Ex-Bank of America lawyer loses appeal of conviction for assault of Hong
Kong policeman
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[February 08, 2022]
By Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - An American lawyer
convicted of assaulting a plain-clothes Hong Kong police officer during
anti-government protests in 2019 lost his appeal on Tuesday and was
taken back to jail to serve the remainder of his sentence.
Samuel Bickett, a former anti-bribery compliance director at Bank of
America Merrill Lynch, was jailed for four months and two weeks in June
last year for assaulting Yu Shu-sang on Dec. 7, 2019. He was released on
bail in August after spending more than six weeks in jail.
In 2019, the former British colony faced the longest and biggest
pro-democracy protests since its 1997 return to Chinese rule, often
involving violent clashes between protesters and police. More than
10,000 people were arrested in relation to the demonstrations, some of
them by plain-clothes police.
In videos widely circulated online, Bickett is seen attempting to snatch
an extendable baton from Yu's hands as the officer fell to the ground.
When asked by another person using a derogatory term for the police
whether he was a policeman, Yu, wearing jeans and a blue jacket, said
"no" then "yes".
"As observed by the court, time and time again, police officers or any
public officers who are carrying out their public responsibilities must
be protected when in the execution of their duties," High Court Judge
Esther Toh said.
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Samuel Bickett, a former corporate lawyer from the United States,
poses during an interview, before the appeal for allegedly
assaulting a plain-clothes policeman during protests in 2019, in
Hong Kong, China November 4, 2021. Picture taken November 4, 2021.
REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Bickett said in a statement he was
sent back to prison for a crime he did not commit and he would
appeal again to a higher court.
Bickett has said he was trying to stop Yu from assaulting another
person in a train station.
Yu earlier told the court he was using his baton to stop a man from
jumping over the turnstile without paying and he did identify
himself as a police officer.
Magistrate Arthur Lam in the Eastern Magistrates Court said it was
understandable Yu did not immediately answer "yes" to the
"disrespectful" question.
Bickett, who has lived in Hong Kong and Taiwan since 2013, was
immediately detained.
He told Reuters in November he believed he suffered an injustice.
"I don’t regret stepping in that day, doing the right thing,"
Bickett said.
(Editing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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