Cleaner stole jewellery worth $4000

Cleaner stole jewellery worth $4000

In dire financial straits and desperate to support her five children, a part-time cleaner cleaned out her employer's jewellery drawer.

Over the course of four months last year, Rafizah Rafie, 32, stole gold earrings and bangles worth about $4,000 from Indian housewife Anitha Lakshmanan.

She was jailed for 10 weeks yesterday after pleading guilty to nine charges of theft from her employer, three of which were proceeded on.

Rafizah had been employed in July 2013 by Ms Lakshmanan to clean her Anchorvale flat. She was paid $14 per hour for a four-hour cleaning session.

The accused was aware of the drawer where Ms Lakshmanan, 34, kept her jewellery as her employer had previously asked her to put some of it there.

PAWN

During cleaning sessions from February to May last year, Rafizah would take pieces of jewellery from the drawer, which she would later pawn for sums ranging from $70 to $750.

Last May, Ms Lakshmanan and her husband, IT consultant Satyanarayanan Karthikeyan, also 34, discovered that some of the jewellery had disappeared.

They spoke to Rafizah about the missing jewellery, but she denied taking anything and even offered to help them search their home again.

After Mr Satyanarayanan repeatedly asked her if she had stolen the jewellery, she finally confessed to the theft later that month. The couple made a police report on May 29, 2014.

The police have successfully recovered all the stolen items.

Rafizah's lawyer Ravinderpal Singh said in mitigation that it was his client's first brush with the law and that she is facing severe financial difficulties supporting her five young children.

Her ex-husband is imprisoned, leaving her with custody of all five children. Rafizah's oldest child is 15 and her youngest is just a year old. The family receives assistance from Daybreak Family Service Centre.

District Judge Janet Wang said that she was mindful that Rafizah was a first-time offender, but that there had been a "certain breach of trust" in her stealing from her employer and that she had committed "a multitude of offences in the span of four months."

For each count of theft, Rafizah could have been jailed up to three years and fined.


This article was first published on May 27, 2015.
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