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Crooked cop’s family returns $20 million
Fri, June 09 2006
By Mata Press Service
Sgt. Hon Shum Hon Kwing-shum, alias Hon Shum or Hon Sum, served in the Royal Hong Kong Police from September 1940 until he retired in August 1971 during which time he had earned a total of about C$35,000.
But upon retirement he and his beneficiaries owned millions of dollars worth of assets. This included over 50 properties, various bank accounts, investments in
Last month, seven years after the corrupt cop, known as one of the “Five Dragons” died – his family reached an out of court settlement and gave up about C$20 million dollars worth of property to the government of Hong Kong.
The
The assets handed over were all in Hong Kong and do not include the millions of dollars worth of property and investments linked to Hon in
A covert police study obtained by The Asian Pacific Post showed that Hon and his family had bought at least 11 residential and commercial properties and established a dozen companies in
The properties were mainly located in the posh Shaughnessy, Kerrisdale and
The police study done by Asian Organized Crime Investigators believes that up to 44
former Royal Hong Kong cops, followed the lead of Hon and the other so-called “Five Dragons” to escape a corruption crackdown and establish themselves in The ex-Royal Hong Kong police officers, their wives, concubines and children have invested tens of millions of dollars in businesses and real estate in
The study also found that four of them, whose average salary was about HK$30,000 a year each, had built a two-tower, 600-room hotel in
The richest eleven of the 44 fugitive cops were estimated to have a combined asset base both directly and indirectly of some C$80 million.
"It is not exactly understood how much influence or power these former police officials possess regarding Chinese criminal activities in Brian McAdam, a former immigration-control officer in
managed to stop at least six ex-cops suspected of being affiliated with triads from entering "But many more got through with their connections or by pumping money into investor immigration schemes," he told The Asian Pacific Post in an interview on this subject two years ago.
"Some of these guys had close connections in high places and we were not seeing all the paperwork."
The exodus of Hong Kong cops to
In the ensuing investigations, ICAC brought 260 police officers to court after finding 18 criminal syndicates operating in the police force.
The criminal element in the
The Five Dragons, all of whom eventually ended up in
In the mid-seventies as the corruption crackdown in Hong Kong intensified, Hon, despite his criminal connections, became a landed immigrant in
British
At that time he was said to have in his control HK$2,343,624 (C$468,000), a sum disproportionate to his salary as a Detective Staff Seargent of the Royal Hong Kong Police Department.
The next day, Hon appeared in a
The bail was raised by family and friends of Hon and covered the titles of six houses.
The bail was raised by his: i) Concubine - Kan Suk Ying (515 West 54 Ave ii) Son - David Hon Kam Hung (Date of Birth 2 Sept 1950/B.C.Driving Licence 2788025) and his wife Alice Hon Yoke Leng (DOB 14 Aug 1949/BCDL 2116473). They raised C$48,500. iii) Fei-Fung Lui, a UBC student who listed her address as The judge also ordered Hon's three passports British, Hon's lawyer, H.A.D. Oliver, who later went on to become a judge and a conflict-of-interest commissioner, applied for the case to be thrown out on a technicality involving the law.
Three months later, a Federal Court judge agreed with Hon's lawyer and ordered the extradition hearing stopped. Hon is released, bail is discontinued and his three passports returned. The government of
On
Hon died at the age of 76 in August 1999 in
In an analytical report done by the RCMP liaison office in
Police officers and lawyers familiar with proceeds of crime investigations said the money brought in by the corrupt Hong Kong cops is likely to have been legitimized through a variety of means and that there is very little the authorities can do now, unless the same players are actively involved in criminal enterprises.
The conclusion to Hon's case marks the end of a string of police corruption cases in
One of those cases involved retired detective sergeant Lui Lok, who also invested his fortune in
Civil proceedings were also launched by the
Former ICAC deputy director of operations Alex Tsui Ka-kit, one of the investigators in Hon's case, described the settlement as "sensible and reasonable".
In a telephone interview with the South China Morning Post, Tsui said: "The man [Hon] is no longer here. But the case has dragged on and on for so many years, with so much time and effort having been put into it.It is about time it came to an end. The settlement is also a relief for the members of his family, who have been under a lot of pressure."
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