In the subsequent years, Tay started several funeral companies. Following the now defunct Casket Palace, he founded Casket Fairprice in 1993 which was subsequently managed by his two children from his first marriage. He later founded Tong Aik Undertaker, Hindu Casket and Direct Funeral Services. Tong Aik Undertaker is in charge of operating the
Singapore Police Force's police hearse, and also has operated as Direct Funeral Services since 2000. In 2004, Tay with Direct Funeral Services conducted the pro-bono funeral of
Huang Na, an eight-year-old girl who was murdered brutally in
Pasir Panjang, Singapore. This was followed by another pro-bono funeral in 2005 of 22-year-old Chinese national
Liu Hong Mei, who was murdered and chopped into seven parts before being dumped in the
Kallang River. The process of sewing the body parts back together took Roland Tay and his embalmers 7 hours. He also oversaw the funeral of
Li Hong Yan, a 24-year-old village girl from
Heilongjiang who drowned at
Sentosa. Tay reportedly collected around three hundred identity cards of deceased persons whom were without family, and for whom he conducted pro bono funeral services. One of Tay's more memorable cases is the pro bono funeral he provided for the primate tourism icon
Ah Meng of Singapore. In 2013, Tay brought his daughter Jenny Tay into the business, who subsequently helped him rebrand the undertaking firm as a managing director after quitting her job at a marketing firm. Her husband Darren Cheng also closed down his counselling business and joined her in the company as an executive director. Thanks to their efforts, the business saw its annual revenue tripled from SG$2 million to SG$7 million in the subsequent years, and alongside their main funeral services, Direct Funeral Services now offers additional services like grief counselling, funeral pre-planning, living funerals, and via their charitable subsidiary Direct Life Foundation, opened volunteering opportunities to the public and their employees for both the underprivileged and the elderly. To this day, Tay continues managing pro-bono cases and alongside Jenny and Cheng, attend wakes under their company and Direct Life Foundation volunteering events. == Legal Issues ==