it just means that the prosecution has failed to produce sufficient evidence. That’s how the legal system works.
Our hearts go to the family of Xu in China who had hoped that their child would get a decent education in Malaysia and grow up to be somebody they can be proud of.
Instead he was murdered and, worse, we cannot even find his murderer or murderers. It’s a murder most foul.