Hong Kong health inspector gets 120 hours of community service for stealing food samples

A Hong Kong health inspector has been sentenced to 120 hours of community service for stealing food samples bought with public money for radiation testing, with French veal stew and Arborio rice among the items seized from his home.

West Kowloon Court on Thursday agreed not to jail Lau Shing-hin after the 36-year-old defendant pleaded guilty and testified against four others on trial, even though they were eventually acquitted.

The Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) prosecuted five inspectors from the food import and export section of the Centre for Food Safety’s risk management division on suspicion of appropriating residual food samples for their own use, in breach of internal guidelines.

The ICAC said in a statement last year that the inspectors had used taxpayers’ money to buy more than HK$88,000 (US$11,300) worth of food samples from five importers for two radiation tests in 2022 and 2023.

Investigators recovered more than 80 food items at the five defendants’ homes, including canned abalone, white truffle sauce, crab bisque, Japanese rice and various types of pasta.

A prosecution case summary said eight samples worth a total of HK$543 were recovered from Lau’s home, including French veal stew, Arborio rice, octopus, squid, cheese and Earl Grey tea bags.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Hong Kong stocks waver amid profit-taking after tech-led rally a day earlier

Hong Kong stocks waver amid profit-taking after tech-led rally a day earlier

Hong Kong stocks fluctuated on Thursday as investors took profit following a strong rally fuelled by technology stocks a day earlier. The Hang Seng Index was little changed at 26,517.46 as of 9.45am. The Hang Seng Tech Index gained 0.3 per cent. On the mainland, the CSI 300 Index and the Shanghai Composite Index both

Geely drone subsidiary Aerofugia eyes Hong Kong market for AE200 flying car

Geely drone subsidiary Aerofugia eyes Hong Kong market for AE200 flying car

A mainland Chinese drone manufacturer owned by a carmaking giant has revealed that it is eyeing Hong Kong as a future market for its flagship passenger-carrying flying car, as the city embarks on a new phase of developing its low-altitude economy. Aerofugia, a subsidiary of China’s second-largest carmaker, Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, said that Hong

Opinion | Why Hong Kong must seize opening of Trump’s H-1B visa chaos

Opinion | Why Hong Kong must seize opening of Trump’s H-1B visa chaos

The US’ shake-up of its H-1B visa programme has left businesses scrambling to respond. On September 19, President Donald Trump announced that companies hiring foreign nationals to work in the United States under the scheme would be charged an extra US$100,000 per beneficiary, effective from September 21. The vague language of the proclamation created widespread

Lessons from Ragasa lashing Hong Kong’s coastal areas must be learned, experts say

Lessons from Ragasa lashing Hong Kong’s coastal areas must be learned, experts say

A flooded hotel lobby and promenades engulfed by seas whipped up as Super Typhoon Ragasa bore down on Hong Kong provide timely lessons for buildings and urban planning in coastal and low-lying areas, experts have said. They called for flood-resilient features and higher breakwaters on Wednesday after a storm surge and downpours associated with Ragasa

Alibaba shares soar to 4-year high, lifted by bullish AI investment, Cathie Wood’s Ark ETF

Alibaba shares soar to 4-year high, lifted by bullish AI investment, Cathie Wood’s Ark ETF

Alibaba Group Holding’s ambitious investment in artificial intelligence and an endorsement by one of the world’s most influential technology investors lifted its Hong Kong shares to a four-year high. Star US fund manager Cathie Wood bought a combined US$16.3 million of Alibaba shares, her first investment in the Chinese e-commerce giant in four years and

Hong Kong back in action after Super Typhoon Ragasa paralyses city for 2 days

Hong Kong back in action after Super Typhoon Ragasa paralyses city for 2 days

Hong Kong is gradually returning to normality after Super Typhoon Ragasa paralysed the city for nearly two days, with authorities racing to clear 1,200 toppled trees and a backlog of 1,000 flights that affected 140,000 passengers. The deadly super typhoon, which triggered the highest-level No 10 hurricane warning for nearly 11 hours, edged as close

Hongkongers plug window leaks with sanitary pads, diapers as Ragasa rages

Hongkongers plug window leaks with sanitary pads, diapers as Ragasa rages

From slippers and sanitary towels to diapers and potty pads, Hongkongers showed off their creative skills – and humour – in coping with water seepage and rattling windows as Super Typhoon Ragasa battered the city. Well-schooled from their previous experiences with super typhoons, residents on Wednesday took to social media to share their best tips