SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES
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- Case and Legislation Notes
Compensation for victims of crimes: should victims’ financial means and insurance coverage matter? Criminal Procedure Code 2010, s 359(1); Public Prosecutor v Ong Eng Siew [2025] SGHC 55
First view: [Mar 2026 Online] Sing JLS 1-11Under s 359(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code 2010, the court can order an offender to compensate the victim with a sum which the victim would have been able to recover in a civil claim in tort against the offender. The courts have used this useful power extensively, though problems remain. One such problem is seen in Ong Eng Siew, where the court declined to make a compensation order. Given the purpose of the compensation system, the court was not correct to hold – in effect – that the purpose of s 359(1) is to benefit only impecunious victims, and that the Prosecution bears the burden of proving that the victim is impecunious. Further, the compensation order should have covered not only medical expenses paid by the victim in cash, but also those paid using Central Provident Fund savings and MediShield Life insurance payouts. This comment also calls for further study of the compensation regime in practice and possible procedural reforms to make it easier for victims to have prosecutors present evidence relevant to the issue of compensation. - Case and Legislation Notes
The Standard of Care Applicable to Practitioners of Alternative Medicine: Shakoor v Situ
Citation: [2001] Sing JLS 1 - Case and Legislation Notes
Singapore’s New Environmental Law: The Environmental Pollution Control Act, 1999
Citation: [2000] Sing JLS 1 - Case and Legislation Notes
Defences to Strict Liability Offenses in Singapore and Malaysia
Citation: [1985] Sing JLS 1 - Case and Legislation Notes
Varying the Terms of a Trust – A New Power for the Courts? : Leo Teng Choy v Leo Teng Kit
Citation: [2001] Sing JLS 12 - Case and Legislation Notes
The Laws in Singapore and England Affecting Spouses’ Property on Divorce: White v White: Cowan v Cowan
Citation: [2001] Sing JLS 19Two comparative law jurists accurately observed this character of legal development more than two decades ago. The laws of several countries of the effect of marriage on each spouse’s interest in the property of the other acquired during the course of their marriage are proving this proposition. This note records developments in Singapore and England. Recent decisions in England portend to mirror earlier development in Singapore. - Case and Legislation Notes
Protecting the Integrity of the Securities Market: Recent Amendments to the Law Relating to Insider Trading: Securities Industry (Amendment) Act No 2 of 2000
Citation: [2000] Sing JLS 33
