Remand Upon his arrest, Ahmad was remanded in police custody for investigations. Ahmad appeared in court via video link, and was reportedly emotionless as the charge sheet was read out to him. After he was charged, Ahmad was held at the Tanglin and Central police divisions and was scheduled to return to court on 24 December. If found guilty of murder under the laws of Singapore, Ahmad would face the
death penalty. Defence lawyer Shashi Nathan and two other colleagues from his law firm, Withers KhattarWong, would represent Ahmad in his murder trial. The case was adjourned to 31 December 2020, and on that day, Ahmad was further remanded for one more week due to an unspecified health condition. Ahmad was ordered to undergo a three-week psychiatric assessment while in remand on 7 January 2021. On 28 January 2021, Ahmad's final psychiatric report was completed and would be used as evidence to assess his mental state at the time of the offence. Access to the report was restricted due to ongoing investigations. Ahmad remained remanded in prison to await trial, as murder suspects are denied bail. Ahmad's case was adjourned to March 2021. On 24 May 2022, it was reported that Ahmad's remand order was extended and still in effect, while police continued to search for Ragil, who remained at large outside Singapore. Ahmad would make his next court appearance in July 2022.
Pre-trial hearing and withdrawal of murder charge On 27 June 2022, Ahmad was granted a discharge not amounting to an acquittal for Teo's alleged murder, but it can be revived if the prosecution finds additional evidence against him. Shashi Nathan, Ahmad's lawyer, earlier tried to convince the district court judge, Eugene Teo, to grant Ahmad a full acquittal as giving Ahmad a discharge without acquitting him would potentially lead to Ahmad being psychologically haunted by the prospect of the murder charge hanging over his head indefinitely. Nathan also emphasised the sufferings Ahmad's wife (who left his flat due to harassment by members of the public) and his family members endured due to their connection to Ahmad and the public's condemnation of his actions. Although District Judge Teo did not accept Nathan's proposal due to it being the wrong time to do so, he stated he did feel some sympathy for Ahmad upon hearing Nathan's concerns. He added that there may be a review in the future as to the extent of Ahmad's responsibility in the case, so it was not the right time to fully acquit Ahmad. Despite his discharge, Ahmad still faced a charge of disposal of Teo's corpse, as well as five other charges of misappropriating some of Teo's possessions, giving false information to the police, withholding crucial information of Teo's case, and falsifying phone calls or text messages to mislead people into thinking Teo was still alive. Ahmad, who was offered a
S$20,000 bail, was scheduled to return to court on 6 July 2022 for trial, after he expressed his intention to plead guilty to the lower charges. By then, the prosecution - consisting of Deputy Public Prosecutors (DPP) Yang Ziliang and R. Arvindren from the
Attorney-General's Chambers (AGC) - had pursued the same six charges in addition to the murder charge on Ragil's charge sheet, and the
Singapore Police Force had contacted the
Indonesian authorities, who agreed to help their Singaporean counterparts to trace the whereabouts of Ragil. The prosecution stated there was no prejudice on Ahmad in his case and commented on the unusual nature of Ragil's fugitive status, "This is not a case where police have been trying for many years to trace the co-accused. The tracing of him only began after the accused was arrested 1.5 years ago and new facts came to light during the investigations." Although the court documents did not reveal who exactly killed Teo or her cause of death, it was revealed that Ahmad and Ragil disposed of Teo's corpse at the vicinity of Punggol Track 24 after the alleged killing. The search efforts resulted in the discovery of a skull fragment where Ahmad and Ragil abandoned the corpse. The skull fragment was sent by the prosecution to the
United States for mitochondrial DNA testing to determine if the skull fragment belongs to Teo.
Guilty plea and 26-month jail term On 6 July 2022, Ahmad returned to court and was set to plead guilty to his charges. However, the guilty plea was adjourned and a pre-trial hearing would be conducted on 5 August 2022, as the prosecution and defence needed to have discussions and resolve several issues. Nathan also filed an appeal for Ahmad's murder charge to be fully withdrawn with a discharge amounting to an acquittal; if an acquittal was granted, it meant that Ahmad would not be charged again for the same offence. The appeal was scheduled for hearing at the
High Court in March 2023. The
Chief Justice,
Sundaresh Menon, was appointed to hear the appeal. While the appeal was being processed, the full grounds of decision by District Judge Eugene Teo were released on 12 August 2022. He explained that there was no basis to acquit Ahmad as at the district court hearing stage, there were no precedent cases of murder suspects acquitted before their official trial at the High Court (only the High Court can hear cases of murder or other crimes that attract the death sentence). Giving Ahmad an acquittal would potentially give him legal immunity against the murder charge should there be evidence that demonstrated Ahmad could be the one killing Teo, so it would not be appropriate for Ahmad to be acquitted until such a stage where the trial judge deemed Ahmad should gain an acquittal over Teo's murder. Given that Ahmad had hidden his criminal behaviour with lies and pretenses for 13 years prior to his capture, the court felt it would not be safe to grant an acquittal at this stage, even if Ahmad was genuinely not the killer. Ahmad returned to court to submit his guilty plea on 14 October 2022, and on the same day, Ahmad was sentenced to 26 months' imprisonment for abandoning Teo's body, stealing her belongings and giving false evidence to the authorities. Ahmad's sentence was one month short of the 27-month jail term sought by the prosecution in their closing submissions. The DNA results from the American forensic authorities revealed that the skull most likely belonged to Teo. During sentencing, the district court judge admonished Ahmad for callously taking advantage of Teo's death by taking her belongings and hiding the truth from her friends and family, leaving them unable to find closure. The prosecution argued that Ahmad's actions were highly premeditated with a great amount of planning, and his cover-up of Teo's death caused the unnecessary channelling of resources in the 13-year long fruitless search for 19-year-old Teo, who was actually dead despite being reported missing. Ahmad's lawyer Shashi Nathan, who earlier sought a 18-month term of imprisonment, argued that Ahmad was genuinely regretful of his actions but failed to muster sufficient courage to tell the truth for fear of losing his family, life, reputation and career, and also expressed his intention to apologise to Teo's friends and family for the emotional torture he put them through. ==See also==