
Perling assemblyman Cheo Yee How said the report was lodged when the owners discovered the matter following a decision by the Johor Bahru Consumers Claim Tribunal last June 7, which was in their favour, over a case filed by some of them concerning the property.
Cheo claimed that the property owners found that there were some pages which did not have their signatures that had been inserted into the S&P agreement.
“We want the housing and local government ministry and the relevant authorities to take note of such amendments in the S&P agreement and to take further action.
“This gives a bad image to the country, and a reminder to other developers,” he said at the Sentral police station here today.
One of the owners, Chok See Wai, 42, claimed that there were also amendments in their documents for bank loans.
“I found the (bank loan) documents have been falsified where two of the pages had forged signatures,” he said.
Another owner, Yew Pei Lee, 40, said there were also pages in her S&P agreement which she did not sign although she had signed all the pages in 2015 when she submitted the document.