Education

Ex-CEO of private college gets RM15,000 fine for issuing fake certs

Amran Mustaffa pleads guilty to charge involving false docs for Kolej Sentral programme

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 16 Jan 2023 3:55PM

Ex-CEO of private college gets RM15,000 fine for issuing fake certs
The lawyer for former private college chief executive Amran Mustaffa had sought a fine as punishment from the court, citing that the accused had pled guilty to the charge of issuing false documents. – Pixabay pic, January 16, 2023

KUANTAN – The former chief executive of a private college has been fined RM15,000 for two optional charges of issuing false documents to obtain RM5,000 seven years ago.

Sessions court judge Datuk Ahmad Zamzani Mohd Zain meted out the sentence on Amran Mustaffa, 58, after he pleaded guilty and stipulated a 12-month jail sentence if the latter failed to pay the fine.

Amran was alleged to have committed the offence on October 21 and 24, 2015, at a bank in Jerantut involving a fake certificate and transcript for the Kolej Sentral science foundation programme in the name of a male student at the college.

According to the facts of the case, the RM5,000 was deposited into the accused’s bank account in return for the issuance of the documents, which can be used to pursue studies overseas, without the student having to attend classes and sit for exams.

The charges were framed under Section 471 of the Penal Code, punishable under Section 465 of the same code, which carries an imprisonment of up to two years or a fine or both if convicted.

Lawyer Ariff Azami Hussein requested the court to impose a fine because the accused had pleaded guilty as soon as the prosecution accepted his request for representation.

“The accused is the head of a large family, with 11 children aged between three and 32. Since the investigation of the case in November 2017, he has lost his income and is now doing business with an uncertain income,” he said, adding that his client had repented and fully cooperated with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission throughout the investigation.

Deputy public prosecutor Rifah Izzati Abdul Mutalif urged the court to impose a deterrent sentence, saying that the accused’s greed to obtain easy money affects the image and integrity of the country’s educational institutions. – Bernama, January 16, 2023

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