A group of celebrities were allegedly caught on video using drugs at the restaurant owned by Suki Tsui's husband Kenny Wong. Kenny was also blackmailed $200,000 to get the video clip back. The incident alarmed the police and are currently following closely with this case. Sources reveal the police has called Kenny Wong in for questioning, but Kenny said: "I have nothing to say and no video clip." He also couldn't produce any evidence/information of the former employee whose trying to blackmail him. The police had already investigated the restaurant and found no CCTV installed in the VIP rooms. Yesterday afternoon, Kenny admitted the police had left their [business] cards with him, so they could be in touch with him. In addition, he explained why he didn't have CCTV installed in the VIP rooms: "The incident (celebrity drug use) happened a few years ago. After the incident, I spoke to the security consultants and they said due to privacy issues, VIP rooms cannot have CCTV installed, so we immediately took them out and only left the ones in the hallway, backdoor and kitchen." It was widely rumored that the media already purchased the 'celebrities drug use' video clip? Kenny expressed he heard about it too: "Yeah, I already discussed with my legal adviser. Since the incident originated from [my restaurant], I'm in for some trouble. I will absolutely not make this public, unless the police requests that I turn in the video."
He said the police has already contacted him, so he cannot say too much. Due to privacy issues, he absolutely cannot reveal the names of the celebrities seen using drugs. Asked if his staff actually saw that the drug users were actually artists? He said: "One employee said, they appeared to be artists, but can't wrongly accuse someone and that's the reason why there is no evidence. At the time, I was not at the restaurant. Maybe they were just taking sober-up pills. If any of our customers are caught using drugs at our restaurant, we will call the police immediately."
Kenny explained because the CCTV screens are located behind the registers near the entrance, anyone who walks by can easily take a USB flash drive and copy the computer memory. The incident happened over the weekend and he didn't find out until two days later, perhaps someone has already copied it. "Usually we erase what was recorded on the videotapes after 7 days, but because of this incident, we haven't erased anything."
Source: Oriental Daily
Translated by: aZnangel @ AsianEU Forum