Singapore uncovers 'high-tech' exam cheating plot
- Published
A Singaporean tutor has admitted to helping six Chinese students cheat in their 2016 exams in what prosecutors say was an elaborate plot.
Tan Jia Yan took the exams as a private candidate and FaceTimed questions to accomplices who then rang students and read answers to them, prosecutors say.
The students snuck in mobile phones and Bluetooth devices, and wore skin-coloured earphones during their exams.
Ms Tan pleaded guilty to 27 charges. Three others deny charges of cheating.
The exams were the O-levels, typically taken by students aged about 16.
The plot was uncovered after an invigilator noticed unusual sounds coming from one of the students involved, prosecutors said.
The student was taken aside after his exam and asked to remove his vest. A mobile phone, Bluetooth device and skin-coloured ear piece were found on him.
Prosecutors said during the opening day of the trial on Monday that Ms Tan and her accomplices had helped the six students to cheat in their exams at the Singapore Examinations and Assessment Board in October 2016.
The "cheating operations" were "highly sophisticated", Deputy Public Prosecutor Vadivalagan Shanmuga said, Channel NewsAsia reports., external
Ms Tan was employed at Zeus Education Centre at the time.
The other three suspects are Poh Yuan Nie, the centre's principal, and her fellow teachers Fiona Poh Min and Feng Riwen. They are contesting the charges against them, and are expected to go on trial later this week.
Poh Yuan Nie is alleged to have received from a Chinese national S$8,000 (£4,260; $6,100) as deposit and S$1,000 for every student referred to the Zeus Education Centre.
The money was to be fully refunded if the students failed their exams.
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