Prosecution seeks 4 years' jail for dentist

He duped CPF Board into disbursing $434k from patients' Medisave accounts to his clinic

Steven Ang Kiam Hau devised the bogus claims scam in 2009 and was said to have pocketed 56 per cent of the profit.
Steven Ang Kiam Hau devised the bogus claims scam in 2009 and was said to have pocketed 56 per cent of the profit.

The prosecution has called for a four-year jail sentence for a dentist who came up with a bogus claims scam involving his patients' Medisave accounts.

Steven Ang Kiam Hau, 44, duped the Central Provident Fund (CPF) board into disbursing $434,241 from 14 patients' Medisave accounts to the clinic where he worked - The Smile Division Dental Surgeons @ Orchard.

Yesterday, Deputy Public Prosecutor Teo Guan Siew told District Judge Kan Shuk Weng that Ang had abused his position as an accredited medical practitioner.

The DPP said: "The accused's criminal conduct was especially egregious bearing in mind the profile of his patients. His patients were mostly not sophisticated or highly educated individuals.

"The youngest of the accused's 14 patients was 49 years old, the oldest was 65... These were not individuals who had the rest of their working years to replenish the Medisave savings that were decimated by the accused's offences."

Ang would certify that day surgeries were conducted on multiple dates when they were, in fact, done in a day or two. As a result, the CPF Board was induced into disbursing multiple claim amounts to the clinic in Lucky Plaza.

Ang's legal team, led by Senior Counsel Davinder Singh, urged Judge Kan to sentence their client to six months' jail. SC Singh said performing the procedures on the patients over a number of days "would have been contrary" to the best interests of Ang's patients.

He added: "The procedures that were performed on the patients were highly invasive, involving extremely high levels of pain, which meant that if the procedures were not performed in a single day, the patients had to undergo sedation on a number of occasions."

On May 4, Ang pleaded guilty to 30 cheating charges involving five patients and $65,858. Another 253 charges involving the remaining amount will be taken into consideration during sentencing.

As part of the ruse, Ang would offer underprivileged patients lower rates than at other clinics before making dishonest claims from their Medisave accounts with their consent. DPP Teo had earlier said Ang's share of the net fees was 56 per cent, while Smile was entitled to the rest.

Ang, who joined Smile in 2007, came up with the scheme two years later. The dental group's managing director Cecil Goh Chin Chye, 48, found out about the scheme in 2011, and saw it as a way to attract patients, the court heard.

The offences came to light after the Ministry of Health made a police report on July 14, 2014, following an audit.

The cases involving Goh, Smile's practice manager Yeo Meow Koon, 47, and dentist Daniel Liew Yaoxiang, 36, are still pending. Ang is out on bail of $250,000 and is expected to be sentenced on Aug 3.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on June 27, 2018, with the headline Prosecution seeks 4 years' jail for dentist. Subscribe