A Record for ACA

August 27th, 2008 by poobalan | View blog reactions Leave a reply »
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55 people arrested in 24 hours. The scandal in Puskapom is probably tip of the iceberg.

A total of 55 people, including 28 Puspakom staff, believed to be earning up to an additional RM1,000 each a day “in takings,” have been arrested by the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) in a nationwide blitz between Tuesday and Wednesday.

The other 27 are agents or runners who are allegedly in cohorts with the centre’s traffic wardens and vehicle examiners, who allegedly carry out inspections on “problematic” vehicles without following standard operating procedures.

They also allegedly approved tests on vehicles without actually sending them for inspection.

ACA director of investigations Datuk Shukri Abdull said the agency had conducted an “intelligence-based investigation” for months, which had intensified over the past two months and led to the arrests.

Codenamed “Ops Compact,” Shukri said based on investigations, it was believed the culprits charged vehicle owners RM80 to give the thumbs-up when inspecting problematic cars; it cost RM400 to “pass” a vehicle’s inspection without it having to be sent to Puspakom.

“We are still investigating and we believe there will be more arrests made against those involved in this illegal operation,” he told a press conference on Wednesday.

The nationwide blitz began at 3pm on Tuesday and the last arrest was made at 2pm Wednesday.

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1 comment

  1. So does this mean I can soon expect investigations to start on the MAIKA scandal? Or ACA does not work retrospectively i.e. they don’t open cases prior to their establishment?

    Don’t get me wrong, I am for ACA to be independent, which means (let me say this before Killer comes yapping around) let ACA investigate the two Perak EXCO members.

    If found guilty, jail those Perak EXCO men. Its that simple.
    If found innocent, be prepared to deal with the $100 million ringgit defamation suit filed by those Perak EXCO men last week against the federal government.

    Anyway, what about MAIKA case? Anyone else wants to know what happened to 66,000 estate workers’ savings?