Summit has Singapore in spotlight years after Kettering teen’s caning

Hosting the U.S./North Korea summit between President Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un has Singapore in the international spotlight this week, as it was in the spring of 1994 for a very different reason.

Credit: SUBMITTED / FILE

Credit: SUBMITTED / FILE

That’s the year Singapore gave a caning to Michael Fay, who had lived in Kettering with his father. The punishment handed down after the 18-year-old was found guilty of vandalism prompted an international debate and protests from then-President Bill Clinton.

RELATED: 7 of Dayton area’s most notorious criminals

The New York Times at the time apparently talked to a retired banker who lived a few doors from the Fays’ large brick home. The neighbor, the Times reported, “said he would support the caning of local teen-agers who have blown up his mailbox with cherry bombs.”

PHOTOS: The last time Singapore was big news in Dayton

Fay, who was then living overseas with his mother and stepfather, denied spray painting cars, for which he served 83 days in a Singapore jail. He was also sentenced to six lashes with a wet rattan cane, and was believed to be the first American ever sentenced to be caned there.

Credit: SKIP PETERSON

Credit: SKIP PETERSON

DOWNLOAD OUR MOBILE APPS FOR LATEST BREAKING NEWS

The number of lashes was later dropped to four. Clinton – addressing the issue in the White House’s Rose Garden – called the punishment “a mistake,” the Los Angeles Times reported.

Fay, who accused the police of forcing him to confess by slapping and punching him, returned to Kettering in early June of that year.

FOLLOW NICK BLIZZARD ON FACEBOOK

About the Author