Exam cheat handed in decoy phone to throw off invigilators
Student in O-level cheating case says tutors gave him a phone to surrender and supplied him answers via another hidden phone
In an attempt to throw off the invigilators, one of the students involved in the O-level cheating case surrendered a decoy phone at the examination centre before the start of five separate papers he took.
Chinese national Zhou Zice, 17, testified in court yesterday that Zeus Education Centre in Tampines Street 34 had provided the phone.
Zhou said that after giving up the decoy phone, he smuggled another mobile phone into the exam hall - carefully concealed, and linked to a Bluetooth skin-coloured earphones he wore.
He said that he received help with his exam papers through the earphones.
Zeus' principal, Poh Yuan Nie, 52, and two tutors from the centre are accused of helping Zhou and five other Chinese national students cheat in the exam in 2016.
Poh Yuan Nie, also known as Pony Poh, her niece Fiona Poh Min, 30, and Chinese national Feng Riwen, 25, each face 27 cheating charges.
Zhou, who sat his science practical paper on Oct 19, 2016, told District Judge Chay Yuen Fatt that he could not understand the questions, which were in English.
Despite that, he had the answers fed to him through the devices. Zhou said this in response to questions by Feng's lawyer, Mr James Chai.
"I only received one call but that one call provided me the answers for all the questions... I don't know if the answers were correct, I simply wrote them down," Zhou added.
The teenager testified that when he could not hear clearly, he would signal this by coughing.
He said: "The answers were given to me in a mixture of English and Mandarin... They would read out each word one by one and spell each word for me."
Zhou also sat for a mathematics paper later that month.
When Mr Chai suggested that his client did not provide him with any answers for the mathematics paper, the teenager replied: "I disagree. There is a possibility."
On Monday, one of Zeus' tutors confessed to her role in the same elaborate plot to remotely feed exam answers to the six private candidate students.
Singaporean Tan Jia Yan, 32, had a camera phone stuck to her chest, concealed under her clothes.
She took the exam as a private candidate and used FaceTime to beam images of the paper to her alleged accomplices at Zeus.
They then supplied the answers to the students.
The six students embroiled in the exams cheating scandal were referred to Zeus by a Chinese national, Mr Dong Xin, 30.
Tan, who pleaded guilty to 27 cheating charges, will be back in court on May 15.
The pre-trial conference for the cases involving Feng, Poh Yuan Nie and Fiona Poh will take place on April 26.
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