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Australian lawyer remanded over dine-and-dash charges at Hong Kong luxury hotels

Dine and dash

An Australian man has been remanded after allegedly dining at five-star hotels in Hong Kong without paying, just a day after being fined HK$3,000 over similar charges.

The Island Shangri-La Hotel in Admiralty. Photo: Google Maps.
The Island Shangri-La Hotel in Admiralty. Photo: Google Maps.

Samuel Anthony Monkivitch, 50, appeared at Eastern Magistrates’ Courts on Friday. He was charged with making off without payment and criminal damage between April 24 and May 5, local media reported.

Monkivitch, a lawyer, is accused of not paying restaurant bills at Cafe Too at the Island Shangri-La in Admiralty, Cafe Kool at the Kowloon Shangri-La in Tsim Sha Tsui, and two other restaurants – one in Central and another in Wan Chai.

His bill at the four places totalled around HK$2,039, the court heard.

The criminal damage offences relate to allegations that on May 4, he destroyed a sales terminal at the Island Shangri-La and damaged a person’s iPhone outside the Hong Kong Museum of History in Tsim Sha Tsui.

An online video posted in March 2026 captures Australian lawyer Samuel Anthony Monkivitch in Wan Chai after an alleged dine-and-dash incident. Photo: Screenshot, via Internet.
An online video posted in March 2026 captures Australian lawyer Samuel Anthony Monkivitch in Wan Chai after an alleged dine-and-dash incident. Photo: Screenshot, via Internet.

Magistrate Tobias Cheng denied Monkivitch bail and adjourned the case to June 5. Monkivitch will attend a bail hearing on May 15.

Previously, on Thursday, the lawyer was fined HK$3,000 for two counts of making off without payment and one count of common assault. He pleaded guilty to the offences the same day, local media reported.

Monkivitch was accused of dashing off after spending HK$639.10 at a Chiu Chow restaurant in Times Square, a mall in Causeway Bay, on March 23. A restaurant staff member chased Monkivitch and said he had not paid, attracting the attention of a bystander surnamed Chen, who pointed a camera at him.

The lawyer got into an altercation with the bystander and said to him, β€œDo you want your head smashed in?”

Monkivitch was also accused of leaving before paying a bill of HK$586 at Footaholic, a massage parlour in Wan Chai, on March 25.

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Designated protest area at Hong Kong legislature being used as car park

car park legco

The Legislative Council (LegCo) has confirmed that the Designated Demonstration Area at the complex, along with the surrounding LegCo Square, is being used as a car park.

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In a response to HKFP earlier last month, the LegCo Secretariat said that the revamp was part of the renovations which took place after the number of lawmakers was expanded from 70 to 90 for the 2022 legislative term.

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The Secretariat said: β€œSince the completion of the expansion project of the Legislative Council (β€œLegCo”) Complex, all 90 LegCo Members and their staff as well as staff of the LegCo Secretariat have moved into the Complex and have been working under one roof.”

It added, β€œTo meet operational needs, the LegCo Square and the whole area (including the Designated Demonstration Area) outside the main entrances to the Complex have been used as a parking area for Members and visitors to the Complex. The Legislative Council Commission will keep the use of this area under review from time to time.”

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

It did not respond when asked when the car park work was completed, but according to a LegCo fact sheet, major expansion works were completed at the complex last year.

Status of protest area β€˜clear,’ says LegCo

The Designated Demonstration Area was intended as the only authorised location for petitions and protests at the legislature. However, it was closed during the 2019 pro-democracy protests and unrest.

After the turmoil and the Covid-19 pandemic restrictions that followed, then-legislative president Andrew Leung hinted that the protest area could reopen in early 2025 at the latest. He dismissed concerns that the extended closure was for political reasons, stating that it β€œcan only reopen when we get rid of the glass and can ensure it is safe,” according to the Standard in 2023.

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Leung may have been referring to the brief occupation of the building on July 1, 2019, by pro-democracy protesters, who broke windows to access the complex and vandalised it.

legco storming Monday July 1
The storming of LegCo on July 1, 2019. File Photo: May James/HKFP.

Last August, Leung said the reopening was still under consideration, adding that the β€œscale of current petition activities had become smaller, and it is necessary to consider whether such a large space is still required,” according to NowTV.

HKFP asked the LegCo Secretariat multiple times last month whether the Designated Demonstration Area was still available for those who wished to submit a petition or stage a protest.

They did not directly confirm whether it remained open, but they referred HKFP to their earlier response, adding that it was already β€œclear,” and did not β€œamount to a refusal to confirm if the Designated Demonstration Area is still operational.”

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

A Legislative Council handbook for lawmakers, dated this February, suggests that the protest area is still available for applications, despite the new car park.

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The application form for using the area is still online, as are the guidelines – both from 2018.

They state: β€œMembers of the public are allowed to stage petitions or demonstrations at the LegCo Square, subject to the terms set out in the β€˜Guidelines for staging petitions or demonstrations by individuals and groups at designated demonstration areas in premises managed by The Legislative Council Commission’.”

β€˜Doors always open’

According to its website, the purpose-built Legislative Council complex at Tamar in Admiralty was opened in September 2011 and included architectural features to showcase transparency.

LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
LegCo Square and the Designated Demonstration Area at the front of the Legislative Council complex on Wednesday, April 22, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The website states: β€œThe Tamar Project has been designed with the main theme of β€˜Doors Always Open’, β€˜Land Always Green’, β€˜Sky Will Be Blue’ and β€˜People Will Be Connected’.”

No major mass protests have been held in Hong Kong since the onset of the 2020 national security law.

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Australian dine-and-dash lawyer gets suspended sentence and fine, plans to fly home

Samuel Anthony Monkivitch lawyer

Australian lawyer Samuel Monkivitch has received a fine and suspended 18-month jail term after pleading guilty to charges relating to a dine-and-dash spree across the territory.

Monkivitch appeared on Friday at the Eastern Magistrates’ Courts after dining at five-star hotels in Hong Kong without paying. He was previously fined HK$3,000 over similar charges.

The Island Shangri-La Hotel in Admiralty. Photo: Google Maps.
The Island Shangri-La Hotel in Admiralty. Photo: Google Maps.

In the most recent case, Monkivitch was charged with four instances of making off without payment between April 24 and May 5, as well as a criminal damage charge, local media reported.

The lawyer failed to pay restaurant bills at the Island Shangri-La’s Cafe Too in Admiralty, at the Kowloon Shangri-La’s Cafe Kool in Tsim Sha Tsui, and at two other restaurants – one in Central and another in Wan Chai. His bill at the four eateries totalled around HK$2,039, the court heard.

The criminal damage offences relate to allegations that, on May 4, he destroyed a sales terminal at the Island Shangri-La and damaged a person’s iPhone outside the Hong Kong Museum of History in Tsim Sha Tsui.

An online video posted in March 2026 captures Australian lawyer Samuel Anthony Monkivitch in Wan Chai after an alleged dine-and-dash incident. Photo: Screenshot, via Internet.
An online video posted in March 2026 captures Australian lawyer Samuel Anthony Monkivitch in Wan Chai after an alleged dine-and-dash incident. Photo: Screenshot, via Internet.

The 50-year-old was released on Friday after spending a month behind bars. He was fined HK$2,000 and was slapped with an six-week jail term suspended for 18 months, according to The Age. He was also ordered to pay HK12,539.90 to cover the damaged iPhone and unpaid bills.

A family member – who travelled to Hong Kong for the hearing – agreed to pay the fine.

He represented himself before Magistrate David Cheung, confirming that he was unemployed given his time in custody. When asked when he planned to return to Australia, he said β€œtoday, probably,” according to The Age. He pleaded guilty without seeing the prosecution’s statement of facts.

His former employer KorumLegal told the newspaper that they had parted ways with Monkivitch.

Earlier offence

Separately last month, he was fined HK$3,000 for two counts of making off without payment and one count of common assault. He pleaded guilty to the offences the same day, local media reported.

Monkivitch was accused of dashing off after spending HK$639.10 at a Chiu Chow restaurant in Times Square, a mall in Causeway Bay, on March 23. A restaurant staff member chased Monkivitch and said he had not paid, attracting the attention of a bystander surnamed Chen, who pointed a camera at him.

The lawyer got into an altercation with the bystander and said to him, β€œDo you want your head smashed in?”

Monkivitch was also accused of leaving before paying a bill of HK$586 at Footaholic, a massage parlour in Wan Chai, on March 25.

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