A charge of criminal intimidation was taken into consideration during the sentencing.
The parties involved cannot be named under a court order to protect the victim’s identity.
The court heard that at the time of the offences, the man had custody of his biological son after a divorce with his wife.
On November 30, 2022, the man learnt that his son, had been texting his mother despite being told to cut off contact.
He became angry and slapped the boy on the left side of his face, causing injury and pain in the victim’s left ear.
The man then used a yellow rubber hosepipe to hit the victim on his upper left arm, back and left thigh, causing multiple bruises.
The boy was taken to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital for treatment for his injuries.
The offender also admitted that he had hit the victim on previous occasions, said Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Jocelyn Teo.
Investigations also revealed that at least three times in 2022, the man secured the boy’s ankle or wrist to a fixed metal bar in the toilet, using a metal chain and padlock.
He would put a rubber hosepipe between the metal chain and the victim’s skin to protect him from injury if he struggled, and put some food and water in the toilet, leaving the victim there for two to five hours.
The man would either sleep or leave the unit, exposing him to potential danger in case of emergency such as a fire, the prosecutors said in sentencing submissions.
“The accused did so to punish the victim for lying, not doing his homework or not keeping his promise such as not to contact his mother,” said the prosecutor.
Police were alerted to the child abuse case by a staff member on the National Anti-Violence Helpline on December 4, 2022.
Court documents did not indicate which incident led to the police report.
Seeking a jail term of between 28 and 31 months, the prosecutor pointed to the “extensive” injuries suffered by the child and the abuse of position of trust on the part of the father as aggravating factors.
Defence counsel Mansur Husain sought a shorter jail term of between 12 and 15 months, describing the term sought by the prosecutor as “excessive”.
He said that his client is apologetic for his mistakes and pleaded for leniency so that he could put this chapter of his life behind him as soon as possible.
In delivering his decision, District Judge Chay Yuen Fatt described the punishments in the case as “harmful and completely unnecessary”.
He added that the defence had also conceded that the offender had crossed the line between disciplining a child and committing these criminal acts.
For each count of ill-treating a child, the man could have been jailed for up to eight years, fined up to S$8,000 (US$5,914) or both.