26-year-old man charged with running SG Nasi Lemak didn't hide his link to Telegram group

He even wanted to have a discussion about it.

Belmont Lay | October 15, 2019, 06:15 PM

Four people have been charged in court on Tuesday, Oct. 15 over their alleged involvement in the “SG Nasi Lemak” chat group that promotes vice.

The four suspects are:

• Abdilah Sabaruddin, 17

• Justin Lee Han Shi, 19

• Leonard Teo Min Xuan, 26

• Liong Tianwei, 37

Investigations revealed that Teo and Liong were the administrators behind the chat group.

The other two teenagers were the distributors of the obscene materials.

Focus on one man

While reporting on the news that the four of them have been charged, Today found information online pertaining to Teo:

https://www.instagram.com/p/B3orspcBzsk/

This was so as he apparently has the most public profile of all.

Openly linked himself to the SG Nasi Lemak chat group

According to his Facebook page, Teo is an actor, dancer, magician, and even a stuntman.

Browsing through Teo's online social media presence, it is apparent he did not hide his alleged association with the SG Nasi Lemak Telegram group before his arrest.

Teo had engaged in an Oct. 1 Twitter conversation on SG Nasi Lemak with DJ Dee Kosh:

https://twitter.com/TheDeeKosh/status/1178744038364565509

This was after the existence of the Telegram group started to become mainstream knowledge after it was flagged online.

And on Oct. 2, Teo tweeted a photo of a plate of nasi lemak and asked if he should close down the chat group while accusing others of "mob justice" and being "SJW", which stands for "social justice warriors":

https://twitter.com/LeoTeoMX/status/1179135246794493952

The Twitter account has since been deleted or privatised but this was what the photo in the tweet showed:

On Oct. 8 he tweeted cryptically:

https://twitter.com/LeoTeoMX/status/1181275275318816772

Heard Twitter japanese can look for assisted suicide and hitmen. Im finding such services anyone?

Arrests

The four men were arrested on Oct. 14.

The police have not revealed how they managed to arrest the administrators of the vice channel on the Russian-made chat platform favoured by dissidents as it is supposedly encrypted and promotes anonymity.

But Teo's outing of himself in public left traces that could point to his involvement.

Ironically, five years ago, in September 2014, Teo published a anti-crime video he did for the Singapore police.

The caption said:

 

Content that keeps Mothership.sg going


❌?
Are young Singaporeans really lazy and pathetic?

??️
Do you agree that FOMO really isn't a thing?

??
Do yourself a favour and have a quickie please.

??
Quick atas tips to impress your date.