Jade Rasif and her sisters Tyen Rasif and Khym Fong rarely talk about their father, David Rasif. However, on rare occasions, the 28-year-old Jade Rasif responded to a comment on social media and touched on the topic.
In an Instagram story on Wednesday (March 9), Jade Rasif shared the conversation she had with a netizen on Facebook about David Rasif. The netizen opined that they thought Ms. Rasif came from a very wealthy family that included David Rasif as one of its members.
Responding, Jade Rasif wrote: “Can I just clear this up? My dad when I was 12, stole 4 million. He’s still on Interpol wanted”.
According to singaporelegaladvice.com, “A lawyer by profession, (David) Rasif had just received a sum of almost $2 million from his clients for a property purchase transaction. This sum was later misappropriated by Rasif and used, inter alia, for the purchase of precious stones and jewellery from a jewellery retailer”.
In a second Instagram story on the topic, Ms Rasif added: “If you really think I would risk going to jail & miss out on the best years of my life over 4 million in stolen gold bars you are insane”.
“Not only is that blood money with bad karma, but this is singapore. 4 million is what, a Rolls Royce? Some nice watches? An apartment? Is that what family is worth nowadays? Wake the hell up,” she wrote.
Ms Rasif is often vocal on social media, often touching on social issues.
Earlier this week, voicing an unpopular opinion, a 27-year-old guy wrote that he would rather go out with sugar babies than find a girlfriend.
In an anonymous post on confessions page NUSWhispers, the guy wrote: “For the longest time, I bemoaned my lack of dating success. I would look at friends who were attached and feel so much envy. Wondering why couldn’t [I] just find someone who I could care for, and would care for me in return”.
He added that he created an account on Sugarbook, an online dating service that was founded in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Sugarbook is most popular in the Southeast Asian countries of Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines. It is known as a site for people to find “mutually beneficial relationships”, attracting sugar babies and sugar daddies.
Ms Rasif responded and, wrote: “NUS admin, how much did you get paid to post this? Be honest”.
She added: “I don’t think this should be here. Former NUS student here. One thing to let these financially insecure women eat ur scraps. Another thing to brag about it on a website with university students”.
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