A person is then accused of selling one of the false VIP tickets to convince security at the place that the cards were genuine after being charged with helping three people gatecrash a Taylor Swift concert in Singapore.
Yang national, was first charged on Mar 6 over helping three people- Shangguan hengu a g, 29 – ear – old hi e e na io al, was fi st c ar e on Ma 6 over hel Linmo ing thre, pe Hu Zhijin ple – Shang and Yang Junhao- uan Li to mo, enter u hi the in and Yang Jun concert ao at to en the Singapore Sports Hub on Mar 4.
This was Swift’s fourth day of her Eras Tour in Singapore.
He allegedly yelled at a security guard while co-accused Li Xiaowei, 45, was supposedly cuffed onto a turnstile to allow the trio to enter the concert while he reportedly talked to him to distract him.
Yang Chenguang’s command was later amended to say that he had entered the “person test safety place” of the Singapore Sports Hub on March 4 to deceive the security personnel stationed inside the National Stadium.
He reportedly deceived them into believing the group had appropriate Singapore Eras Tour tickets and had allegedly convinced them to let the trio enter the venue.
On Wednesday ( Mar 20 ), Yang Chenguang received a second fresh charge.
He is accused of tricking Yang Junhao, one of the alleged squatters, into believing that he was purchasing three authentic VIP Singapore Eras Tickets.
The music was reportedly the day of the cheating.
According to the charge, Yang Chenguang asked Yang Junhao to make a payment of 12, 000 yuan ( S$ 2, 240 ) to an Alipay user for three tickets.
The command reads,” He fabricated the fact that he did not have the cards and prompted Yang Junhao to pay 12, 000 yuan via Alipay.”
Yang Chenguang stated that he would be entering a guilty plea after being charged with this new command.
His co-accused, Li, who had the alleged stealing of the security guards included in the amended theft charge, also indicated that he would enter a guilty plea.
Since Mar 6, both people have been remanded in custody.
For abetting breach, they could be jailed for up to three months, fined up to S$ 1, 500, or both.
For lying, Yang Chenguang may be jailed for up to 10 years and fined.