Court denies protection to man who reported needle attacks in Singapore

Published on May 26, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

A Singapore resident sought court orders against his wife after reporting a series of assaults including needle pricks in intimate areas, financial control, and threats with a knife. The family court denied the protection order, deeming the evidence presented insufficient, coupled with the fact that the couple was already living separately. The wife did not attend the hearing, citing medical treatment in China without presenting a valid certificate, and accepted the court's decision.

A courtroom gavel striking a wooden block near a closed legal folder with a Singapore family crest, a man in a grey suit sitting alone with a frustrated expression, a medical syringe and a kitchen knife placed as evidence exhibits on the table, a woman's empty chair with a suitcase and a Chinese medical document, cold fluorescent lighting, metallic reflections on the gavel, photorealistic legal illustration, dramatic shadows, high-contrast cinematic style, detailed wood grain and fabric textures

Blockchain and Medical Records: The Technology That Could Have Changed the Case 🛡️

The lack of a valid medical certificate from the wife was a critical point in the process. Blockchain-based medical record systems could resolve such disputes. Storing certificates on an immutable blockchain would allow instant verification of the authenticity of documents issued by healthcare centers abroad. Additionally, technologies such as forensic geolocation or activity logs from smart devices could provide objective evidence in cases of financial control or threats, reducing reliance on conflicting testimonies.

Needles, Knives, and a Lost Certificate in China: The Modern Family Drama 🔍

If the defense had presented an NFT of their medical certificate, things might have turned out differently. But no, the lady preferred the classic method: disappearing and claiming treatment abroad without papers. At least the court wasn't pricked by the story. That said, the husband now knows that to prove a needle attack, it's better to have a witness or a video, because evidence that vanishes like a Chinese certificate doesn't convince even the most understanding judge.