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Doctor accused of having secretly recorded 4,500 videos in the toilets released on deposit

Melbourne, Australia – A trainee surgeon was released on Friday on a deposit on Friday after being accused of having secretly recorded hundreds of medical colleagues in the toilets of Australian hospitals.

Ryan Cho, 28, will probably face approximately 500 accusations concerning 4,500 intimate videos which he has secretly recorded with phones mainly in the toilets of the staff of three hospitals in Melbourne since 2021, the police have allegedly allegedly alleged documents from Victoria.

Judge James Elliott judged that the junior doctor was released provided that he lives with his parents, who moved from Singapore to Melbourne in anticipation of the liberation of their son. His parents had to display a deposit of $ 50,000 Australian dollars ($ 32,000).

The prosecutor argued that the accusations presented to Cho an incentive to flee and that he had no significant link with Australia after being suspended from his work. While Cho became an Australian permanent resident in April, he could expel if he was sentenced and sentenced to 12 months or more in prison, said Hammill.

The judge noted that Cho had returned his passport to Singapore and had no criminal link to help him leave Australia.

Police alleys that Cho has recorded intimate images of at least 460 women. The judge noted that there was no Cho allegation broadcast these images.

Cho was arrested in July after a phone was found recorded from the inside of a net bag suspended in a rest room at Austin hospital. The police say that he also recorded in the toilets of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Center and the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

His lawyer Julian McMahon rejected the prosecutors’ fears that if she was released, Cho could interfere with the witnesses. There are probably hundreds of witnesses alleging similar offenses, said McMahon.

“There is a feeling that if my client was engaged in the criminal offense to interfere with witnesses, that would not affect the result of the case,” said McMahon.

Cho was initially accused of six offenses, but 127 other accusations were added on Thursday, in particular by intentionally recording intimate images without authorization.

McMahon said it was too early to say if the allegations would be tried. Cho did not have fun.

Cho came to Australia as a student in 2017 and studied medicine at Monash University in Melbourne.

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