32.7 C
Bangkok
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Home Blog Page 2481

Prosecutors Seek Death Penalty in iPhone Stabbing Case

BANGKOK — Police submitted their case Thursday to the prosecutor’s office against two men accused of stabbing a young man to death to steal his iPhone in northern Bangkok earlier this month.

The two suspects, 26-year-old Kittikorn Wikaha, and 25-year-old Supattanachai Chansri, are charged with several offenses, including fatal armed robbery. They face the death penalty if convicted.

“The maximum penalty for the most serious charge [against them] is execution,” Sarawut Jindakham, chief of Kok Kram Police Station, said by telephone.

Read: Suspect in Brutal Bangkok Knife Murder Video Arrested

Footage of the gruesome Jan. 4 murder shocked many and raised discussion about public safety.

Police said that footage showed Kittikorn stabbing his victim, 26-year-old Vasin Lueangcham, to death while his accomplice looked on from a getaway motorcycle. Kittikorn later told police he didn’t intend to kill Vasin, and that the robbery went awry only because the victim resisted.

Col. Sarawut said Kittikorn and Supattanachai are being held at Bangkok Remand Prison, their bail denied. The prosecution will schedule court dates and arrange pro bono lawyers for the two suspects if they cannot afford to do so, Sarawut said.

The killing captivated headlines and social media attention for days, not only because of its brutality, but because Kittikorn is a former convict who had served separate prison terms for drug charges. Kittikorn’s recidivism prompted some on social media to demand tougher prison terms and less chances of royal pardon for convicts.

Advertisement

Scientists Claim New Gibbon Species, Name It Luke Skywalker

A Siamang gibbon species seen here perching from a branch in 2007 in Chiba-shi, Japan. Photo: su neko / Flickr

LONDON — Researchers in China claim they have identified a new species of gibbon in the remote forests along its border with Burma  and have named it after Star Wars character Luke Skywalker.

Scientists studying hoolock gibbons on China’s Mount Gaoligong concluded there were two, not one, species based on both the primate’s distinctive brow and a genetic analysis. The study was published in the American Journal of Primatology.

The proposed new species is called the Skywalker hoolock gibbon or Gaoligong hoolock gibbon. The Chinese characters of its scientific name mean “Heaven’s movement.”

Outside experts are split on whether it’s enough to justify new species status.

Actor Mark Hamill, who played Skywalker in the film, tweeted: “So proud of this! First the Pez dispenser, then the Underoos & U.S. postage stamp… now this!”

Advertisement

Commuters Stuck as MRT Goes Back to Paper Age

At left, Long queues at 7:25am on Thursday at MRT Bang Sue. At right, paper tickets were issued while the electronic system was down. Photos: @Praerieternal and @Aeffycnp / Twitter

BANGKOK— Subway commuters were met with an unwelcome surprise early Thursday morning when the electronic entry systems crashed system-wide and they were unable to enter the platform.

Starting from 6:28am, commuters could not use their cards or tokens to enter the MRT subway system. Instead, they had to wait in long queues to purchase paper tickets with cash, then wait to hand those tickets to someone to descend to the platform.

System service at all 18 systems were up and running again at 8:55am, the subway operator announced. Bangkok Expressway and Metro Public Co. Ltd. gave no explanation for the downtime.

Some tweets from queuing commuters:

Advertisement

Combative Trump Concedes Russia’s Role in Election Hacking

President-elect Donald Trump speaks Wednesday during a news conference in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press

NEW YORK — In a combative and freewheeling news conference, President-elect Donald Trump said for the first time Wednesday that he accepts Russia was behind the election year hacking of Democrats that roiled the White House race. Looking ahead, he urged Congress to move quickly to replace President Barack Obama’s signature health care law and insisted anew that Mexico will pay the cost of a border wall.

The hour-long spectacle in the marbled lobby of Trump’s Manhattan skyscraper was his first news conference since winning the election in early November, and the famously unconventional politician demonstrated he had not been changed by the weight of his victory.

He defiantly denied reports that Russia had collected compromising personal and financial information about him, lambasting the media for peddling “fake news” and shouting down a journalist from CNN, which reported on the matter. His family and advisers clapped and cheered him on throughout.

Trump’s transition has been shadowed by U.S. intelligence assessments that Russia not only meddled in the election, but did so to help him defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton. After spending weeks challenging that idea, Trump finally accepted at least part of the intelligence conclusions.

“As far as hacking, I think it was Russia,” Trump said, quickly adding that “other countries and other people” also hack U.S. interests. Still, he kept needling the intelligence agencies, saying it would be a “tremendous blot” on their record if officials were leaking information from his classified briefings.

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in a statement later that he had spoken with Trump Wednesday evening and told him he does not believe any leaks came from the intelligence community.

One U.S. official told The Associated Press Tuesday night that intelligence people had informed Trump last week about an unsubstantiated report that Russia had compromising personal and financial information about him. Some media outlets reported on the document, which contains unproven information alleging close coordination between Trump’s inner circle and Russians, as well as unverified claims about unusual sexual activities by Trump. The AP has not authenticated any of the claims.

Clapper said Wednesday he had told Trump the intelligence community “has not made any judgment that the information in this document is reliable.”

Wednesday’s news conference was initially billed as a chance for Trump to answer questions about his plans for distancing himself from his sprawling, family-owned real estate and licensing business. Lawyer Sheri Dillon stepped to the lectern midway through the event to announce that the president-elect was relinquishing control of the Trump Organization to his adult sons and an executive, as well as putting his business assets in a trust. While new international business deals will be banned, the company will be allowed to start new projects in the U.S.

The move appears to contradict a previous pledge by the president-elect. In a tweet last month, Trump said that “no new deals” would be done while he was in office.

With dramatic flair, Trump aides piled stacks of manila folders on a table next to the lectern – in front of 10 American flags – before the news conference began. Trump said the folders contained documents he had signed formalizing the new business arrangements, though journalists were not able to view and independently verify the materials.

Some 250 journalists crammed into the Trump Tower lobby for the news conference, which was not only Trump’s first since the election, but his first since July. Journalists shouted for his attention. At times, he skipped past questions he appeared to not want to answer, including an inquiry about whether he would keep in place sanctions Obama slapped on Russia in retaliation for the election-related hacking.

Until Wednesday, Trump had spent most of his two months as president-elect doling out policy pronouncements, attacks on critics and boasts about his victory in 140-character increments on Twitter. His preferred mode of communication has left some of his positions vague – an approach that is often by Trump’s design.

The president-elect set some concrete policy markers Wednesday, though specifics continued to be in short supply on some of his major campaign promises.

He promised that a replacement for Obama’s sweeping health care overhaul would be offered “essentially simultaneously” with a congressional vote to repeal the measure. The complexity of the policy changes makes quick passage of a new health care law virtually impossible, and Trump is yet to detail what he wants included. He said his team would send a plan to Congress after Rep. Tom Price, his pick to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, is confirmed.

Turning to his plans to build a wall along the nation’s southern border, Trump vowed that Mexico would “reimburse” the cost of the project through an unspecified tax or payment. He said that while his administration would begin negotiating with Mexico after his Jan. 20 inauguration, he did not want to delay the work until an agreement was reached, raising the prospect that U.S. taxpayers could ultimately bear the costs.

“I want to get the wall started,” he said. “Mexico will pay for the wall, but it will be reimbursed.”

Following Trump’s remarks, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto said his country “of course will not pay” for a border wall.

Trump also moved to complete his Cabinet picks, announcing his intention to nominate David Shulkin to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, elevating him from his current role as VA undersecretary. He suggested that Shulkin may work with major private hospitals to help address issues that have plagued veterans’ health care.

Trump said he would move quickly to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. He said he had been interviewing candidates and seeking input from conservative groups and planned to name someone about two weeks after the inauguration.

Story: Julie Pace

Advertisement

Taliban Release Video Showing American, Australian Captives

This image made from video released by the Taliban on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2017 shows an American identified as Kevin King making a statement on camera while in captivity. Photo: Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban released a video Wednesday showing an American and an Australian who were kidnapped in August, the first time they have been seen since their abduction.

The two men, an American identified as Kevin King and an Australian identified as Timothy Weekes, were abducted outside the American University of Afghanistan in Kabul, where they worked as teachers.

U.S. officials said in September that American forces had launched a rescue mission, but the captives weren’t at the raided location.

In the video, sent to media by Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, the pair appears pale and unshaven. They say they are speaking on Jan. 1. In the video, apparently delivering a message on behalf of the kidnappers, they ask U.S. President-elect Donald Trump to offer a prisoner exchange to secure their freedom.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner said U.S. authorities were studying the video and could not confirm its authenticity. He declined to comment on the case, citing privacy considerations, but he added: “Taking and holding civilian hostages is reprehensible and we condemn such actions in the strongest terms.”

Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade issued a statement saying the “Australian government has been working closely with other governments to secure the release of an Australian man kidnapped in Afghanistan in August 2016.” Citing a request for privacy from the man’s family, and “in the interests of his own safety and well-being,” Australian officials would not comment further, it said.

Advertisement

Volkswagen Pleads Guilty to Emmissions Scandal, Fined USD 4.3 Billion

A Volkswagen logo is seen on car offered for sale at New Century Volkswagen dealership in 2015 in Glendale, California. Photo: Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Six high-level Volkswagen employees from Germany were indicted in the U.S. on Wednesday in the VW emissions-cheating scandal, while the company itself agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges and pay USD $4.3 billion  by far the biggest fine ever levied by the government against an automaker.

In announcing the federal charges and the plea bargain, Justice Department prosecutors detailed a large and elaborate scheme inside the German automaker to commit fraud and then cover it up, with at least 40 employees allegedly involved in destroying evidence.

“Volkswagen obfuscated, they denied and they ultimately lied,” Attorney General Loretta Lynch said.

Prosecutors may have trouble bringing the executives to trial in the U.S. German law generally bars extradition of the country’s citizens except within the European Union. Privately, Justice Department officials expressed little optimism that the five VW executives still at large will be arrested, unless they surrender or travel outside Germany.

Still, the criminal charges are a major breakthrough for a Justice Department that been under pressure to hold individuals accountable for corporate misdeeds ever since the 2008 financial crisis.

U.S. authorities are still investigating just how high the scheme went, and held out the possibility of charges against more VW executives.

“We will continue to pursue the individuals responsible for orchestrating this damaging conspiracy,” Lynch said.

VW admitted installing software in diesel engines on nearly 600,000 VW, Porsche and Audi vehicles in the U.S. that activated pollution controls during government tests and switched them off in real-world driving. The software allowed the cars to spew harmful nitrogen oxide at up to 40 times above the legal limit.

U.S. regulators confronted VW about the software after university researchers discovered differences in testing and real-world emissions. Volkswagen at first denied the use of the so-called defeat device but finally admitted it in September 2015.

Even after that admission, prosecutors said, company employees were busy deleting computer files and other evidence.

The fines easily eclipse the USD $1.2 billion penalty levied against Toyota in 2014 over unintended acceleration in its cars. VW also agreed to pay an additional USD $154 million to California for violating its clean air laws.

The penalties bring the cost of the scandal to VW in the United States to nearly USD $20 billion, not counting lost sales and damage to the automaker’s reputation. Volkswagen previously reached a $15 billion civil settlement with U.S. environmental authorities and car owners under which it agreed to repair or buy back as many as a half-million of the affected vehicles.

Although the cost is staggering and would bankrupt many companies, VW has the money, with USD $33 billion in cash on hand.

As for why the fine was so big, “the premeditation here was very significant and that was at a very high level in the company,” said Leslie Caldwell, an assistant U.S. attorney general.

“Lower-level people actually expressed concern along the way about the fact these defeat devices were being used and questioned whether they should be used. And higher-up people decided to use them,” Caldwell said. “Volkswagen also lied to the regulators and the Department of Justice once our investigation had started. That’s what distinguishes this.”

Volkswagen pleaded guilty to conspiracy, obstruction of justice and importing vehicles by using false statements. Under the agreement, VW must cooperate in the investigation and let an independent monitor oversee its compliance for three years.

The six supervisors indicted by a federal grand jury in Detroit were accused of lying to environmental regulators or destroying computer files containing evidence.

All six are German citizens, and five remained in Germany. The only one under arrest was Oliver Schmidt, who was seized over the weekend in Miami during a visit to the U.S.

Schmidt was in charge of VW’s compliance with U.S. environmental regulations. Those indicted also included two former chiefs of Volkswagen engine development and the former head of quality management and product safety. Prosecutors said one supervised 10,000 employees.

All six were charged with conspiracy to defraud the U.S. by making false statements to regulators and the public. Three were also charged with fraud and clean-air violations.

Government documents say one engine development supervisor asked an assistant to search another supervisor’s office for a hard drive that contained emails between them. Then another assistant was asked to throw it away, prosecutors said.

Authorities said the scheme began when VW officials realized new diesel engines wouldn’t meet U.S. 2007 emissions standards. Acting on instructions from their supervisors, VW employees borrowed the defeat device idea from VW’s Audi luxury-car division, which was developing different engines with similar software.

In November 2006, some employees raised objections about the defeat device to the head of VW-brand engine development, prosecutors said. That official allegedly directed the employees to continue and warned them “not to get caught.”

In 2014, VW employees learned about a West Virginia University study that found emissions discrepancies in VWs. Three of the supervisors and other employees decided not to disclose the defeat device to U.S. regulators, prosecutors said.

In August 2015, a VW employee ignored instructions from supervisors and told U.S. regulators about the device.

VW also faces an investor lawsuit and a criminal investigation in Germany. In all, some 11 million vehicles worldwide were equipped with the software.

Story: Michael Biesecker, Tom Krishner, Dee-Ann Durbin

Advertisement

Moscow Says Rumors it Has Compromising Trump Dossier Are ‘Utter Nonsense’

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during his annual news conference Dec. 23 in Moscow. Photo: Pavel Golovkin / Associated Press

MOSCOW — A spokesman for President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday denied allegations that the Kremlin has collected compromising information about U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, deriding the claim as a “complete fabrication and utter nonsense.”

“This is an evident attempt to harm our bilateral ties,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow. “The Kremlin does not engage in collecting compromising information.”

A U.S. official told The Associated Press on Tuesday that intelligence officials had informed Trump about an unsubstantiated report that Russia had compromising personal and financial information about him. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the official was not allowed to publicly discuss the matter.

After news reports were published about the briefing, Trump tweeted: “FAKE NEWS – A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!”

President Obama had also received a briefing on the alleged dossier which includes unsubstantiated claims Moscow had information about unusual sex acts he engaged in their. It had been circulating in political and media circles for several months before Buzzfeed posted it online today.

Peskov dismissed the report but commented that the allegations could be used to keep American politicians from wanting to improve ties with Russia.

“We should treat it with humor, but there is a sad side to it, too,” he said. “There are people who are whipping up this frenzy, who are doing their best to keep this witch hunt going.”

Peskov described the report as part of efforts to “keep harming the relations, not allow anyone to think about whether this is in the interests of both countries, the interests of the global community and what can be done to move from a total confrontation to a more constructive approach.”

Story: Natalia Vasilyeva

Advertisement

Hong Kong Tourist Robbed by Bad ‘Good Samaritan’

Police on Wednesday question Thanpisit Onraksa, seated, at Chachoengsao City Police Station.

CHACHOENGSAO — A Thai man was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of posing as a tourism official to rob a lost tourist seeking help in Chachoengsao province last week.

Thanpisit Onraksa, 31, reportedly confessed to police that on Jan. 5 he robbed the 61-year-old tourist from Hong Kong.

He was arrested after the victim contacted Chinese authorities who in turn alerted Thai police, according to Prasert Ngernyuang, commander of the national Tourist Police.

“He confessed,” Col. Prasert said. “We searched his house and recovered much of [his money]. He had spent some, but we recovered most of it.”

Police said Thanpisit approached the victim, Lee Guankin (transcribed from Thai text), who was lost at the provincial train station. Thanpisit allegedly introduced himself as a tourism official and offered to find accommodations for the man.

Instead police said he took the tourist to his own house and robbed him of HKD25,000 (about 114,000 baht), local police said.

Col. Thanpisit said the tourist is still in Thailand, and has already provided testimony at an advanced court hearing so he could return to Hong Kong when he wishes.

“The court allowed him to testify in advance so he wouldn’t have to waste his time coming to Thailand [for the trial],” the colonel said.

Advertisement

Find ‘La La Land’ in Bangkok at These 9 Jazz Bars

BANGKOK — With dream couple Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone’s retro romance seizing hearts and every Golden Globe it was nominated for, fingers have been snapping for “La La Land,” even before it was released in Thai theatres.

Thailand is no stranger to jazz, but that interest has been rekindled by the story of Mia, an ambitious barista with Hollywood dreams, and her introduction to jazz by Sebastian the pianist. The musical features an original score of more than a dozen jazz numbers including Golden Globe-winning “City of Stars,” sung by Gosling and Stone.

Read: ‘La La Land,’ ‘Moonlight’ Top Golden Globes

For those who left the rom-com musical’s 128 minutes wanting more, here are some fine places in Bangkok worth checking out to get in the mood again.

1Brown Sugar

Founded three decades ago near Lumphini Park, this jazz and blues bar now in Phra Nakhon has long ranked as one of the best in the city. Local and international acts play regularly, including performers from reality singing competition “The Voice” and a nine-piece band called Big to the Future, aka B2F.

Brown Sugar is located on Phra Sumen Road, only a kilometer from Khaosan Road. It’s closed Mondays.

2Smalls

Photo: Smalls / Facebook

For some years now, this richly appointed three-floor bar has been a hip venue for Bangkok night owls with a reliable flow of fine cocktails and music. The upper levels and roof are a bit more laid-back, with people drinking and talking.

Smalls sits on the corner of Soi Suan Phlu 1. Take a cab or moto from MRT Lumphini or BTS Chong Nonsi.

3Jazz Happens

Photo: Jazz Happens / Facebook

Inside a two-floor shophouse-bar on Phra Athit Road, Jazz Happens was founded by a group of music lecturers at Silpakorn University and remains a friendly, groovy atmosphere with a few menu items from Singha beer to grilled pork neck.

The venue recruits music students and up-and-coming artists such as Rasmee Isan Soul, a singer-songwriter with northeastern roots who mixes mor lam and Soul.

4Saxophone Pub and Restaurant

Photo: Saxophone Pub and Restaurant / Facebook

For great jazz, a big meal and bigger sound, this two-floor jazz bar in European style serves a rocking vibe along with Thai dishes and drinks. The must-hear regulars include Koh Mr. Saxman, Lek T-Bone, The Emergency, Neung Jakkawal and many more.

Saxophone Pub and Restaurant can be reached by foot from BTS Victory Monument’s exit No. 4.

5Soul Bar

Photo: Soul Bar / Facebook

Nestled in Charoen Krung’s Talad Noi neighborhood, Soul Bar features the tasteful sounds of soul, funk and jazz. Make sure to grab a beer to enjoy with the complimentary crispy fried bananas.

Guest acts take the stage along with four house bands: Mother Fucky Band, Bank the Voice and NRG Band, Supergoods and The Lowdowns. Live music plays 9pm until late Wednesday through Saturday.

6Evil Man Blues

Photo: Evil Man Blues / Facebook

Step into a neon-lit cocktail bar in Thonglor to get in the mood for the American 60s.

The bar plays funk, R&B and old school hip-hop while jazz is given sound Wednesday through Saturday nights by jazz guitarist Dan Phillips and the Bangkok Edge Quartet.

Evil Man Blues is on the ground floor of Thonglor’s community mall 72 Courtyard located on Soi Sukhumvit 55, a short motorbike ride from BTS Thong Lo.

7Maggie Choo’s

Photo: Maggie Choo’s / Facebook

Be impressed by the 1920s Shanghai speakeasy theme, cocktails and more at this theme basement-level bar on lower Silom Road.

Live performances go off every night, ranging from jazz bands, costumed dolls on swings, drag queen shows and more, all amid the underground ambience.

Maggie Choo is in the basement of the Novotel Fenix Silom hotel and can be reached by taxi from BTS Surasak, BTS Chong Nonsi or MRT Silom.

8The Iron Fairies

Photo: The Iron Fairies / Facebook

Head to this fairytale-themed bar on Mondays for open-mic night. While jazz bands are available on the mezzanine nightly, sometimes the singer descends the spiral staircase to make a scene. For an unforgettable night you may not remember, try the absinthe martini.

The Iron Fairies is located on Soi Sukhumvit 55 at Soi Thong Lo 14. Hop on a motorbike from BTS Thong Lo.

9Bamboo Bar

Photo: The Bamboo Bar at Mandarin Oriental, Bangkok / Facebook

It’s fancy, definitely high on the hi-so meter, and with 64 years of history, the oldest jazz bar in Bangkok.

Said to have hosted top talents such as Ray Charles, Eric Clapton, Louise Armstrong and Mick Jagger, Bamboo Bar sets a high bar for expectations. Live bands start at 9pm every night. Dress smart.

Bamboo Bar is located inside the Mandarin Oriental Hotel by the river on Soi Charoen Krung 40.

Thai Teacher’s Tale of Injustice Ignites Public Sympathies

At left, Jomsup Saenmuangkot in a Tuesday night appearance on Channel X. At right, she meets with officers at the Ministry of Justice on Monday.

BANGKOK — A teacher imprisoned for a year and a half for killing a motorcyclist on the road has gone public with a story of injustice and police incompetence that a court will soon hear.

Professing her innocence ever since being blamed for a fatal road accident a dozen years ago, Jomsap Saenmuangkot alleges a rigged system resulted in her being wrongfully imprisoned two years ago in a case police willfully ignored evidence to win her conviction.

“When I was going into jail, I thought, ‘Thailand, Thailand, why are you like this?’” Jomsap said in a televised interview Tuesday night, tearing up. “I sometimes thought about drinking floor cleaner in jail.”

The difference now is that Jomsap isn’t alone. Her claim of innocence has the support of justice officials, officers with the Department of Special Investigation and legal advocates who agree she got a bum rap.

Now she’s seeking compensation for wrongful imprisonment nearly 12 years after she was implicated in a fatal hit-and-run accident that would turn into a eight-year legal battle ending with her sentenced to more than three years in jail in late 2013.

In a nation frequently captivated by stories of gross injustice, Jomsap’s appearances on a variety of television programs discussing her case has garnered great public sympathy.

“The most despicable thing about the justice system is jailing the innocent. One life has been completely destroyed, nothing can heal that,” wrote user Nattapol Sinthaweewat on a discussion of Jomsap’s case in the popular Drama-addict group on Facebook.

As she has recounted, the schoolteacher was at home watching television in Sakon Nakhon province on March 11, 2005, when the road accident she would be implicated for occurred a province away in Nakhon Phanom.

A witness at the scene reported the car’s license plate to the police, but officers ignored the fact it also matched another plate registered in another province. They also may have ignored witness testimony the driver was a large man in a green truck – Jomsap drove a brown car – to win her conviction.

Thai justice comes down hardest on those who refuse to confess, and it made things worse for Jomsap when she refused to do so in exchange for a lighter sentence.

“I believed I was innocent. If I did that, then the real criminal would get away. I wouldn’t do it,” Jomsap said on Amarin TV’s Different People, Different Opinions show.

After her Sept. 24, 2013, conviction, Jomsap’s friends sought help from the Justice Ministry to find evidence which would exonerate her. She likely would have served the full term were it not for a royal pardon on April 3, 2015.

Rojana Jantrut, Jomsap’s childhood friend, said she and officers from the DSI tracked down the real perpetrator, who turned out to be a “man of wealth.”

“He didn’t know that a teacher would go to jail instead of him. He quickly confessed that he had killed someone in a road accident in ‘05,” Rojana said on the program.

On Wednesday, Kasem Mutaporn of Nakhon Phanom police confirmed that a man named Sap Wapee confessed just over a year ago.

“He will give his testimony at the court on the 16th,” Col. Kasem said.

A new trial to clear Jomsap’s name and determine whether she should be compensated is scheduled for Jan. 16. Under the law, convicts later found to have been wrongfully jailed are eligible to receive 500 baht per day they spent behind bars, along with a maximum 50,000 baht for physical and mental rehabilitation and up to 40,000 for medical fees.

Jomsap said irreparable damage has been done to her life. While in jail, her oldest child died, the cost of her defense forced her second child to drop out of university, and her husband left her.

The veteran teacher is also seeking to be reinstated at the school which fired her over the matter.

Despite or even because of what happened, she said the public is also to blame for going along with a corrupt system.

“When other prisoners would ask me why I didn’t just bribe the police with money so I wouldn’t have any trouble, I got really sad. Why do most people think like this? Why do people choose the easy way out?” she said on the show.

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
few clouds
32.7 ° C
32.7 °
32.7 °
61 %
4.1kmh
13 %
Wed
37 °
Thu
39 °
Fri
37 °
Sat
37 °
Sun
37 °