Former businessman fails to commute death sentence for UUM grad’s brutal murder

Federal Court dismisses Shahril Jaafar’s application over killing of Chee Gaik Yap

4:40 PM MYT

 

PUTRAJAYA – The Federal Court here today upheld the death sentence of a former businessman for the murder of a female marketing executive 18 years ago.

The three-member panel comprising justices Datuk Harmindar Singh Dhaliwal, Datuk Nordin Hassan and Datuk Abu Bakar Jais dismissed Shahril Jaafar’s review application to commute his death sentence to life imprisonment under the Revision of Sentence of Death and Imprisonment for Natural Life (Temporary Jurisdiction of the Federal Court) Act 2023.

“We wish to reiterate that this court is always aligned to compassion and mercy. In our view this is an exceptional case with exceptional facts,” said justice Harmindar. 

He said the deceased, Chee Gaik Yap, had suffered exceptional violence at Shahril’s hands. He pointed out that the 25-year-old woman was abducted, sodomised, raped and killed by Shahril.

He said the crime caused public uproar and shock, adding that the incident took place in broad daylight. 

“We are constrained to dismiss Shahril’s application and the death sentence is upheld,” said justice Harmindar.

In 2015, Shahril, 43, was found guilty by the Alor Star High Court of killing Chee, a Universiti Utara Malaysia graduate, near the Cinta Sayang Club in Taman Ria Jaya, Sg Petani, between 5.30pm on January 14 and 3.05am on January 15, 2006. 

He was sentenced to death, and his subsequent appeals at the Court of Appeal and Federal Court were dismissed in 2016 and 2018, respectively.

Earlier, Shahril’s lawyer Rosli Kamaruddin asked the court to commute the death sentence imposed on his client to life imprisonment.

He conveyed Shahril’s remorse and appealed to the court for a chance at redemption, citing his client’s active participation in prison rehabilitation programmes as a testament to his commitment to repent. 

Deputy public prosecutor Datuk Dusuki Mokhtar, who was assisted by DPP Solehah Noratikah, Ismail objected to Shahril’s application and urged the court to uphold the death sentence, noting that this was the rarest of rare cases.

He said it was a brutal kidnap, rape, sodomy and murder of a young lady who had gone jogging with her younger sister, adding that her semi-nude body was found nine hours later in a bush near the jogging track.

Dusuki said forensic pathologists found 50 wounds on Chee’s body, including around her private parts where Shahril’s DNA was found. 

He said Shahril fled to Australia for three years to avoid investigation and arrest. He was finally detained six years later at Kuala Lumpur International Airport upon his arrival from Perth in January 2012. – May 29, 2024

Topics

 

Popular

Grab perluas Program #SisBoleh untuk memperkasakan lebih ramai wanita

Untuk menjayakan ciri tersebut, penumpang wanita digalakkan untuk mengemaskini butiran melalui aplikasi Grab

Trump unveils ‘largest AI project in history’ with OpenAI, Oracle, SoftBank

Stargate, a US$500 bil joint venture between top tech firms, aims to strengthen US leadership in AI with plans for nationwide data centres, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs

Catch-22: Universities in a bind over AI use in classrooms, say observers

PERAI – Universities are grappling with integrating artificial intelligence (AI) tools in the classroom, as educators question the authenticity of student assignments despite supporting AI’s potential to facilitate learning, according to several...

Related