SINGAPORE: A prison officer and an inmate who assisted him in housekeeping matters were embroiled in a corrupt arrangement where the inmate bribed the officer in exchange for lewd photos and pills being smuggled into jail.
Suspended officer Mohammad Asri Abd Rahim, 39, and Mohamad Yusof Kasim, 50, were sentenced to 10 months’ jail each on Thursday (Oct 10) for three charges each under the Prevention of Corruption Act, with another two charges considered in sentencing.
Asri was also ordered to pay a penalty of S$3,700 (US$2,860).
Another inmate, 36-year-old Murali Vigneshwaran, who was roped into the corrupt scheme and had only one charge, was given four months’ jail.
In sentencing, District Judge Ng Cheng Thiam said Asri had illegally obtained gratification while carrying out his duties as a public servant.
“This is an abuse of power,” he said. As for the inmates, he said that the pair was in prison at the time, but instead of “learning to reform and rehabilitate themselves”, they went on to reoffend and “even corrupted” Asri.
The trio have caused damage and harm to the trust in and integrity of Singapore Prison Service (SPS), a public institution, said the judge.
He said he largely agreed with the sentencing submissions by the prosecution, except that he found a stiffer sentence was warranted.
THE CASE
Asri had joined SPS in 2012 and managed inmates in Changi Prison Complex Institution B4.
He was assisted by correctional unit attendants, inmates who are given duties to assist in house-keeping matters and who would be paid an allowance to buy items like snacks in prison.





