Former DPP Grenville Cross reveals split over Sally Aw Sian prosecution
Grenville Cross says justice secretary overruled him with decision not to charge Sally Aw Sian

Former top prosecutor Grenville Cross has broken his 15-year silence on a split in the Department of Justice over the controversial decision not to prosecute newspaper tycoon Sally Aw Sian.
Cross, who stepped down as director of public prosecutions in 2009, told the Sunday Morning Post he had advised there was sufficient evidence to prosecute Aw, but was effectively overruled by then-secretary for justice Elsie Leung Oi-sie.
"My position on the evidence was a difficult one. Although, on balance, my provisional view was that there was enough evidence to prosecute, I accepted, after discussion, that there was an alternative view, which was legitimately held," he said.
Aw, chairwoman of Sing Tao Holdings when the decision was made in 1998, was named as a co-conspirator in charges brought against three Hong Kong Standard newspaper executives.
The three executives were later jailed for their part in a plot to deceive advertisers by falsely inflating circulation figures.