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Film Academy Diversifies Leadership, Apologizes to Asians

In this Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016 file photo, host Chris Rock, right, gestures to three unidentified children portraying auditors in a skit at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. Photo: Pizzello/Invision / Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences has added three new governors to its 51-member board and appointed six minority members to other leadership positions. The group also apologized for a racially insensitive skit during last month's Oscar show.

Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs announced the new appointees late Tuesday after a meeting of the organization's Board of Governors. The board also ratified other changes proposed in January in response to the OscarsSoWhite crisis aimed at increasing diversity, including limiting Oscar voting rights to those active in the movie business.

The academy's apology came after criticism from some Asian academy members offended by a skit during the Oscar show that introduced three Asian kids as academy accountants.

"I can understand the feelings and we are setting up a meeting to discuss, because as you well know, no one sets out to be offensive, and I'm very sorry that has happened," Boone Isaacs said in a phone interview with The Associated Press late Tuesday. "I think so much is achieved with dialogue, so much is achieved. And that is what we'll continue to do: have dialogue, listen and just keep fixing."

In the interview, Boone Isaacs also expanded on Tuesday's board meeting and the academy's diversity goals. Responses have been edited for brevity and clarity.

AP: Talk about the new positions announced tonight (new governors include Oscar telecast producer Reginald Hudlin and "Kung-Fu Panda 3" director Jennifer Yuh Nelson; committee members include actor Gael Garcia Bernal and producer Effie Brown).

Boone Isaacs: Now the board has much more of a diversity to it… It's always good to have some new-ness, someone who comes into the conversation that has been rolling along, just a different perspective… We set out, even a few years ago, of having more inclusion and certainly have stepped it up. We just want to keep this process going, and so were really happy that were able to announce these additions.

AP: How did the voting discussion go? When you first announced planned voting changes in January, some older members worried about losing their privileges.

Boone Isaacs: Overall it was positive. What we have added to this discussion is — our branches are diverse within themselves… in terms of perspective, and we respect this tremendously. We have just clarified a bit more that because the branch qualifications are so varied that the best way to determine specific criteria is within the branches. It's not such a one-size fits all.

AP: So voters concerned about their voting status can appeal to their branch?

Boone Isaacs: Each branch will review with regard to their qualifications.

AP: A past academy president said the goals you announced in January to double the academy's female and minority members are impossible to achieve without relaxing standards. Are they?

Boone Isaacs: The thing is we want to set goals and we're going to work our damndest to meet them all. That's our goal. The goal is to have one, and then do everything you can to meet it… Everything about us is setting our standards high, and we're going to continue that.

I think that this conversation really has picked up around the industry as a whole. You see different companies — whether its Bad Robot or Ryan Murphy or Plan B or the program that Warner Bros. just set up — this conversation is really, really rolling. So absolutely: Let's set it, let's work for it and do everything we can. That is the goal.

Story:  Sandy Cohen /  Associated Press

 

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‘Tessakit’ Officer Accused of Taking Tourist’s Cash

Municipal security officer Pairoj Tinno is confronted over allegedly snatching cash from a tourist’s wallet in a still image from a video uploaded Tuesday. Image: Austin Sanyawutthi / Facebook

BANGKOK — An investigation has been launched into a municipal security worker alleged in a widely shared video to have taken money from a tourist.

The incident, alleged to have occurred Tuesday in Bangkok’s historic quarter, is the latest scandal to hit the city’s tessakit department, long criticized for aggressive and predatory behavior toward foreign tourists.

In the video, a Thai man berates a tessakit officer later identified as Pairoj Tinno, who was kilometers away from his assigned area, for forcefully taking thousands of baht from a tourist’s wallet as a fine for littering. 

“Isn’t this what they call robbery of foreigners?” wrote Facebook user Austin Sanyawutthi, who uploaded the video. “He’s a Pathum Wan District tessakit, but he behaved like a bandit.”

Witchapong Suwannamai, deputy director of Pathum Wan District Office, said Thursday an investigation is underway and will be completed some time next week.

“We have to be fair to him. We have to adhere to the procedures. Once it is finished, we will punish him,” Witchapong said. “How much he will be punished depends on his actions. If he did what was alleged in the media, it would be considered a grave offense, which means he would be fired.”

The authorities are also trying to reach Austin for testimony, he said.

Witchapong said Pairoj insists it was all a misunderstanding, as he was in fact helping out a tourist who was lost in the capital’s Phra Nakhon district, where there is a number of heavily visited tourist sites. 

Witchapong admitted to being skeptical.

“But if you ask me, judging from his testimony, I don’t think the truth went in the way that he told me,” Witchapong said.

The law enforcement arm of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, tessakit patrol streets and fine violators for minor infractions of city regulations.

Tourists have long complained of being preyed upon by tessakit who demand hefty fines for minor offenses that are otherwise tolerated, such as an infamous 2,000 baht fine for smoking in public or littering. Tessakit, who wear city-issued uniforms, have also been accused of posing as police officers to intimidate foreigners. 

Asked to comment on their reputation, Witchapong said he has ordered his officers to only issue warnings to tourists for their first offense instead of fining them, because foreigners may not be aware of Thai laws.

“We have instructed them repeatedly that this is important issue. Pathum Wan is a tourist area. There are many foreign tourists. We have to be careful in our dealings with foreign tourists,” he said.

Related Stories

Bangkok 'Tessakit' Threatens to Attitude-Adjust 'Smart Ass' Citizen

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

 

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Frenchman Slams Motorbike into Garbage Truck, Dies

SAMUI — A 26-year-old Frenchman was killed after he rode a motorcycle into a parked garbage truck early this morning in front of Samui Town Center.

Rescue workers had trouble freeing the man, who struck the front of the truck so hard at about 3am on Thursday that his head entered and became stuck in its grill.

It took nearly an hour to extricate his body.

The 35-year-old truck driver, Sangkom Srisat, said he had parked to pick up the garbage around the area for about 20 minutes when he heard a crash.

The French tourist reportedly entered Thailand on Feb. 24. He was not wearing a helmet, according to Lt.Col. Tewet Pleumsut of Bo Phut Police Station.

The man’s blood alcohol level was to be tested, Tewet said.

 

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Air India Jet Evacuated in Bomb Scare at BKK

A Thai Airways 787-8 Dreamliner on the runway in July 2014 at Suvarnabhumi Airport. Photo: Narong Sangnak / EPA

BANGKOK — Passengers and crew of an Air India jetliner were evacuated using emergency slides at Suvarnabhumi Airport, and authorities searched the plane for explosives after an apparent bomb hoax Wednesday, officials said.

The scare was prompted by an anonymous call received by the national carrier's office in India, warning of an explosive aboard flight 332 en route from the Indian capital, New Delhi, to Bangkok, said Air India's Thailand manager Indranil Banerjee.

As soon as the Boeing 787 Dreamliner landed at Suvarnabhumi International Airport, the pilots were told to park the aircraft in an isolated spot. All 231 passengers and 10 crew members were immediately evacuated using the aircraft's inflatable slides, Banerjee said.

Security personnel searched the plane but nothing was found, Banerjee said.

Air India spokesman G. P. Rao said the bomb threat call was received in New Delhi an hour before the flight from India's capital was to land at Bangkok.

The aircraft, which was scheduled to fly to Mumbai on Wednesday night, will now depart on Thursday.

Story: Associated Press

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Obama Nominates Judge to US Supreme Court, Challenging Rivals

US Federal appeals court judge Merrick Garland receives applauds from President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden as he is introduced as Obama's nominee for the Supreme Court Wednesday in Washington. Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama nominated appeals court judge Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court on Wednesday, challenging Republicans to drop their adamant refusal to even consider his choice in an election year.

Obama called Garland, a long-time jurist and former prosecutor, "one of America's sharpest legal minds" and deserving of a full hearing and Senate confirmation vote. Republican leaders, however, have said the vacant high court seat should not be filled until a new president is elected, a stance Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell emphasized immediately after the White House announcement.

Garland, 63, is the chief judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, a court whose influence over federal policy and national security matters has made it a proving ground for potential Supreme Court justices.

He would replace conservative, Justice Antonin Scalia, who died last month, leaving behind a bitter election-year fight over the future of the court.

Obama announced his choice at a ceremony in the Rose Garden, with Democratic Senate leaders and allies looking on.

Garland, who had been passed over before, choked back tears, calling the nomination "the greatest honor of my life." He described his grandparents' flight from anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe and his modest upbringing.

He said he viewed a judge's job as a mandate to set aside personal preferences to "follow the law, not make it."

Obama held up Garland as diligent public servant, highlighting his work leading the investigation into the Oklahoma City bombing and prosecutions. He quoted past praise for Garland from Chief Justice John Roberts and Sen. Orrin Hatch. And he said Garland's talent for bringing together "odd couples" made him a consensus candidate best poised to become an immediate force on the nation's highest court.

The president urged the Republican-led Senate not to let the particularly fierce and partisan political climate quash the nomination of a "serious man."

"This is precisely the time when we should play it straight," Obama said.

Garland was confirmed to the D.C. Circuit in 1997 with backing from a majority in both parties, including seven current Republicans senators.

If confirmed, Garland would be expected to align with the more liberal members, but he is not viewed as down-the-line liberal. Particularly on criminal defense and national security cases, he's earned a reputation as centrist, and one of the few Democratic-appointed judges Republicans might have a fast-tracked to confirmation – under other circumstances.

In the current climate, Garland remains a tough sell. Republicans control the Senate, which must confirm any nominee, and GOP leaders want to leave the choice to the next president, denying Obama a chance to alter the ideological balance of thecourt before he leaves office next January. Republicans contend that a confirmation fight in an election year would be too politicized.

Republicans have set up a task force that will orchestrate attack ads, petitions and media outreach. On the other side, Obama allies are to run a Democratic effort targeting states where Republicans might feel political heat for opposing hearings.

Obama's choice risks deflating some of the energy among the Democratic base. Progressives and civil rights activists had pushed the president to name an African-American woman or to otherwise continue his efforts to expand the court'sdiversity.

Garland — a white, male jurist with an Ivy League pedigree and career spent largely in the upper echelon of Washington's legal elite — breaks no barriers. At 63 years old, he would be the oldest Supreme Court nominee since Lewis Powell, who was 64 when he was confirmed in 1971.

Presidents tend to appoint young judges with the hope they will shape the court's direction for as long as possible.

Those factors had, until now, made Garland something of a perpetual bridesmaid, repeatedly on Obama's Supreme Courtlists but never chosen.

But he is finding his moment at a time when Democrats are seeking to apply maximum pressure on Republicans. A key part of their strategy is casting Republicans as obstructionists ready to shoot down a nominee that many in their own ranks once considered a consensus candidate. In 2010, Hatch called Garland "terrific" and said he could be confirmed "virtually unanimously."

A native of Chicago and graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, Garland clerked for two appointees of Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower — the liberal U.S. Supreme Court Justice William Brennan Jr. and Judge Henry J. Friendly, for whom Roberts also clerked.

In 1988, he gave up a partner's office in a powerhouse law firms to cut his teeth in criminal cases. As an assistant U.S. attorney, he joined the team prosecuting a Reagan White House aide charged with illegal lobbying and did early work on the drug case against then-D.C. Mayor Marion Barry. He held a top-ranking post in the Justice Department when he was dispatched to Oklahoma City the day after the bombing at the federal courthouse to supervise the investigation. The case made his reputation. He oversaw the convictions of Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, and later supervised the investigation into Unabomber Ted Kaczynski.

President Bill Clinton first nominated him to the D.C. Circuit in 1995.

His prolonged confirmation process then may have prepared him for the one ahead. Garland waited 2½ years to win confirmation to the appeals court. Then, as now, one of the men blocking his path was Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley, who argued he had no quarrel with Garland's credentials but a beef with the notion of a Democratic president trying to fill acourt Grassley felt had too many seats.

Grassley ultimately relented, although he was not one of the 32 Republicans who voted in favor of Garland's confirmation. Nor was Sen. Mitch McConnell, the other major hurdle for Garland now. The Republicans who voted in favor of confirmation are Hatch, Sen. Dan Coats, Sen. Thad Cochran, Sen. Susan Collins, Sen. Jim Inhofe, Sen. John McCain, and Sen. Pat Roberts.

Story: Kathleen Hennessey, Mary Clare Jalonick / Associated Press

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3 Days After Causing 2 Road Deaths, Auto Scion Not Yet Charged

Jenphop Viraporn’s Mercedes-Benz comes to a rest upside down on the outbound stretch of Phahonyothin Road on March 13, 2016, in Ayutthaya province.

AYUTTHAYA — Police have yet to press any charges against the owner of a luxury car dealership who slammed his Mercedes Benz into another car on a highway, killing the two motorists inside.

Police say they are still gathering evidence before they can file any charges against Jenphop Viraporn, 36, who they point out is still hospitalized for what was described in reports as slight injuries.

The Sunday crash was captured by a third vehicle’s dashcam, footage of which has been widely shared online.
 


 

“We are still waiting for the owner of the clip that has been shared online to testify, but that person has not shown up yet,” Col. Pongpat Suksawasdi, commander of the Phra-Inracha Police Station, said Wednesday.

Police are also questioning witnesses in the area, including those who rendered aid to the two motorists stuck in the car that Jenphop allegedly slammed into at a high speed.

The two motorists, both graduate students at Bangkok’s Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University, died when flames engulfed their Ford Fiesta.
 

13March2016deadlycollision
 

Media reports said the collision caused the Mercedes-Benz to flip and caused “slight injuries” to Jenphop. He is currently being treated at Samitivej Hospital in Bangkok, Pongpat said.

Jenphop is listed as the owner and manager of Luxotic Auto. In a 2013 interview with Komchadluek news, Jenphop said his company provides luxury sports cars, and was inspired by his father who owns a similar business called Lenso Group.

Because of Jenphop’s social status and the lack of follow-up to the crash by mainstream media, many on social media expressed fear the Sunday collision would become another example of uneven justice.

“Will this issue go quiet like other previous cases involving rich kids?” wrote the admin of CSI LA, a popular Facebook page that has launched numerous online campaigns on controversial issues.

But Pongpat, the commander of the police station in charge of the investigation, insisted the police force will be impartial.

“Please rest assured about this, because my supervisor has also ordered us to proceed in this matter as soon as possible and in accordance with legal procedures,” the police colonel said.

Additional reporting Chayanit Itthipongmaetee
 

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Millionaire's Son Gets 2 Years for 'Mercedes' Murder

Actress Charged With Deadly Car Crash Says Victim's Ghost Forgave Her

‘Praewa’ Ordered to Pay 30 Million Baht to Van Crash Victims

Deadly Car Crash Driver Escapes Jail Term

 

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

 

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7 Free Flicks to Screen at Thai-Chinese Film Fest

A modified promotional image for ‘Saving Mr. Wu’

BANGKOK — Andy Lau plays a Hong Kong film star kidnapped by a criminal gang in a “based on” thriller. An animated Monkey King returns from legend to save a child from monsters.

The true-story crime drama, “Saving Mr. Wu” (2015),  and “Monkey King: Hero is Back” are among seven Thai and Chinese films screening Friday through Sunday as part of the Thailand – China Film Culture Week in Bangkok.

Organized by Guangxi Film Group and SF World Cinema, the mini film fest will feature two Thai films: “Eternity” (2011), winner of the International Film Festival Rotterdam’s Tiger Award, and “W” (2014), an indie film of adolescent crisis.

The other Chinese films are “Liu San Jie” (1960), “The Nightingale” (2013) and “The Dancing Young.”

 


 

The Thai films will be screened with English subtitles while all five Chinese films will be feature both English and Thai subtitles.

All showings are free. The schedule is available online. People are advised to get their tickets 30 minutes before each screening at SF World Cinema on the seventh floor of Central World.
 


 

 

 

Chayanit Itthipongmaetee can be reached at[email protected] and @chayaniti92.

 

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2 Suspected Uighur Militants Killed in Central Indonesia

Chinese state media broadcast images on July 11, 2015 of Uighurs deported from Thailand, showing them being transported in black hoods and alleging some have 'terrorist links.' Photo: CCTV

PALU, Indonesia — Indonesian police said Wednesday they killed two suspected Chinese Uighur militants during a hunt for the country's most wanted Islamic radical.

The two men were shot during a gun battle Tuesday in mountainous jungle terrain in Central Sulawesi province, said local police chief Rudy Sufahriady.

Since about 2009, groups of ethnic minority Uighurs have traveled across Southeast Asia from China hoping to reach Turkey to claim asylum from what they say is persecution by Chinese authorities.

Indonesian authorities believe a small number entered Indonesia to join forces with local militants at the urging of Abu Wardah Santoso, Indonesia's most wanted radical.

Sufahriady said the two men killed were identified as Uighur by another suspected militant captured in an earlier operation, and had joined Santoso's group about two years ago.

Security forces including elite army troops have been intensifying their operation in Sulawesi against the East Indonesia Mujahidin network led by Santoso.

Sufahriady said police believe four other foreigners remain with the group.

In December, police arrested a suspected Uighur militant near the capital Jakarta who was allegedly preparing to be a suicide bomber.

Last July, an Indonesian court sentenced four Uighurs to six years in prison after finding them guilty of conspiring with militants from Santoso's network. They were arrested in September 2014 in Central Sulawesi.

Story:  Associated Press

 

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Gunfire Erupts at Political Monk Provocateur’s Temple

Buddha Isara gestures inside the guard station at Wat Or Noi west of Bangkok in Nakhon Pathom province.

NAKHON PATHOM — A gunman opened fire on the temple where an ultra-royalist activist monk was sleeping last night.

Two security guards at the Nakhon Pathom province temple where Buddha Isara stays told police they hid after hearing gunshots at about 10pm on Tuesday night, which police believe were fired by a single shooter. Seven bullet holes were found in the wall of the guard station located 500 meters from where the political provocateur monk was sleeping at Wat Or Noi.

“We will inspect the security cameras installed on the road leading to the back of the temple,” said police Col. Witipot Pojanakhom. “But the area where the guard’s residence is located has no camera, as it’s just a vegetable garden.”

Buddha Isara said today the incident did not scare him. The controversial monk, who led anti-government protests and seized government ministries in 2013, said he knows his involvement in national politics has won him many enemies.

He mentioned recent Facebook flame wars with Redshirt leader Jatuporn Prompan and activist Sombat Boonngamanong and also his opposition to endorsing the acting Supreme Patriarch in the battle to succeed the former deceased.

“To those gunmen who have been attacking Wat Or Noi almost every month and getting closer to where I stay, if you want to shoot me to dead, tell me beforehand,” he said. “I will walk out and let you shoot me. I am ready.”

Wat Or Noi has been attacked several times but no one has ever been injured by the gunfire. In 2014, after being shot at a number of times, the temple put up a banner which read “Public Shooting Range, anyone who can hit the target can receive a reward from Buddha Isara!”

 

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Politics, Corruption in Battle for Naming New 'Supreme Patriarch'

Ultra-Royalists Call for Removal of U.S. Ambassador

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Corruption Catch-22: Report a Bribe and Go to Jail?

A police officer appears to extort a motorist in Bangkok’s Bang Na district a still image from a video uploaded Feb. 20, 2015. Image: The Thailand Life / YouTube

BANGKOK — It looked like a shut-and-closed case when a video went viral of a traffic police officer caught red-handed accepting a bribe last week from a truck driver in Nakhon Sawan province.

Although there’s stiff jail time for accepting a bribe, long an endemic practice at all levels of society, the officer has yet to be charged with any crime due to a technicality that would seem to discourage such cases going forward: The bribe-paying driver hasn’t shown up in person to file a complaint.

Why not? As the nation’s top highway cop explained, the driver himself would go to jail, as the law criminalizes both accepting and giving bribes.

“If he admits the bribery took place, he would be punished too,” Maj. Gen. Somchai Kaosamran said in a Wednesday telephone interview.

This conflict of interest in reporting bribery seems another Catch-22 deterring citizens from speaking up or taking action about the corruption permeating the police force.

Police identified the officer in the video as Lt. Cpt. Thawat Umsuparb. The incident took place March 6 on Nakhon Sawan’s Asia Road, according to the person who filmed and uploaded the clip to Facebook.

Maj. Gen. Somchai said Thawat has been administratively disciplined and will be locked up for seven days. Asked why Thawat wasn’t kicked off the force, Somchai said regulations say officers can only be expelled if they are found guilty of a criminal offense.

And the only way to file charges against Thawat, he continued, would be for the truck driver and his videographer friend to show up in person to file a complaint. The video alone is insufficient because it doesn’t show the whole context of the situation.

“In criminal law, evidence has to be complete. We can’t just make an allegation on our own,” Maj. Gen. Somchai said. “Suppose we file the charge without supporting evidence, that person may file a lawsuit against us in return. That’s why we have to interrogate three parties involved: the person who filmed the clip, the person who gave the money and the police officer.”

Once the driver implicates Thawat – thereby confessing to paying him a bribe – he would be taken into custody and prosecuted as well.

Somchai said he sympathizes with the driver, but insisted police have to adhere strictly to the rule of law.

“To be honest, I really don’t want to answer questions about this case. I don’t want to demoralize the people, but we’d have to prosecute him, because he’s guilty of giving the bribe,” Somchai said. 

Mitigating Circumstances

Bribery is widespread across the bureaucracy and motorists are familiar with the culture of bribing police officers when they commit infractions minor or serious to avoid the lengthy process of paying fines in person at police stations. It has led to a symbiotic relationship which drivers and police officers seem happy to participate in.

Many failed initiatives to curtail the practice can be seen in the rear-view mirror.

In October 2014, Bangkok police launched a short-lived policy of awarding officers who refused bribes. It lasted two weeks before being pulled, possibly in response to cascades of ridicule on social media. 

Somchai said this culture of bribery is easily solved if motorists simply refuse to give bribes to police at all: “We all have to help. Don’t give bribes.”

But what if a police officer forces you to do so? Is that enough grounds to seek leniency in the court?

Somchai said it depends on what’s meant by “force.” 

“They can’t force you to pay a bribe, unless they forcefully take away your driving license,” the major general said. In that case, he explained, motorists should immediately report the crime to a nearby police station, because it would be extortion. 

Royal Thai Police spokesman Dechnarong Sutticharnbancha said citizens who are subject to intimidation by police to pay bribes won’t face charges under anti-bribery laws. 

“We’d have to look at whether there was any intimidation. We’d have to look at the facts,” Gen. Dechnarong said.

He declined to give specific examples of what would count as “intimidation,” as circumstances vary in each case. And he declined to comment on the video of Thawat accepting the truck driver’s bribe.

Some Bribery Straight Talk

What should drivers do when they encounter police officers thirsty for tea money?

First of all, Somchai said, don’t pay a bribe, whether you’re guilty or not. 

Next, send a Line message his way via @Highway1193.

“Inform me right away. I personally read all the messages,” Maj .Gen. Somchai said.

Dechnarong, meanwhile, suggested embracing the power of technology: Film the cops right away, from the very moment they start making demands.

“Just get your phones out and film them!” Dechnarong said. “It’s your evidence. If you don’t have evidence, you will only have words when you testify.” 

If you don’t have a camera or phone at hand, testimony from witnesses, such as a passenger, could also count as evidence. 

 

Related Stories:

Policeman Rewarded 10,000 Baht For Declining Bribe

Thailand Wins 'Ig Nobel' Distinction for Bribing Cops not to Take Bribes

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at[email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

 

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