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Mathavakannan Kalimuthu was born on 10 May, 1978 in Singapore, is a murderer. Discover Mathavakannan Kalimuthu's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 45 years old?
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46 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Taurus |
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10 May, 1978 |
Birthday |
10 May |
Birthplace |
Singapore |
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Singapore |
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He is a member of famous murderer with the age 46 years old group.
Mathavakannan Kalimuthu Height, Weight & Measurements
At 46 years old, Mathavakannan Kalimuthu height not available right now. We will update Mathavakannan Kalimuthu's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Mathavakannan Kalimuthu Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Mathavakannan Kalimuthu worth at the age of 46 years old? Mathavakannan Kalimuthu’s income source is mostly from being a successful murderer. He is from Singapore. We have estimated
Mathavakannan Kalimuthu's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
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Source of Income |
murderer |
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Timeline
Due to the lack of new cases of successful clemency outcomes, succeeding presidents of Singapore like President S R Nathan (1999–2011) and Tony Tan (2011–2017) became the two presidents who did not grant a single application for clemency from a death row inmate by the time both ended their respective terms as president. In a newspaper article published on 27 August 2017 (5 days after Nathan died at age 92), which once again brought up Mathavakannan's case, Nathan had once reportedly told a reporter in an interview about Singapore's clemency process that he had to act on the advice of the Cabinet to decide if a person deserves the pardon. He said it was hard when it involves the death sentence and it had to be decided to ensure that justice is served and he cannot go by human emotions to make these decisions and was in no position to contradict the submission when he have not heard the case. Nathan ended the interview by saying, "I have to ask the man up there to forgive me for what is done for the good of society."
Mathavakannan's lawyer Subhas Anandan also wrote in the clemency letter and asked for mercy to the President on account of Mathavakannan's young age at the time of the murder, and that he played the most minor role out of all the three in the murder of Saravanan. This information was revealed by the lawyer himself during an interview in 2013 or 2014 when he recounted the case of Mathavakannan (without naming him directly) while explaining the presidential clemency process in Singapore.
Extracted from President Ong's commutation order (republished in Mathavakannan s/o Kalimuthu v Attorney-General [2012] SGHC 39):
Eight days after his successful appeal against his life sentence, and after spending nearly 16 years of his life behind bars, 33-year-old Mathavakannan Kalimuthu was released from jail on 28 January 2012.
His case had attracted media attention once again on 28 November 2011 when he filed an appeal regarding the issue of his life sentence, whether it should be 20 years' imprisonment (the old definition) or imprisonment for the rest of his natural life (the new definition) in accordance to a landmark appeal by Abdul Nasir bin Amer Hamsah on 20 August 1997, which changed the definition of life imprisonment under the law. The High Court then allowed Mathavakannan's appeal, and he became a free man soon after and led a low-profile life since his release.
In response to another letter by Mathavakannan's lawyers on 28 March 2011, the AGC rejected the motion to restate his case on 28 July 2011, and stated that Mathavakannan would have his case assigned to the Life Imprisonment Review Board to assess his suitability for release on parole, which would take place from 28 April 2018 onwards should Mathvakannan's sentence was actually natural life imprisonment and once he served at least 20 years of his supposed natural life sentence.
After hearing the arguments from both sides on 28 November 2011, Justice Lee reserved his judgement until 20 January 2012. On 20 January 2012, Justice Lee allowed Mathavakannan's appeal and ordered that Mathavakannan's life term should be considered as 20 years' imprisonment instead of a jail sentence lasting his remainder of his natural lifespan. In his verdict (which was published on 27 February 2012), Justice Lee accepted that the ruling should not apply to Mathavakannan's case mainly because Mathavakannan committed the offence of murder on 26 May 1996, more than a year before 20 August 1997, which meant that his life sentence should not be construed as natural life imprisonment. The appeal ruling had already made it clear that those committed crimes or those pending trials in Singapore before 20 August 1997 would not be affected by the verdict.
This issue would further develop with Mathavakannan's mother sending a letter to the Minister of Law on 26 October 2010 regarding the issue of her son's sentence. In December 2010, the SPS once again reiterated in a reply that Mathavakannan's life sentence was to be natural life imprisonment in accordance to the new interpretation set by Abdul Nasir's case on 20 August 1997.
On 4 January 2007, Mathavakannan's lawyers once again sought clarification from SPS via another letter. The SPS replied that they need more time to confirm the date. On 5 March 2007, SPS stated in a reply letter that upon clarification with the Attorney-General's Chambers (AGC), the commutation of Mathavakannan's death sentence "by the President to life imprisonment should be construed as life imprisonment for his remaining natural life".
However, there was a controversial issue that ensued in 2006 regarding the true legitimate length of Mathavakannan's life sentence. On 13 September 2006 and 18 December 2006, there were two letters were written to SPS by Mathavakannan's lawyers requesting for the clarification of the Mathavakannan's release date. On 28 December 2006, SPS replied that the late President Ong (who died 4 years earlier in 2002) had commuted Mathavakannan's death sentence to "natural life imprisonment", in accordance to the appeal outcome of Abdul Nasir since Mathavakannan was granted clemency in April 1998, 8 months after 20 August 1997, meaning that the SPS has considered Mathavakannan's life sentence as natural life imprisonment.
This was also the only case where President Ong exercised his powers of discretion as president to pardon a death row inmate with clemency in Singapore, as President Ong's 6-year presidential term ended on 31 August 1999, and he later died on 8 February 2002 at the age of 66.
After his successful clemency outcome, Mathavakannan was removed from death row and he began to serve his life sentence since the date he was pardoned. Although the Singapore Prison Service (SPS) claimed on 15 November 1999 that Mathavakannan was serving life imprisonment since 4 July 1996 (the date of his arrest), it was subsequently confirmed that Mathavakannan's sentence was to take effect from the date he was pardoned by President Ong.
Even till today since 28 April 1998, Mathavakannan is significantly known to be the sixth and last person to receive clemency from the President of Singapore as there were no further cases where a death row inmate successfully receiving clemency in Singapore since then. The rarity of any President in Singapore pardoning a death row inmate from execution in Singapore was another factor that made Mathavakannan's case notable in the city-state and beyond its borders.
After losing their appeals against the death sentence, all three men petitioned to Mr Ong Teng Cheong, then President of Singapore, for clemency on 13 January 1998. In his clemency petition, Mathavakannan expressed that he felt deep regret for causing the death of Saravanan on that night itself, and claimed that he did not want to fight the man or intend to kill the man when he caught up with Saravanan, who started the fight by inflicting the first blow on him, leading to Mathavakannan having to defend himself.
On 28 April 1998, three months and two weeks after receiving Mathavakannan's clemency plea, President Ong decided to, on the advice of the Cabinet, accept Mathavakannan's submission and thus commuted 19-year-old Mathavakannan's death sentence to life imprisonment. The reasons behind Mathavakannan's successful clemency petition were not given.
As for both Asogan and Selvar's clemency petitions, President Ong, who also received them besides Mathavakannan's, decided to reject both the clemency letters on the advice of the Cabinet. Soon after, two death warrants were issued for both Asogan and Selvar, who were scheduled to be hanged in Changi Prison at dawn on 29 May 1998, according to a 1998 Amnesty International Report.
Despite Amnesty International's plea for clemency, both Asogan and Selvar were hanged at dawn on 29 May 1998, as scheduled in their death warrants. They were executed together with an unnamed drug trafficker on the same day. The pair's obituaries were published a day after their executions in the daily national newspaper The Straits Times. The pair's hangings were also confirmed by Amnesty International in its 1998 execution report and 1999 annual human rights report. The 1999 human rights report also revealed that within the year 1998, there were at least a total of 28 executions reportedly carried out in Singapore (mostly for drug trafficking) and at least five death sentences being reportedly meted out by the courts of Singapore for murder or drug trafficking, but Amnesty International believed that the actual numbers could be higher.
The executions of both Asogan and Selvar took place just three days after 26 May 1998, the date of the murdered victim Saravanan's second death anniversary.
In response to Subhas Anandan's arguments, the Attorney-General's Chambers, argued that Mathavakannan's life sentence had taken effect on 28 April 1998, the day he received presidential clemency from President Ong. This would mean he was affected by the Court of Appeal ruling over life sentences meted out after 20 August 1997 and hence he must stay in jail for the rest of his natural life, with the possibility of parole once it was confirmed that at least 20 years of the sentence was fully served by the convicted prisoner.
As such, he decided that it would be 20 years in jail for Mathavakannan's case. Additionally, as Mathavakannan had served his sentence with good behaviour since 28 April 1998, he was qualified for one-third remission of his sentence and was set to be released soon.
Significantly, in Singapore's legal history, Mathavakannan Kalimuthu was the sixth and till today, remains as the last case of a death row inmate successfully receiving clemency from the President of Singapore, not including the successful clemency pleas of detainees of TPP (who committed capital crimes under the age of 18). Since April 1998, there were no new cases where the President of Singapore had ever approved clemency for death row inmates pending execution in Singapore, and all of these subsequent petitions were met with failure. These cases include notorious murderers like Anthony Ler (2002), Took Leng How (2006), Leong Siew Chor (2007), Tan Chor Jin (2009), Kho Jabing (twice in 2011 and 2015 respectively), Micheal Anak Garing (2019), and Iskandar bin Rahmat (2019); and notable drug traffickers like Yong Vui Kong (2009), Van Tuong Nguyen (2005) and Iwuchukwu Amara Tochi (2007).
In 1998, Singaporean crime show Crimewatch re-enacted the murder of Saravanan Michael Ramalingam, and it aired as the sixth episode of the show's annual season in August 1998, four months after Mathavakannan was pardoned from death row, and three months after the joint executions of Asogan and Selvar.
Despite losing his appeal on 14 October 1997, Mathavakannan was granted clemency by then President of Singapore Ong Teng Cheong, who commuted his sentence to life imprisonment on 28 April 1998, while his two friends were eventually executed on 29 May 1998 after they failed to obtain clemency from the President. Subsequently, Mathavakannan served a total of 16 years in prison (inclusive of the period he spent in remand and on death row) before he was released on 28 January 2012.
After their convictions by the High Court, Mathavakannan, Asogan and Selvar appealed against their sentences. However, nearly a year later, on 14 October 1997, the Court of Appeal of Singapore dismissed the appeals of all the three accused and upheld their death sentences.
Originally, on and before 20 August 1997, life imprisonment means a fixed prison term of 20 years, and with good behaviour, an early release would be granted after serving at least two-thirds of the life sentence (13 years and 4 months). It was on 20 August 1997, due to the appeal of Abdul Nasir bin Amer Hamsah, a Malay Singaporean who was serving 18 years' imprisonment and a consecutive life sentence (in total 38 years' imprisonment) with caning for robbery with hurt resulting in death (see Oriental Hotel murder for more information) and kidnapping, the Court of Appeal, which dismissed Abdul Nasir's appeal for a concurrent aggregate sentence, decided to amend the interpretation of life imprisonment as a term of incarceration for the rest of the convicted prisoner's natural life instead of 20 years in prison, and the new interpretation will apply to future crimes committed after 20 August 1997. The appeal of Abdul Nasir, titled "Abdul Nasir bin Amer Hamsah v Public Prosecutor [1997] SGCA 38", was since regarded as a landmark in Singapore's legal history as it changed the definition of life imprisonment from "life" to "natural life" under the law.
In the appeal, which was heard in the High Court by High Court judge Lee Seiu Kin, Mr Subhas argued that there was no mention of commuted sentences in the ruling when the Court of Appeal changed the interpretation of life imprisonment. Since there was ambiguity, the benefit of the doubt should be given to their client. Mr Subhas said, "Mr Mathavakannan was of the belief and held the legitimate expectation that he had to serve 20 years' imprisonment in total and would potentially qualify for remission after 13 years and four months." He raised the fact that since he committed the offence before 20 August 1997, Mathavakannan's life term should be considered as a 20-year prison term by the Court of Appeal's stand that crimes committed before that date would warrant 20-year-long life sentences for those involved in these crimes. Subhas additionally pointed out that on 14 November 2002, SPS had stated that his client's "tentative date of release is 28 August 2011". It meant that SPS could only have stated this if it was of the opinion that life imprisonment meant 20 years' jail and was subject to remission, meaning that the SPS, having referred to President Ong's commutation order, it formed the view that life imprisonment meant 20 years with remission. This led to Mathavakannan to believe for a period of almost eight years that he only had to serve 20 years' imprisonment with remission.
Justice Lee also stated that there was ambiguity over President Ong's commutation order regarding what he meant by ordering Mathavakannan be imprisoned for life – whether for 20 years or his natural life; due to this, he rather gave Mathavakannan the benefit of the doubt. He also pointed out that at the time when President Ong commuted Mathavakannan's death sentence, the life imprisonment laws were changed for merely eight months, and the old interpretation of life imprisonment had remained so for more than 40 years before this reform in 1997 and in President Ong's case, the advisers might not have informed him to specifically define the life sentence given to Mathavakannan due to the uncertainty of whether the amended law should apply in his case.
On 26 May 1996, exactly 16 days after celebrating his 18th birthday, 18-year-old Mathavakannan, together with his two older friends and secret society gang members, 23-year-old odd-job worker Asogan Ramesh Ramachandren (Tamil language: அசோகன் ரமேஷ் ராமச்சந்திரன்) and 24-year-old unemployed Selvar Kumar Silvaras (Tamil language: செல்வார் குமார் சில்வரஸ்), assaulted and murdered 25-year-old Saravanan Michael Ramalingam (Tamil language: சரவணன் மைக்கேல் ராமலிங்கம்), a secret society gangster from Sio Ang Koon Secret Society and Lion Brothers. Before that, Saravanan and Asogan had conflicts with each other on three previous occasions.
Before the murder, according to court documents detailing the case, Mathavakannan had gone drinking with both Selvar and Asogan on the night of 25 May 1996. It was not until the early hours past the morning of 26 May 1996 that the trio decided to head home. On the way, the trio encountered Saravanan, who was formerly school mates and friends with Selvar before they fell out due to their respective, different allegiances to each other's rival gangs from the underworld. Seeing him, Selvar, then a member of "Tiger Rose" gang, shouted at Saravanan, beckoning him over for a talk. In response, Saravanan allegedly shouted back some Tamil expletives and then ran away.
After committing the murder, Mathavakannan was not arrested until 4 July 1996, when he was just serving into the first days of his two-year mandatory National Service. As for Asogan and Selvar, Asogan was arrested in a hotel within Singapore while Selvar gave himself up to the police. Within the next four months, together with both Asogan and Selvar, Mathavakannan was brought to trial before High Court judge Kan Ting Chiu in the High Court of Singapore and was tried for murder together with his two friends. As murder was a capital offence in Singapore, if they were found guilty, the trio would be given the mandatory death penalty.
On 27 November 1996, six months after the murder of Saravanan, the three men were found guilty of murder and sentenced to death. As Mathavakannan was 16 days past his 18th birthday when he killed Saravanan, his conviction for Saravanan's murder meant that he was automatically liable to mandatory execution by hanging under Singapore law. Had Mathavakannan committed the crime more than two weeks (or at least 17 days) earlier, he would have been spared the death sentence and instead be serving indefinite imprisonment at the President's Pleasure.
In accordance to the appeal ruling of Abdul Nasir's case, since Mathavakannan had murdered Saravanan on 26 May 1996, 1 year and 3 months before 20 August 1997, his life sentence was considered as a 20-year jail term and his tentative date of release, if served with good behaviour, was to be on 28 August 2011, according to the SPS on 14 November 2002.
Mathavakannan Kalimuthu (Tamil language: மாதவக்கண்ணன் காளிமுத்து; born 10 May 1978) is an Indian Singaporean who, together with his two friends, murdered a gangster named Saravanan Michael Ramalingam on 26 May 1996. Mathavakannan, who was arrested on 4 July 1996, was tried and convicted of murder by the High Court of Singapore. As murder was a hanging offence in Singapore and since he was 16 days past his 18th birthday when he committed murder, Mathavakannan was sentenced to suffer the mandatory sentence of death on 27 November of the same year he killed Saravanan. Mathavakannan's two accomplices were also found guilty and sentenced to death in the same trial.
Mathavakannan Kalimuthu was born in Singapore on 10 May 1978. Mathavakannan was the only son of his family and have at least one younger sister in his family. He became affliciated to secret society members during his teenage years.
At the time of his pardon from the gallows, Mathavakannan was the sixth person since 1965 to be granted clemency from the President of Singapore. There were five precedent cases of death row inmates (including drug trafficker Sim Ah Cheoh) who had successfully obtained clemency petitions from the President before him. This outcome was widely reported at that time as the successful cases of clemency were considered a rare phenomenon in Singapore, since there were many people who failed to receive pardon from the President of Singapore.