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Tourist Fined $1,000 for Collecting Thermal Water in Yellowstone

FILE - This September, 2009 file photo shows the Norris Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park, Wyo. Rangers are navigating a dangerous landscape where boiling water flows beneath a fragile rock crust as they search for a man who reportedly fell into a hot spring at Yellowstone National Park. Officials say the safety of park personnel was a top concern during the search in the popular Norris Geyser Basin. The man is presumed dead. (AP Photo/Beth Harpaz, File)

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo.  — A tourist from China was fined USD$1,000 (35, 000 baht) for walking off a boardwalk at Yellowstone National Park and collecting thermal water, apparently for medicinal purposes, park officials said Wednesday.

A witness reported seeing the man break through the fragile, rock crust surrounding the Mammoth Hot Springs area. The witness took photos of the man that were turned over to park rangers, officials said.

The incident came only a week after an Oregon man died after falling into one of Yellowstone’s hot springs.

The Chinese tourist told rangers he did not read the safety information given to him when he entered the park. The man, whose name was not released, reportedly wanted the water for medicinal purposes, said park spokeswoman Charissa Reid.

Reid said in an emailed response to questions about the case the “stiff fine” was levied in large part because of “the irreplaceable nature of the thermal feature.”

The 2.2 million-acre park has seen a string of incidents over the past month where tourists got into trouble.

Some got too close to wildlife and several others walked off boardwalks near hot springs.

On June 7, 23-year-old Colin Nathaniel Scott of Portland slipped on gravel and fell into scalding, acidic water after leaving a boardwalk in the Norris Geyser Basin. Park officials were unable to recover his body.

A day after Scott’s death, six people received USD$130 (4, 600 baht)  citations for walking off trail in the Grand Prismatic Springs area.

Park regulations require visitors to stay on trails and boardwalks for their own safety as well as to protect Yellowstone’s natural resources. It is a violation of federal regulations to collect any park resources.

Related stories:

Man Falls into Acid Hot Spring at Yellowstone Body Totally Dissolves

Tourists Fined for Instagramming Star Fish 

Feeding Corn to Fish Could Cost Tourists 100, 000 Baht. Here’s Why. 

Tourists’ Big Catch Gets Yacht Banned From Similans

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Tiger Temple Volunteers Deny Knowing of Abuses

Seated from left, Edwin Wiek, Chatraporn Thamthong and Tanya Erzinlioglu discuss the now-shuttered Tiger Temple on Wednesday night at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Former volunteers of the Tiger Temple said they were surprised when more than 1,000 tiger-skin amulets and other evidence of trafficking and worse were discovered recently at the complex.

Two former volunteers discussed their passion for the animals’ welfare, in hindsight two weeks after wildlife officials raided and shut the place down, at a panel discussion Wednesday night at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand alongside one of the commercial temple’s principal detractors, wildlife activist Edwin Wiek.

“It was a major shock,” Tanya Erzinlioglu, who said she worked at the temple for six years.

As for why they did not know what was going on days seemingly extensive evidence of wrongdoing was recovered from the site located west of Bangkok, Chatraporn Thamthong said that as a woman, she was not allowed to enter the monks and abbot’s areas, where huge tiger pelts were found earlier this month.

Missing at the discussion was Adisorn Noochdamrong, who led the operation for the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation, who canceled at the last minute.

Wiek, head of Wildlife Friends Foundation of Thailand, said the temple’s saga won’t be resolved until the tigers have a good home and the people who exploited them are prosecuted. He called attention to a new Wildlife Preservation Act being written that promises stricter regulations including stiffer penalties and agency cooperation with NGOs.

Erzinlioglu and Chatraporn said they were concerned about the tigers’ new home inside two government wildlife facilities in Ratchaburi province. Erzinlioglu said they don’t have access to nature as they’re kept in cages with concrete floors.

The Tiger Temple, aka Wat Pha Luangta Bua Yannasampanno, is closed to tourists now after years of proving a popular attraction where guests could pay to touch and take photos with the big cats.

After years of suspicion the temple was trafficking and exploiting the very animals it claimed to protect, wildlife officials finally began removing the animals on May 30. In the following days, officials discovered more than 40 dead tigers cubs, animal carcasses, jarred tiger parts marked “energy booster,” and a number of living unregistered animals including a lion. A monk was stopped trying to remove a load of tiger-skin amulets in a truck.

Trafficking and possession charges have been laid against several people involved in the temple’s operations, while its abbot of 22 years claims he had no idea anything improper took place there.

Police believe the temple was involved in a larger international trafficking ring and say they are still investigating.

 

Related stories:

Abbot of 22 Years Denies Knowing Tiger Temple’s Terrible Secrets

Officials Hunt for Abbot of Tiger Temple

Bottles of Real Tiger Labeled ‘Energy Booster’ Discovered in Tiger Temple

Conservation Rhetoric Falls Apart as 1,000 Magic Tiger Amulets Seized From Monk (Photos)

Lion, Tiger Pelt, More Wildlife Discovered Inside ‘Tiger Temple’

Horrible Discovery in Tiger Temple: Dozens of Dead Tiger Kittens (Photos)

Officers Enter Tiger Temple to Begin Removing Tigers

Another Showdown as Tiger Temple Blocks 1,000 Wildlife Officers

 

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Maxim Cover Models Falsely Named as Sex Workers

Seven Maxim models file charges today at Technology Crimes Suppression Division.

BANGKOK — Models for a popular men’s magazine were unamused to see themselves in a message shared described as sex workers from a brothel recently raided by authorities and have filed a complaint with police.

Outraged by the image circulated over Line, seven Maxim pinup models went to the tech crime division Wednesday after their images were found in a gag message referring to the June 7 raid of Nataree Entertainment, where 15 underage girls and trafficked women were found among 121 sex workers there.

“These are the Nataree massage parlor girls that were arrested. Choose which ones you want to bail out!” read the message, which came with a photo of dozens of women.

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It turned out the women were not from Nataree, but Maxim magazine models. Seven of those shown filed a complaint asking the Technology Crime Suppression Division to track down and prosecute those responsible.

They included Nattada “Gigi” Ketanong, Nipakorn “Ploy” Phummarin, Ploypapat “Milk” Malyamalaya, Koraporn “Grace” Armartayathadi, Darunee “Oum” Srimueang, Warinthorn “Valen” Naksingha and Lalita “Natto” Ruengthong.

“I want the police to investigate and track down the people responsible,” said Maxim editor Krittin Jikitsilaphin. He added that more models in the photo would file charges in the coming days.

Spreading “false information” on the internet is outlawed under the Computer Crimes Act. Cpt. Sombat Sombatyotha, who took the complaint, said police are investigating.

Related stories:

Fake Facebook Profile Lists Civil Servant as Sex Worker

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Put Down the Tinfoil: Science Ministry Insists Mind Control Not Possible

Leaked photo of alleged mind control experiment being carried out at an undisclosed site in New York.

BANGKOK — Government scientists is seeking to convince the public today there are no such things as mind control devices.

The unusual, deadpan statement from the Science Ministry came one day after a woman eluded security at Government House to beseech Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha for help with the mysterious frequency reading and controlling her mind.

“At the present time, there is no credible, scientific proof of any technology that can access human brains in order to retrieve their thoughts and feelings,” Ministry of Science and Technology spokesman Worawarong Rakreungdet said in a statement.

Worawong said the ministry sent a similar explanation to the woman, Jemjuree Chuayprad, after she first petitioned the Government Complaint Center last month with her extraordinary claim.

Police drag Jemjuree Chuayprad away on Tuesday morning after she shouted her complaint at Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha at Government House.
Police drag Jemjuree Chuayprad away on Tuesday morning after she shouted her complaint at Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha at Government House.

It didn’t work. On Tuesday, 27-year-old Jemjuree beseeched Gen. Prayuth while the junta chairman was visiting exhibition booths just outside his offices.

“Mister Prime Minister! Help me!” Jemjuree shouted at Prayuth, “I’m here to ask for action about  mind control from a condominium building; it’s a project to read human thoughts. I have evidence, but no one is doing anything about it!”

Prayuth showed consideration to the woman.

“What happened? Listen to her, what’s her story? Don’t do anything to her,” Gen. Prayuth instructed his aides.

Despite Prayuth’s order, security officers promptly dragged Jemjuree away. Once she was released, Jemjuree told reporters she believed someone at the condominium she’s living in is transmitting a radio signal that reads her mind, alters her behavior and damages her health.

She also said she researched the matter and concluded the technology was part of a CIA program from the 1950s called MK Ultra, under which the U.S. agency experimented with mind control using psychoactive drugs and hypnosis.

In today’s statement, spokesman Worawarong said that while the CIA was known to conduct such experiments during the Cold War, mainly by drugging its own employees, the program failed and was discontinued as unpredictable and ineffective.

The science ministry spokesman said the jury was still out on radio-controlled brains.

“We have not found any evidence that the program is still being conducted in the present time,”  Worawarong said. “And it has never been confirmed that radio wavelengths can be used to read human thoughts and alter their behavior.”

It’s not the first time a ministry has weighed in so sincererely on junk science. In March, the Energy Policy and Planning Office warned the public that using mobile phones at gas stations can cause fires. (Not true.)

The Health Ministry is perhaps the most prolific with nonsensical statements on topical matters, such as warning selfies cause mental health issues and urging the nation to drink more milk to raise the average height. Such proclamations routinely lack footing in peer-reviewed research or longitudinal studies.

As for Tuesday’s incident, police officers at Government House said it was a security breach, because petitioners are usually not allowed to approach Prayuth directly. Jemjuree was said to have posed as a visitor scheduled to meet the junta chairman.

Prayuth played it cool later that afternoon, saying he’s got his fists to protect him from the crazies.

“Don’t see it as a big issue … no one was going to punch me in the mouth,” he said. “Don’t panic about everything. I’m a former soldier. I know how to protect myself. If someone did get through, I would punch them myself.”

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Human Rights Activists Refuse to Hand Over Names of Alleged Torture Victims

Pornpen Khongkachonkiet, second from right, speaks with a family member of one alleged fatal victim of military torture in May 2016 at a military base in Pattani province. Photo: Pornpen Khongkachonkiet / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Three activists being sued for defamation by the national counter-insurgency agency over reports on the use of torture in the Deep South said they will not reveal the names of their sources to the authorities.

After receiving a police summons Monday accusing them of defaming the Internal Security Operations Command, or ISOC, the authors of a February report said they will not give up the names of those who claimed they were tortured but will instead pass them along to the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights.

“We didn’t defame anyone. We had no intention to cause damage to anyone, but we want them to scrutinize [the torture claims] in a way that would lead to redress,” said Pornpen Khongkachonkiet, director of the foundation which published the report.

The summons went to Pornpen along with human rights lawyer Somchai Hom-laor and Anchana Heemmina, president of Songkhla-based human rights organization Duay Jai Group, who co-edited the report. They were ordered to present themselves to hear the charges June 26 at Pattani Police Station.

The three were accused of defaming ISOC, a force outside the military structure which answers only to the prime minister, in their 120-page report “Torture and Ill Treatment in the Deep South 2014-2015,” released Feb. 10. They were also accused of violating the Computer Crime Act by spreading the content online.

If charged and found guilty, the three could face imprisonment up to seven years – two for the defamation count and five for violating the Computer Crime Act.

Cover of 'Torture and Ill Treatment in the Deep South 2014-1015' released Feb. 10 by the Cross Cultural Foundation.
Cover of ‘Torture and Ill Treatment in the Deep South 2014-2015’ released Feb. 10 by the Cross Cultural Foundation.

ISOC wants to know all 54 names used in the report, but Pornpen insisted only six granted consent to be identified.

In one of the cases, cited in the report as DJ.07.2015, a 28-year-old man claimed that on Jan. 11, 2015, he was subjected to electric shock while blindfolded and had his testicles squeezed. He then claimed to have been left lying naked in a cold room while a female military officer brushed her breasts against his face.

The report recounted claims that physical assault against the man continued for several days until he suffered bruises and blood in his urine and stool. ISOC, which is in charge of operations against ethnic-Malay separatists in the Deep South, has rejected the allegations as fiction.

Pornpen said it’s not right to use the Computer Crime Act against her and the others because it wasn’t meant for defamation cases.

“I don’t think it’s just,” said Pornpen, who together with her colleagues will request a postponement of the meeting with Pattani police.

Sam Zarifi of the International Commission of Jurists said he was surprised by the criminal complaints.

“We had just recently gone through the Phuketwan case in which the Navy’s similar claim was dismissed at great cost to Thailand’s national and international reputation, and also because the Thai government has just recently announced with great fanfare it was moving toward implementing the Convention Against Torture,” said Zarifi, who is based in Bangkok.

He said the suit was inconsistent with forward progress in ending abuses.

“At the end of the day, Thailand has made a commitment to end torture and ill-treatment, and a big part of that is ensuring proper investigation and accountability for allegations of such behavior.”

Zarifi said his commission called June 9 for the withdrawal of the criminal complaints against the three.

Asked if he believed the torture claims were undermined by not disclosing the sources’ identities, Sarifi responded negatively.

“It seems that police ill-treatment of detainees is a general phenomenon throughout Thailand, not just in the Deep South,” he said, citing the Koh Tao murder and Erawan bombing cases in which torture allegations were made.

“But our information suggests that by 2013, complaints of torture and ill-treatment of detainees in the Deep South had decreased notably from the high levels of 2005-2009. This trend seems to have reversed again, with the complaints increasing,” he said, adding that the allegations demand a full and speedy investigation by military authorities.

Related stories:

Army Denounces Deep South Torture Report as Product of ‘Imagination’

Torture in Deep South Systematic and Spreading Elsewhere, Rights Groups Allege

 

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Passengers Seethe After Thai Airways Aborts Second Flight This Week

Photo: Baitong Sydney / Facebook

BANGKOK — Passengers complained they were left sitting two hours inside a Thai Airways jet after it aborted its flight from Phuket to Bangkok, prompting some to book new tickets as soon as they were allowed off the plane.

Thai Airways flight TG218 had just taken off with 260 passengers aboard when it asked Phuket International Airport for permission to land again at 7pm on Tuesday, the second such incident in three days. After that, passengers complained of the airline’s communication and management because it held passengers on the plane for two hours while maintenance was conducted.

“What I saw was the captain didn’t inform passengers about anything,” wrote Facebook user Baitong Sydney, who said she ended up rebooking on Nok Air. “But he walked out and crawled to a woman sitting in first class, gave her a beautiful wai and talked for a while, but then never announced anything.”

The airline finally allowed passengers off the plane to rest inside the terminal. The plane finally departed again at 10:27pm and completed the journey to Suvarnabhumi Airport without further incident.

Phuket Airport Director Monrudee Katephan said Thai Airways asked for permission to land because it found a technical problem but did not request further help.

Thai Airways on Wednesday morning dismissed rumors the plane was forced to land due to a fuel leak. It said in a statement that that while the plane was on taxiway, the pilot noticed a problem in the computer system controlling the fuel, which led him to return to the airport.

It was the second time in three days a Thai Airways flight was forced back to the ground by a technical problem. On Saturday, TG111 to Bangkok had to return to Chiang Mai International Airport.

 

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Transport Minister ‘Confused’ by Safety Downgrade for Thai Airlines

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Tokyo Governor to Resign Over Misuse of Funds

In This Monday, June 6, 2016 photo, Tokyo Gov. Yoichi Masuzoe bows before a press conference at Tokyo Metropolitan Government headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Shizuo Kambayashi / Associated Press

TOKYO  — The governor of Tokyo submitted his resignation Wednesday, ending a weeks-long bid to stay in power despite a mounting scandal over his alleged use of political funds for personal purposes.

Gov. Yoichi Masuzoe had come under intense questioning in the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly for allegedly using the money for family trips, artwork and other expenses. He looked set to lose a no-confidence motion that lawmakers had been preparing to introduce later Wednesday.

Japanese media reported that the resignation would take effect June 21.

The impact on planning for the 2020 summer Olympics in Tokyo is unclear. Masuzoe had been scheduled to attend the Rio Olympics opening ceremony in August, and would have accepted the Olympic flag during a handover at the closing ceremony.

His predecessor, who played a leading role in securing the bid for the 2020 Olympics, also resigned over a money-related scandal. Naoki Inose stepped down in December 2013 after revelations that he had received 50 million yen (16.6 million baht) from a hospital company.

Masuzoe, a former health minister backed by Japan’s ruling party, easily won an election in February 2014, and promised a successful 2020 Olympics. He balked at the high cost of the Games, and successfully lobbied to have some events moved to existing facilities in farther-out areas, instead of building new ones in Tokyo.

His troubles began earlier this year with revelations that he had stayed in expensive hotel suites at taxpayer expense on work trips to Europe and the United States, and used his official vehicle to travel regularly to a weekend retreat.

Then came the allegations about his political funds. He hired outside lawyers to investigate, and they found that his use of funds was inappropriate but not illegal.

 In this Tuesday, June 14, 2016 photo, Tokyo governor Yoichi Masuzoe, fourth from left, surrounded by security personnel, walks on the hallway at Tokyo Metropolitan Government headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / Associated Press

In this Tuesday, June 14, 2016 photo, Tokyo governor Yoichi Masuzoe, fourth from left, surrounded by security personnel, walks on the hallway at Tokyo Metropolitan Government headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / Associated Press

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Japan’s Olympic Minister Says Tokyo’s 2020 Bid Was Clean

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Hillary Clinton Wins DC Primary, as She Meets with Sanders

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton arrives to speak at a rally at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Circuit Center in Pittsburgh, Tuesday, June 14, 2016. Photo: Andrew Harnik / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton brought a close to the presidential primary season with a win Tuesday in the nation’s capital and a meeting with dispatched rival Bernie Sanders, hoping to set a tone of Democratic unity heading into next month’s party convention in Philadelphia.

Clinton’s win in the District of Columbia, the final primary of 2016, had no bearing on her role as the presumptive nominee, but it nevertheless marked a transition in the lengthy primary fight between the two rivals.

In virtually identical statements released after meeting for more than 90 minutes, the Clinton and Sanders campaigns said the two rivals discussed their primary campaign, “unifying the party and … the dangerous threat that Donald Trump poses to our nation.” Neither spoke to reporters after the session at a Washington, D.C., hotel a few blocks from the White House.

Clinton told Sanders she appreciated his commitment to stopping Trump in the general election and the two discussed issues in which they share common goals, including “raising wages for working families, eliminating undisclosed money in politics and reducing the cost of college for students and their families.” Both candidates agreed to work together on the development of the platform at the upcoming Democratic National Convention.

Before polls closed in Washington, Sanders vowed again to do all he can to prevent Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, from reaching the White House — but he declined to endorse Clinton.

The Vermont senator had said the private meeting would help him determine how committed Clinton will be to the policy issues he has staked out during his 13-month campaign.

“Our goal must not be to allow politicians, Donald Trump or anyone else, to divide us,” Sanders said outside his Washington headquarters, telling reporters he will continue to “fight as hard as we can” to transform the Democratic Party.

Sanders said he would push for new leadership in the Democratic National Committee — his campaign has sparred with Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the party’s chair — along with a progressive platform in the summer convention and electoral changes, such as primaries that allow independents to participate and the elimination of superdelegates.

“We need major, major changes in the Democratic Party,” he said.

Sanders was warmly received Tuesday by Senate Democrats at their weekly luncheon, where he offered an update about his campaign and some of the lessons he had learned during the past year. Lawmakers in attendance said Sanders did not indicate his future plans.

“He had an opportunity to talk to us about his campaign and how it has changed him and what he has learned,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. “I think we all listened intently because we are anxious to always do better and grow as a party and be more inclusive.”

Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., who leads the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm, said Sanders “absolutely will” support fellow Senate Democrats in the fall elections. “It was productive, it was good, it was vintage Bernie,” Tester said.

Sanders met last week with President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, who both later endorsed Clinton, and signaled to Democrats that he hopes to play a constructive role in helping the party regain control of the Senate in the 2016 elections.

The self-described democratic socialist says he will take his campaign to the convention in July and advocate for his policy issues in the platform while urging Democrats to be more inclusive of independents, young people and working-class voters, all of whom were pivotal in his victories in 22 states. But what that will look like still remains unclear, and Sanders has been soliciting advice from supporters on how he should take his campaign forward.

The mass shooting at a nightclub in Orlando, Florida, has commanded the attention of both campaigns and prompted Democrats to point to Trump’s call for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the U.S., an issue they view as a key contrast in the general election.

Without mentioning Trump by name, Clinton warned during a speech in Cleveland on Monday that demonizing Muslims would only empower extremist groups. “We should be intensifying contacts in those communities, not scapegoating or isolating them,” she said.

Sanders attended a vigil in his hometown of Burlington, Vermont, on Monday night to show solidarity with the victims. Pointing to Trump’s comments about Muslims, Sanders said the shooting was conducted by “one hateful person” and not committed by the Muslim people.

Looking forward, Sanders has begun helping Democrats preparing for congressional races and the battle to regain control of the Senate.

An early test of his clout came Tuesday in Nevada, where a Sanders-backed congressional candidate, Lucy Flores, competed in a three-way primary.

Sanders has opened up his campaign’s massive email donor list to several Democratic candidates, hauling in more than $2.4 million for his allies. Flores has been the top recipient of those appeals, collecting about $390,000 from an email Sanders sent in April on behalf of her and two other candidates.

Story: Ken Thomas

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Eight Years Later, Clinton Ready to Break One Glass Ceiling

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5 Flicks on Those Forced to Flee Start Thursday at Refugee Film Fest

BANGKOK — From the youngest Nobel Laureate who survived Taliban assassins to a Jewish woman who fought to recover Nazi-looted artwork, UNHCR will host a five-day film fest starting Thursday.

To mark World Refugee Day on June 20, “He Named Me Malala” (2015), a documentary about Pakistani child activist Malala Yousafzai will show along with four other films highlighting the plight of refugees and migrants around the world.

Get a look inside a Syrian refugee camp from two American filmmakers who went inside to make 2015’s “Salam Neighbor,” and a female boxer in Afghanistan clashes with her country’s traditions in “Boxing for Freedom.

A lesser-known issue is explored in “Facing Extinction: Christians of Iraq” a 2009 documentary short centered around a persecuted Christian minority group in Iraq.

Aside from the four documentaries, “Woman in Gold” stars Oscar-winner Helen Mirren as a Jewish woman who fights to recover a famous Gustav Klimt painting of her aunt stolen from her family by the Nazis during World War II.

The festival runs Thursday to Monday at Paragon Cineplex.

Admission is free. The movie schedule and ticket reservation information are available online.

 

 

 

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Massage Parlor King Wanted for Pimping Minors

Sex workers rescued from Nataree Entertainment were brought to Huai Khwang Police Station on June 8, 2016, for questioning.

BANGKOK —  A court warrant was approved today for the arrest of the vice tycoon behind a brothel where 15 underage girls and trafficked sex workers were rescued in a recent raid.

Prasert Sukkhee, 58, was charged Tuesday with offenses including human trafficking and pandering minors at Nataree Entertainment, one week after Interior Ministry officers raided the large, downtown brothel.

Underage Girls, Police ‘Bribe Ledger’ Discovered in Raid on Ratchada Flesh Parlor

Prasert, aka Ko Lok, is well-known for owning several large “massage parlors” along Ratchadapisek Road, a strip nicknamed by Thais as the Road of Lust for its seedy reputation.

Prasert’s whereabouts are currently unknown, but police are doing their best to locate and capture him, said Chayuth Thanathaweerat, the head investigator into prostitution at Nataree.

“We have already alerted the Immigration Police not to let him flee the country,” Col. Chayuth said by telephone. “I think we will get him.”

A mugshot of Prasert Sukkhee provided by police.
A mug shot of Prasert Sukkhee provided by police.

Police were initially excluded from the June 7 raid, during which a ledger was recovered in which brothel staff wrote down names of different police agencies and the bribes they allegedly were paid by the establishment.

Prasert has been charged with human trafficking, prostitution of minors and children, and harboring migrants who entered the kingdom illegally.

On the afternoon of June 7, a combined force of more than 100 officers from the Ministry of Interior Affairs raided Nataree following a tip-off from an NGO that the brothel engaged in human trafficking.

There officers said they found 121 sex workers, mostly women from neighboring countries such as Myanmar and Laos. Fifteen of the girls were later confirmed to be under 18, police said Saturdaym, the youngest of which was 15.

Police said their investigation into the claims of bribery is ongoing.

Related stories:

Those Found in Brothel ‘Bribery List’ Say They Know Nothing

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