Malaysia

Former pay TV employee with 743 charges of tampering clients’ account data sent to psychiatric hospital

The court took almost two hours to read out 132 of the 743 charges against Nora Idayu

Updated 11 months ago · Published on 26 Jun 2025 5:06PM

Former pay TV employee with 743 charges of tampering clients’ account data sent to psychiatric hospital
The charges are framed under Section 5(1) of the Computer Crimes Act 1997 - June 26, 2025

THE KUALA Lumpur Sessions Court today ordered a former employee of a pay television station who is facing 743 charges of tampering with clients’ account data to undergo a month's observation at Hospital Bahagia Tanjong Rambutan, Ulu Kinta, Perak.

Judge Norma Ismail ordered Nora Idayu Jaafar, 48, to be sent to the hospital after her lawyer, Daniel Annamalai, informed the court that he received a letter from a clinic, dated June 6, requesting that the accused be sent for psychiatric assessment as she is suspected of suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

"The accused is hereby sent to Hospital Bahagia for observation for one month. Since the accused is on bail, the accused must go to the hospital on June 30," said the judge, who then set July 29 for mention.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Rohaiza Abd Rahman appeared for the prosecution, reported Bernama.

Meanwhile, in today's proceedings, the court took almost two hours to read out 132 of the 743 charges against Nora Idayu, who had fainted in court after the 30th of 743 charges was read out to her last June 4.

She collapsed in the dock shortly after entering her non-guilty plea to the 30th charge.

The proceedings had to be halted while the court's security personnel and medical assistants from the Kuala Lumpur Hospital were deployed to the courtroom.

Nora Idayu, who was with the commercial support unit, is accused of converting the regular client's account to a corporate account without authorisation at Astro's office in Menara Icon at Jalan Tun Razak here in 2014.

The charges are framed under Section 5(1) of the Computer Crimes Act 1997, which provides a maximum fine of RM100,000 or a jail term not exceeding seven years or both upon conviction. – June 26, 2025

Related News

Malaysia / 4w

Health Ministry sets up task force to address medicine supply crisis

Malaysia / 2mth

VMY2026: Tourist arrival targets remain on track - deputy sec-gen

Malaysia / 6mth

Student stabbing case: Psychiatric report not ready, case mention postponed

Malaysia / 7mth

Estranged husband of missing Pamela Ling wins court tussle over Singapore assets

Malaysia / 7mth

IRB sues Muhyiddin's son-in-law over RM2.59m in unpaid taxes

Malaysia / 7mth

Altantuya's father granted leave to seek judicial review of probe into Azilah's affidavit

Spotlight

Malaysia

Former head of a ministry's corporate communications unit acquitted of bribery charge

Malaysia

Two sisters die trapped in Johor house fire as escape routes cut off by flames

Malaysia

NS election speculation intensifies as Aminuddin granted audience with state ruler

Malaysia

Teenager who drove recklessly, causing death remanded for further investigation

Malaysia

Police looking for trio involved in violent armed robbery in Penang (video)

Malaysia

Family of five killed as car crashes into water pipe in Serian

Malaysia

'I was once spat on by a pakcik' — Marina denies fear of contesting Malay-majority seats

Malaysia

Jewellery shop among six premises destroyed in fire (video)

You may be interested

Malaysia

Teenager who drove recklessly, causing death remanded for further investigation

Malaysia

Negeri Sembilan PH state assemblymen meet at MB's residence

Malaysia

Minor earthquake shakes Kundasang as residents report feeling tremors

Malaysia

Johor PRN: Onn Hafiz likely to be BN 'poster boy'

Malaysia

Pamela Ling’s disappearance, Durian Tunggal shooting, corporate mafia; MP demands answers

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Baby boy thrown from car in AMJ highway crash survives

Malaysia

‘What wrong did I do?’ – asks PKR MP after loss of MyKhas access

Malaysia

Azam Baki denies threat allegations after giving statement to police