Arrest and conviction Five years after he was released from prison, Abdul Kahar re-offended and was once again arrested on 6 July 2010 for another offence, this time for capital
drug trafficking. A search was conducted by the officers from
Central Narcotics Bureau and a total of 26.13g of
diamorphine (or pure heroin) was found in Abdul Kahar's motor car, which he drove from Boon Lay Way into Jurong Town Hall Road before he encountered the narcotics police. A second search was conducted at Abdul Kahar's flat (where his brother and mother also lived), and another 40.64g of diamorphine were also found inside Abdul Kahar's bedroom. Thus, Abdul Kahar was brought to court for two charges of drug trafficking. for trafficking 26.13g of diamorphine and 40.64g of diamorphine respectively. As the total amount of drugs exceeded the legal minimum of 15g, Abdul Kahar would face the
mandatory death penalty if found guilty
under the laws of Singapore. In his account to the police and court, Abdul Kahar stated that he knew a man named Latif in
Malaysia, and befriended him after a few meetings. He said that Latif met him on the same day he was arrested, at the void deck of his residential block, and received a request from Latif to help him keep a bag, which he claimed had something related to his work in Malaysia. In the first occasion, Abdul Kahar kept a dark blue bag in his bedroom after receiving it from Latif; the bag contained the 40.64g of diamorphine found in his home. In the second occasion, Abdul Kahar once again received another bag, a red coloured one which also contained what Latif claimed also had to do with his work; the red bag contained the 26.13g of diamorphine that the narcotics police discovered in his motor car. From this, Abdul Kahar tried to claim that he had no knowledge of the drugs and was deceived by Latif in helping him to safekeep the bags. However, there were evidence which proven that Abdul Kahar had knowledge of the drugs and there were also a total sum of over $100,000 in cash found in his home, indicating these to be the criminal proceeds he received from trafficking diamorphine. There were evidence which also showed signs of the drugs being re-packed by Abdul Kahar for the purposes of trafficking. After standing trial in the
High Court, Abdul Kahar was found guilty of drug trafficking on 27 August 2013, but sentencing was postponed in light of the newly enacted death penalty laws more than seven months earlier, in order to certify if Abdul Kahar was merely a drug courier. The reforms of the death penalty laws stated that a drug convict would not face the death penalty and only receive
life imprisonment on the condition that he/she was only acting as a courier or suffering from a mental illness. Two months later, the High Court judge
Choo Han Teck ruled in a follow-up judgement that Abdul Kahar was indeed a courier and gave him the benefit of the doubt, which would spare him from a death sentence. However, Justice Choo chose to postpone his sentencing till a later date.
Prosecution's appeal, re-trial and sentence Subsequently, the prosecution filed an appeal against the October 2013 verdict, which was simultaneously heard with another prosecution's appeal against the case of another drug trafficker
Chum Tat Suan, who was also judged as a courier by the same judge. Chum was arrested in an unrelated case on 16 January 2010 for trafficking 94.96g of diamorphine. Both appeals were allowed by the apex court in November 2014, which quashed both the courier verdicts against the two drug traffickers, and the three-judge panel of the
Court of Appeal ordered both cases to be sent back to the High Court for a re-trial to test if they were really couriers. The panel made clear that the meaning of a courier is limited only to transporting, sending or delivering the drug; if a drug trafficker is found to have any intention of selling the drug, he/she would not be considered as a mere courier. In Abdul Kahar's case, the three judges -
Tay Yong Kwang,
Woo Bih Li and
Chao Hick Tin - held that the judge was wrong to consider him as a courier by disagreeing with a ruling that repacking and collecting payments were "ancillary acts" not excluded from the definition of courier, while in Chum's case, they judged that the High Court judge was incorrect to hold that it was unsafe to explore the evidence from the first phase of the trial to decide if he was a courier, while noting that the evidence of Chum's mental state should have been presented earlier in the original trial. Subsequently, while 68-year-old Chum Tat Suan was eventually certified as a courier and sentenced to
life imprisonment on 7 March 2016 (with his sentence backdated to the date of his arrest), it was the opposite for 61-year-old Abdul Kahar bin Othman, who was not found to be a courier in a re-trial and thus
sentenced to death by
hanging on 4 February 2015. Abdul Kahar's appeal against the death sentence was dismissed on 1 October 2015. A judicial review application filed in 2016 to challenge the Public Prosecutor's decision not to grant Abdul Kahar a certificate was also dismissed. ==Subsequent legal proceedings==