AFTER playing on parents' fears that their child would fail to make it to secondary school, a woman has been jailed for running a bogus tutoring service.
Mr Sukhdev Singh, 44, and his wife were concerned about their son's failing grades at school and decided to engage a tutor to help him pass his upcoming Primary School Leaving Examinations.
They chose the tutor from a flyer placed in the letterbox of a relative.
The tutor, Daisy Pious, 40, recommended an alleged Ministry of Education-approved programme to secure the 11-year-old a place in a secondary school.
She also claimed to be a registered tutor with the MOE.
Pious, a tutor with 20 years' experience, according to her lawyer, told Mr Singh, a sales executive, that the programme would cost $14,200.
The sum would be refunded in stages, upon completion of each syllabus of English, Maths and Science she taught, she said. Mr Singh did not question why she offered almost a complete refund of the tuition fees as he trusted her.
When their son, Melwindev's grades didn't improve, Mr Singh asked for a refund of his money. However Pious made excuses and refused to meet him.
Sensing something amiss, Mr Singh made a police report.
Yesterday Pious was jailed for two months in a district court for cheating Mr Singh with a fake educational programme. She could have been jailed up to a year and fined.
Her lawyer said she had already returned $1,000 to Mr Singh and planned to return the rest in monthly instalments.
Pious was granted a deferment in sentencing until Jan 19 to be with her daughter who is expecting her O-level results.
She also cheated another student's parents of $950 using the same ruse.
Read the full story in Saturday's edition of The Straits Times.