[ad_1]
SINGAPORE: A 20-year-old man admitted to court on Monday (November 9) for repeatedly stealing bags of dirty clothes from a hallway at the National University of Singapore, entering the dormitory whenever he felt the need to look at his underwear. women.
Goh An Soon pleaded guilty to one count of dishonest misappropriation of items, including nine laundry bags containing assorted clothing, and another count of burglary at King Edward VII Hall on eight occasions.
Goh was a student at the time of the crimes at a school not listed in court documents.
Between December 19, 2018 and February 1, 2019, he went to the NUS room five times and took several items with him.
These include two bras from a washing machine, a laundry bag containing four panties from another washing machine, a pair of black shorts hung along a common hallway, a laundry bag containing a sports bra and underwear, and a black leather wallet.
She also took several garments hanging along a common hallway, including two pairs of panties, a bra, and several pairs of socks.
Goh’s modus operandi was to search the washing machines in the bedroom laundries or hallways for women’s underwear.
“He stated that he would then take the underwear to the pantry rooms in neighboring campus blocks to look at them closely and that he left the underwear in these rooms thereafter,” Deputy District Attorney Tan Pei Wei said.
At approximately 6 p.m. on February 1, 2019, a NUS ward employee noticed Goh acting suspiciously and followed him, confronting him in a bedroom pantry.
Goh was taken to the administration office, where the campus security investigation officer called the police. He had already made a previous police call in January 2019 for several incidents of theft of underwear in the hall.
The judge asked for a parole eligibility report. Goh will return to court for sentencing on December 21.
For dishonest misappropriation of personal property, Goh could be imprisoned for up to two years, fined, or both. For breaking and entering, you could be jailed for up to one year, fined up to S $ 3,000, or both.