Accused couple only let 'slave' eat Weet-Bix, jury told
A couple only allowed their alleged slave to eat Weet-Bix as she cleaned their home and looked after their children, without compensation and under threat of violence, a jury has heard.
The 61-year-old woman was denied freedom, medical help and performed unpaid domestic work, including massaging the man’s feet, while sleeping on stairs or in a garage, prosecutors allege.
The victim, who cannot be legally identified, died in 2024. However, her evidence to police, friends and family will be shown to the jury of 14.
Angie Yeh Liaw and Chee Kit “Max” Chong leave the County Court of Victoria, in Melbourne, on Tuesday. (AAP Image/Jay Kogler)

Chee Kit “Max” Chong and his wife, Angie Liaw, faced a courtroom in Melbourne on Tuesday as the prosecution commenced their case against them in Victoria’s County Court.

Chong stands accused of deliberately keeping a woman as a slave from January to October 2022, alongside three counts of assault. Liaw faces charges of aiding Chong in maintaining the woman’s enslavement.

Both defendants have entered pleas of not guilty, firmly rejecting all accusations.

Prosecutor Shaun Ginsbourg SC recounted how Chong first encountered the woman at a church in Malaysia back in 2015, describing their connection as akin to that of a mother and son.

According to the prosecution, Chong allegedly attempted to extract money from the woman on multiple occasions, including a request for $30,000 just before her relocation to Australia with the couple, which she sought from a fellow churchgoer.

Upon her move to Australia in 2017, the woman initially resided with Chong and Liaw. However, Ginsbourg stated that the couple subsequently returned to Malaysia without notifying her, leaving her in a state of homelessness.

The woman allegedly moved back in with the couple in January 2022, to help Liaw with their newborn baby, which is when the prosecutor said the slavery began.

Accused slave-keeper Chee Kit “Max” Chong, and his wife Angie Liaw have both pleaded not guilty. (Mollie McPherson/9NEWS)

By this point, she had multiple vulnerabilities as she was homeless, on a tourist visa with no independent income and isolated from her family in Malaysia, he said.

“Chong described her to other people as his ‘maid or helper’,” Ginsbourg said.

“Mr Chong threatened and coerced (the victim) to provide domestic services, repeatedly told her she had to work to repay supposed debts.

“When (the victim) failed at her duties, or failed to complete them to Chong’s satisfaction, he would often hit or kick her, or punish her by telling her she could not sleep or eat that day.”

Ginsbourg alleged Chong kicked the woman in the head, hit her with a vacuum after she fell asleep while massaging his legs and knocked her head into a wall.

Chong allegedly banned her from eating certain foods and “said she could only eat Weet-Bix”, the prosecutor said as he read messages where the woman asked Chong for permission to use the kitchen facilities.

He said the woman was at times forced to sleep on the stairs or inside the garage, instead of a bedroom at their Point Cook home, in Melbourne’s south-west.

She was not allowed to leave the home without Chong, including for medical help after his alleged assaults, the jury heard.

Chong’s barrister Diana Price said her client never assaulted the woman, denied ever possessing a slave and asked jurors to question why the victim may have exaggerated her claims.

She said Chong denied restricting the woman’s freedoms, including her access to food, how and when she slept, and whether she was able to leave the home.

Price asked the jury to look at whether the woman’s contribution to the household was different from what you might expect for a family of three adults and two small children.

Ginsbourg accused Liaw of benefiting from the woman’s domestic services and asking Chong to give her instructions or tasks, helping Chong in controlling her.

Liaw’s barrister Daniel Gurvich KC said she did not commit any crime as there was no evidence she did beyond a reasonable doubt, and the jury’s true verdict will be a verdict of not guilty.

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