Hong Kong magistrate orders prosecutors in vice case to hand over statements by police’s former national security director
- Prosecutors had objected to release of statements Frederic Choi made as part of internal proceedings over his spa visit, saying they were irrelevant to present case
- But after reviewing the documents, magistrate orders information given to defence of man accused of running vice establishment

A magistrate has ordered prosecutors in a vice case to release statements taken from the former director of Hong Kong’s national security police who was caught at a massage parlour earlier this year.
Prosecutors had previously objected to the release of two statements made by Senior Assistant Commissioner Frederic Choi Chin-pang as part of disciplinary proceedings over his visit, claiming they were irrelevant to the present case.
But Eastern Court Magistrate Daniel Tang Siu-hung on Wednesday sided with the defence and ordered the release of the statements in seven days, after reading the contents and hearing further arguments in a closed-door session.

Choi, 51, was found to be among the patrons of the Viet Spa in Wan Chai when police raided the premises on March 19. He was subsequently cleared of illegal conduct by an internal investigation, but was stripped of his post and reassigned to head of training and discipline.
A man accused of being the owner of the premises – Wu Ping-hung, 61 – was charged with keeping a vice establishment and operating an unlicensed massage parlour.
Three women who allegedly worked there – Nguyen Thi Thu Huong, 34, and masseuses Li Yiqing and Zhang Mingfang, aged 36 and 35 – were also hit with charges relating to managing such establishments.