Initial trial and sentence On 12 January 1976, Ng Cha Boo stood trial for the murder of Eva Soh. The prosecution was led by Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Loh Lin Kok, while Ng was assigned defence lawyer K.E. Hilborne. The trial judges were Justice Alfred Victor Winslow and Justice Thilliampalam Kulasekaram. Eva's mother, Jane, testified that on the evening of 14 August 1974, Eva was brought to Dr Jimmy How, her brother-in-law who was a medical officer in the Singapore Navy, who found a fresh bruise on Eva's right temple. Eva had gestured to her mother by saying 'pom-pom' (which was understood to mean she had a fall), knocking her hands against the wall, then pointing at Ng, implying that Ng had hit her against the wall. On the morning of 15 August, when Eva and her mother were sleeping, Eva rolled off her bed onto the floor. As Eva appeared to be restless, her mother brought her to see How again. The defence's arguments were based on the fact that there was no direct evidence that Ng had murdered Eva. Besides Ng and Eva, nobody would have known what happened in the Holland Road flat on the morning of 26 August. Ng denied having hurt Eva since the day she started taking care of her. She asserted that Eva had died due to complications resulting from falls on 11 August, when she slipped and fell in her room, and 15 August, when she rolled off her bed onto the floor. The defence also suggested that Eva's injuries could be caused by resuscitation attempts. This was rebutted by Chao Tzee Cheng, who said that while the spleen could be ruptured due to excessive force used in resuscitation attempts, the ribs were not, as common rib fractures resulting from cardiac resuscitation are seen in the left ribs, not the right ribs as in Eva's case. At the time, she was the second woman in Singapore to face the death penalty, after
Mimi Wong who murdered the wife of her Japanese lover in 1970. On 9 September 1976, her appeal was successful; her murder charge was reduced to culpable homicide and she was re-sentenced to six years' imprisonment. == Aftermath ==