
The ruling came after the Court of Appeal last week quashed Lai’s fraud conviction for operating a consultancy office out of his now-defunct tabloid newspaper, Apple Daily, finding that the prosecution had failed to prove that the media mogul had made a “false representation” or was criminally liable for concealment.
At Friday’s hearing, Judge Stanley Chan Kwong-chi granted the prosecution’s application to formally withdraw the charge against Royston Chow Tat-kuen, the then chief financial officer and chief operating officer of Next Digital, who testified against Lai in a District Court trial four years ago.
Before the convictions were quashed, Lai and Next Digital’s chief administrative officer, Wong Wai-keung, were charged and found guilty of improperly subleasing office space at Apple Daily Printing Limited to secretarial firm Dico Consultants Limited between June 27, 2016, and May 22, 2020, in breach of land lease conditions.
The judge noted that Lai’s fraud case had concluded after the Department of Justice recently decided not to appeal the appellate court ruling.
“For you, this is a full stop. You will no longer be entangled in this case,” he told Chow.
Chan acknowledged the pressure Chow had faced over the years as a prosecution witness against his former boss.


















