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18 months' jail for elderly Filipino jeweler who stole gems from clients

20 October 2023

 

Alejo (left) leaving court after an earlier hearing of his case

A 73-year-old Filipino jeweller who pawned about $1 million worth of jewelry entrusted to him by two of his loyal clients was sent to 18 months in prison at Eastern Court yesterday, Oct 19.

Celso E. Alejo, Jr.’s fall from grace began some seven years ago when his jewelry business which he ran from an office in On Hing Building in Central started having financial problems.

At the time two sisters, M.K. Seen kay Kay and Mak Seen Wah, Sylvia, who had bought a number of items from him worth well over a million dollars, entrusted a number of mostly gold jewelry to him for appraisal and safekeeping.

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These were itemized as: 82 gold pendants, 75 gold coins, 16 gold bracelets, 8 gold rings, 7 gold disks, 6 gold ingots, 5 gold bangles, 5 gold figurines, 4 gold peaches, 3 gold ring bands, 2 gold peanuts, 2 gold balls, 2 gold chains, 1 gold Chinese zodiac wheel, 1 wedge shape gold piece, 1 gold earring, 1 gold clip, 1 gold frame, 1 gold bar and 1 platinum ring

To save his business from going under, Alejo pawned his clients’ jewelry sometime in 2016 until October 2017. However, he was unable to redeem the jewelry nor pay back the sisters, so he was charged with theft.

The second count of theft involves his taking of a diamond necklace from a pawnshop in Central, also belonging to the Seen sisters, on Jan. 17, 2017.

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No other details of the alleged offences were disclosed, but court records show that Sylvia Mak had filed a civil case in a bid to recover her jewels from Alejo in 2018.

Alejo was arrested and investigated on the two theft charges only on March 9 this year. The hearing of his case was postponed at one point because his defense lawyer indicated his withdrawal from the case.

He subsequently pleaded guilty to the charges on August 3 this year, and Principal Magistrate Ivy Chui set his sentencing on August 17.

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Further delays ensued when Alejo failed to appear in court twice. First, he sent word that he was in hospital, but for the second his whereabouts were unknown so Magistrate Chui cancelled his bail of $40,000 and ordered his arrest.

In court on Wednesday the duty lawyer representing Alejo asked for maximum leniency, saying his client had retired and lived alone after his wife passed, and his son who is in the United States hardly kept touch.

Although he was well educated he now has to rely on social welfare assistance after his business collapsed.

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The lawyer also said Alejo was remorseful, had a clear record and before he committed the offences to save his business he was a law-abiding citizen.

He also tried to use Alejo’s advanced age in appealing for a lenient sentence, but Magistrate Chui said “old age is not a strong ground for mitigation.”

In sentencing, Magistrate Chui said that Alejo committed a serious breach of trust and was in no position to pay compensation to the victims.

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She said that the prescribed sentence for thefts where the amount involved is between $250,000 and $ 1million is from two to three years in jail.

Given the amount involved, she said the correct starting point should be around 36 months, but decided to cap it at 27 months because of the unusual circumstances of the case and Alejo’s age. She whittled it down further by 1/3 because of Alejo’s guilty plea, leaving a final jail term of 18 months.

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