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Chinese Fugitive in $1.5 Million Fraud Case Uses Thai ID Card for 14 Years

Thai ID card
Immigration police arrest 59-year-old Chinese man who had a criminal record for fraud in China, at his residence in the Huai Khwang area of Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A 59-year-old Chinese man, fleeing a fraud case in China involving over 50 million baht or 1.5 million dollars, has been living in Thailand for more than 14 years using a Thai ID card and a Thai name. However, he was discovered by immigration officers during an investigation.

Police Major General Phanthananutnart, Deputy Commissioner of the Immigration Bureau, stated that detectives from the 4th Division, Investigation Sub-Division, Immigration Bureau, discovered that Mr. Yu, a Chinese national, was using a Thai ID card under the name Yongyuth. They sent a letter to the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in Thailand to inquire about Mr. Yu’s personal information, identity, and criminal history.

The immigration investigation team found that he had a criminal record for fraud in China 14 years ago. He had opened a hotel business and deceived victims into investing, causing damages worth over 50 million baht or 10.5 million yuan before fleeing to Thailand.

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The officials then gathered information related to Mr. Yu and sent it to the Department of Provincial Administration for verification. It was found that ‘Yongyuth’ had been living in Thailand for more than 14 years.

The investigation team then obtained a search warrant from the North Bangkok District Court and arrested him at his residence in the Huai Khwang area of Bangkok.

Mr. Yu confessed that he had illegally entered Thailand through a natural border crossing and assumed a Thai identity card in 2010, living in Thailand ever since. The officials charged him with being a foreigner entering and staying in the Kingdom without permission and sent him to the investigating officers at the Immigration Bureau Investigation Division for legal proceedings.

Regarding the offenses of identity theft and using an illegally obtained ID card, the Department of Provincial Administration is considering legal action. At the same time, they have issued an order to remove the suspect’s name Yongyuth from the civil registration system.

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Austrian Nabbed on Koh Phangan for Doing Tour Guide Job Reserved for Thais

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Austrian national Mr. Gunter (center) is arrested on Koh Phangan for illegally working as a tour guide, September 5, 2024.

KOH PHANGANTourist Police arrested an illegal Austrian tour guide who charged foreign customers 2,000 baht per head, caught while taking customers on a tour of Koh Phangan.

On September 6, the Koh Phangan Tourist Police once again arrested a foreigner engaged in an occupation reserved for Thai nationals. The latest case involves an Austrian man who was guiding European tourists for a fee of 2,000 baht.

The arrest was carried out by Police Lieutenant Colonel Winit Boonchit of the Tourist Police Division 5, Section 2, along with Noppadol Khao Mali, the District Chief of Koh Phangan, and the District Security Officer, investigators from Koh Phangan Police Station, and Koh Phangan Immigration Police.

Mr. Gunter, an Austrian national, was arrested in front of a restaurant in Moo 8, Koh Phangan Subdistrict, Koh Phangan District, Surat Thani Province. A Toyota Hilux Revo pickup truck with Surat Thani license plates was seized as evidence of his work as a tour guide.

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Austrian national Mr. Gunter (center) is arrested on Koh Phangan for illegally working as a tour guide, September 5, 2024.

During questioning, Mr. Gunter confessed to having been a tour guide for customers for two years. He had agreed to charge 2,000 baht per person for this particular tour. He picked up the customers from their hotel and took them to various specified locations.

Officials charged him with “operating a tour business without permission, being a foreigner working as a tour guide without permission, and being a foreigner working without a work permit.” He was then handed over to the investigating officers at Koh Phangan Police Station for legal proceedings.

Previously, the Tourist Police had arrested several foreigners who were working in occupations reserved for Thai nationals, illegally operating various services such as car rentals, beauty salons, entertainment venues, and tour guiding.

Most of these individuals were residing in Koh Phangan District, Koh Samui District of Surat Thani Province, Krabi Province, Phang Nga Province, and Phuket Province, which are areas with beautiful natural tourist attractions and large numbers of foreign tourists.

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Related article:

Thai Guides Demand Crackdown on Illegal Foreign Tour Guides

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Alleged American Life Coach Arrested with Magic Mushrooms in Bangkok

magic mushrooms
A 62-year-old American national, who claims to be a life coach, is arrested in a house in Soi Ladprao 108, Chom Phon Subdistrict, Chatuchak District, Bangkok, with a large quantity of magic mushrooms.

BANGKOKAn American man advertising on foreign websites, claiming to treat depression patients in Bangkok, was arrested with magic mushrooms as evidence.

On September 6, Police Major General Phantana Nuchanat led a team of immigration police to announce the arrest of Darius, a 62-year-old American national. He had secretly opened a facility in a house in Soi Ladprao 108, Chom Phon Subdistrict, Chatuchak District. He claimed to be a life coach with a master’s degree in psychology and over 20 years of experience, offering therapy to rehabilitate those with mental trauma or defects leading to depression.

In-depth investigation revealed that Darius was not a doctor as claimed. He had been living in Thailand for several years, initially working as a language teacher before transitioning to offering magic mushroom therapy courses.

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An immigration police explain the arrest of a 62-year-old American national and charged with unauthorized possession of a Category 5 narcotic substance (magic mushroom).

Police found that the house was not a treatment facility but a regular residence with 1-2 beds for clients to relax. A search of the refrigerator uncovered 13 bags of dried magic mushrooms weighing over 1 kilogram, which were seized for examination.

During questioning, Darius initially claimed he had a degree in treating patients with magic mushrooms but couldn’t produce any documents when asked. He then changed his story, saying it was knowledge passed down from his ancestors.

He claimed that magic mushrooms contain important extracts that can counter depression symptoms and that he was unaware they were a Category 5 illegal drug in Thailand. He sold courses for 2,000 baht each, mixing the mushrooms with chocolate, fruit juice, or using inhalation cards before playing music to induce relaxation for easier treatment. The business had been operating for about a month with few customers, which aligned with the financial trail uncovered by police.

magic mushrooms
A 62-year-old American national, who claims to be a life coach, is arrested in a house in Soi Ladprao 108, Chom Phon Subdistrict, Chatuchak District, Bangkok, with a large quantity of magic mushrooms.

The police officers then charged him with unauthorized possession of a Category 5 narcotic substance, which carries a penalty of up to 5 years imprisonment and a fine not exceeding 500,000 baht.

Previously, immigration police had made three similar arrests, mostly in coastal island areas of various provinces. These operations typically claimed to treat depression or mental trauma, but it’s believed that clients were unaware of the use of magic mushrooms in food or aromatherapy smoke. While intoxicated, victims were often persuaded to hand over various assets.

In one case on Koh Phangan, a victim unknowingly transferred several million baht worth of assets to the therapist. Officials warn both foreigners and Thais to be cautious of criminals disguising themselves in this manner, as it could lead to significant financial losses.

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Eight Myanmar Workers Detained for Illegal TikTok Sales in Nonthaburi

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Immigration police officers raid a house in Soi Kantana, Bang Muang Subdistrict, Bang Yai District, Nonthaburi Province, where Myanmar workers used for live streaming sales on TikTok, on September 5, 2024.

NONTHABURI — Live streaming sales is a popular business in Thailand, but migrants or foreigners are not allowed to do it without permission.

Police Colonel Somkiat Sonjai, Superintendent of Nonthaburi Immigration, revealed on September 6 that officials had received a tip about a suspicious gathering of Myanmar workers in a rented house in Nonthaburi Province. They raided the house on Thursday evening and found that the Myanmar group was doing business through live streaming sales.

The house was a two-story townhouse located in a village in Soi Kantana, Bang Muang Subdistrict, Bang Yai District, Nonthaburi Province. Inside, they found numerous packaged clothing items and communication equipment for live streaming sales on TikTok.

Mr. Min, a 25-year-old Myanmar national, identified himself as the tenant, living with his wife, Ms. Nant, also 25, and six other Myanmar nationals. Upon inspection, none had proper immigration documents. They were arrested for illegal entry and working without permits and taken to the Nonthaburi Immigration Office.

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The TikTok account that the Myanmar husband and wife used to live stream clothing sales for fellow foreign workers living in Thailand.

Officials seized one iPad, one iPhone 13, and bank passbooks as evidence for prosecuting a business reserved for Thai nationals.

Police Colonel Somkiat Sonjai, Superintendent of Nonthaburi Immigration, stated that after receiving the tip, the investigation team found that the group was live streaming clothing sales through a popular app, generating significant cash flow. The Myanmar couple acted as employers for the other Myanmar workers.

The couple confessed that they had legally entered Thailand for work, with the husband working as a car washer and the wife as a company employee, earning about 15,000 baht per month each. Wanting to increase their income, they bought clothes from the Pratunam area to live stream on TikTok for fellow foreign workers living in Thailand.

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Immigration police officers raid a house in Soi Kantana, Bang Muang Subdistrict, Bang Yai District, Nonthaburi Province, where Myanmar workers used for live streaming sales on TikTok, on September 5, 2024.

The other Myanmar workers were relatives who had recently entered the country illegally and were in the process of obtaining permits. The couple invited them to help with the work, paying 2,000 baht per month. The couple earned about 10,000-15,000 baht per month from live streaming sales, unaware that it was illegal in Thailand.

Police Lieutenant Colonel Phak Srivanich explained that foreign workers are prohibited from live streaming product sales as it’s an occupation reserved for Thai nationals. The Myanmar workers engaging in work outside their permitted jobs is illegal. All were sent to Bang Yai Police Station for legal proceedings.

The couple was charged with harboring illegal immigrants. The others were charged with overstaying their visas, working without permits, and illegal entry. All face prosecution under Thai law.

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Red Lobster Says It Will Soon Exit Bankruptcy Protection

FILE - Signage at a Red Lobster restaurant, May 20, 2024, in Lincolnwood, Ill. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — After months of dozens of restaurant closings and headlines about “endless shrimp” woes, Red Lobster says it will soon exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Thursday approved the casual seafood chain’s reorganization plan, which includes a lender group led by asset manager Fortress acquiring the business. The green light arrives under just four months after Red Lobster filed for bankruptcy protection as it pursued a sale, following years of mounting losses and dwindling customers while it struggled to keep up with competitors.

At the time of filing in May, Red Lobster’s leadership shared plans to “simplify the business” through a reduction of locations. The chain, which lost $76 million in 2023, shuttered dozens of its North American restaurants over recent months — both leading up to and during the bankruptcy process. That includes more than 50 locations whose equipment was put up for auction just days before the Chapter 11 petition, followed by additional closures throughout the bankruptcy process.

Red Lobster said Thursday that it expects to operate about 544 locations across the U.S. and Canada upon emerging from bankruptcy. That’s down from 578 disclosed as of May’s bankruptcy filing.

Under terms of the acquisition, which is expected to close by the end of September, the chain will continue to operate as an independent company.

Once the deal is finalized, Red Lobster will also get a new CEO — Damola Adamolekun, former chief executive of P.F. Chang’s.

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FILE – Signs for a Red Lobster restaurant are shown in San Bruno, Calif., Tuesday, May 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

Adamolekun was appointed to head RL Investor Holdings, the newly formed entity acquiring Red Lobster, by Fortress last week. In a statement Thursday, Adamolekun said that Red Lobster “has a tremendous future” and thanked Jonathan Tibus, who will leave the company and step down as CEO, for his leadership during the bankruptcy process.

Red Lobster’s purchaser is also providing additional funding to help the Orlando, Florida-based chain get back on its feet post-emergence. Adamolekun said the company’s long-term investment plan includes a commitment of more than $60 million in new funding.

Known for its affordable seafood and cheddary biscuits, Red Lobster has seen multiple ownership changes over the course of its 56-year history. The brand was founded back in 1968 by Bill Darden, who sold Red Lobster to General Mills in 1970. General Mills later went on to form Darden Restaurants, which owns Olive Garden and other chains. Darden Restaurants was spun off from General Mills in 1995.

Darden Restaurants later sold Red Lobster to a private equity firm in 2014. Thai Union Group, one of the world’s largest seafood suppliers, first invested in Red Lobster in 2016 and upped its stake in 2020 — but announced its intention to exit its minority investment earlier this year.

When announcing plans to divest in January, CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said the COVID-19 pandemic, industry headwinds and rising operating costs from Red Lobster had resulted in “prolonged negative financial contributions to Thai Union and its shareholders.” It reported a $19 million loss from Red Lobster for the first nine months of 2023.

While not the sole reason, among sources of loss were — yes — those endless shrimp. Last year, Red Lobster significantly expanded the iconic all-you-can-eat special. But customer demand overwhelmed what the chain could afford. Thai Union leadership later noted that the deal’s $20 price tag wasn’t making enough money.

Last year’s shrimp debacle wasn’t the first time Red Lobster saw consequences of “endless” promises. In 2003, the company reportedly lost millions of dollars on an all-you-can-eat “Endless Crab” promotion when crab prices rose.

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Two Indian Tourists Arrested in Pattaya for Theft on First Day in Thailand

Pattaya Tourist Police arrest two Indian suspects of theft from another Indian citizen on September 5, 2024.

PATTAYA — Tourist Police in Pattaya arrested two Indian men on their first day in Thailand for stealing a camera battery from a fellow countryman, then casually strolling on Walking Street.

At 5:20 a.m. on September 5, Pattaya Tourist Police arrested Mr. Abhishek, 29, and Mr. Akash, 28, both Indian nationals, suspected of theft from another Indian citizen.

Mr. Shaik, 34, also an Indian national, reported to Pattaya City Police Station that his camera battery pack was stolen at a cannabis shop on Walking Street, Pattaya City, Nong Prue Subdistrict, Bang Lamung District, Chonburi Province.

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Pattaya Tourist Police bring two Indian suspects to the cannabis shop where the theft took place on September 5, 2024.

Before the incident, Shaik entered the cannabis shop where the theft occurred and placed his camera battery pack on a sofa. While he was shopping, three tourists of the same nationality entered the store.

CCTV footage shows the suspects noticing Shaik’s belongings on the sofa. The two suspects sat down, with the larger one sitting on top of the battery pack while the thinner one reached underneath to grab it and put it in a bag. They continued sitting to avoid suspicion before leaving the shop.

Later, Pattaya Tourist Police, stationed at a tourist safety point on Walking Street, were notified by Pattaya City Police about the theft. They quickly reviewed CCTV footage from the shop and along the suspects’ escape route, only to find that the perpetrators hadn’t fled but were still casually walking around nearby on Walking Street.

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A camera battery, which was stolen, is the evidence in this case.

When the two realized they were in trouble after police identified themselves, they tried to return the stolen item to Mr. Shaik, claiming they had found it on the ground. The police didn’t believe them and took them to the Tourist Police Station for questioning.

When shown the clear CCTV footage from the shop, the suspects confessed to intentionally stealing the item.

Initially, both suspects, who had arrived in Thailand just one day prior, were detained along with the evidence – a camera battery pack worth about 5,000 baht. They were handed over to Pattaya City Police Station investigators to be formally charged.

The offense of theft, Section 334: Whoever dishonestly takes away property belonging to another person or jointly owned by another person commits the offense of theft and shall be punished with imprisonment not exceeding three years and a fine not exceeding sixty thousand baht.

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Why Is Beijing Interested in a Mid-Level Government Aide in New York State?

New York
Former New York Governor Kathy Hochul aide Linda Sun leaves Brooklyn Federal Court after her arraignment, Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Corey Sipkin)

BANGKOK (AP) — The decision by New York prosecutors to charge a former aide to the New York governor this week with acting as an illegal agent for the Chinese government has raised concerns about China’s efforts to influence U.S. politics.

Linda Sun held numerous roles in New York state government, including deputy chief of staff for Gov. Kathy Hochul. She is accused of pushing Chinese interests at state functions, including allegedly blocking representatives from Taiwan from meeting the governor, in exchange for financial benefits worth millions of dollars.

Sun’s arrest on Tuesday is the latest, and perhaps most high profile, in a series of cases the U.S. Department of Justice has prosecuted in recent years to root out Beijing’s agents on U.S. soil.

While previous cases involved charges against suspected Chinese spies for reporting on and surveilling dissidents critical of the Communist Party, Tuesday’s case appeared to show how China is trying to directly influence U.S. politics in line with its interests, even at the local level.

WHY STATE LEVEL?

China sees it as important to cultivate state-level relationships with U.S. officials, and has always done so.

Although the bilateral relationship between the U.S. and China has become increasingly tense, the two countries had cultivated extensive regional-level ties in the 2010s, with U.S. governors frequently visiting China to boost trade and cultural ties.

That’s taken a sharp 180-degree turn in recent years, as the U.S. government’s relationship with China grows more confrontational and being tough on China has become a bipartisan point of consensus. The White House and Congress are leveling high tariffs on Chinese products and limiting export of high-tech products to China.

Some states are even passing bills to actively ban China’s presence. Georgia, Florida, and Alabama are just some of the states that banned Chinese “agents” from buying real estate.

Seeking influence on the state level has “increased in importance as relations at the federal level have soured,” said Mareike Ohlberg, senior fellow in the Indo-Pacific program at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, who studies China. “Something is better than nothing.”

HOW DOES BEIJING CULTIVATE INFLUENCE ABROAD?

China’s Communist Party has a branch specifically tasked with overseas work, called the United Front. Under the United Front’s control are a multitude of groups which serve to engage overseas Chinese under the guise of social or industry groups. Well-known among these groups is the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, which itself oversees a number of smaller groups.

The groups seek to build membership overseas and engage with the Chinese diaspora, and has branches all over the world, from Africa to Southeast Asia to North America.

Willy Lam, a senior fellow at The Jamestown Foundation, said the Chinese government has a long history of targeting major U.S. cities and states with large Chinese populations such as New York, New Jersey, Los Angeles and San Francisco, where Beijing’s operatives have been working with established, “well-built” associations and trade groups for overseas Chinese.

It pays for those local groups for work with Beijing, while the setup spares Beijing a lot of legwork on the ground, Lam said.

Sun was linked with Shi Qianping, who has described himself as a standing committee member of the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, according to Chinese state media. Shi also held the role of the head of the U.S. Federation of Chinese-American Entrepreneurs, according to Xinhua.

Sun also engaged with regional-level branches of the Returned Overseas Chinese group, like in Jiangsu province, where Sun was born, according to the group.

Aside from these groups, there are also growing worries about overseas Chinese police stations, set up without the knowledge of the countries they operate in. Last year, New York police arrested two men for allegedly setting up a secret police station for a Chinese provincial police agency.

WHAT DOES BEIJING WANT?

Sun’s case, which at first glance may seem the stuff of spy films, showed that China was interested in cultivating influence on a subtle level — for example by promoting messages in line with Beijing’s views.

Prosecutors said Sun solicited talking points from a Chinese official for a video Hochul recorded when she was lieutenant governor to wish people a happy Lunar New Year. She specifically kept Hochul from mentioning Chinese human rights issues in that video, prosecutors say. Sun also allegedly blocked representatives of Taiwan’s government from meeting with top New York state officials. China claims Taiwan, a self-ruled democracy, as part of its own territory and views any interaction between Taiwanese government representatives and other governments as an infringement of its sovereignty claim.

Speeches by Chinese President Xi Jinping and party documents have made it clear that one directive for the party’s overseas work is to rally overseas Chinese around the party’s goals, including urging them to “actively participate in and support” the causes of modernization and peaceful unification for their motherland.

SHOULD STATES CUT OFF ENGAGEMENT WITH CHINESE PROVINCES?

China is often able to set the agenda when it comes to engagement at the local level. “There’s been quite a mismatch in terms of resources on the PRC side vs US side,” Ohlberg said. For example, the city of Shanghai has hundreds of staffers dedicated to international engagement, while U.S. states may only have a handful.

“There needs to be more strategic thinking going into this, more resources and knowledge, and then once you have that, you can decide,” she said.

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Swedish Man Scammed in Thai Wedding, Loses Money and Is Threatened

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Ahmet, a 42-year-old Swedish national, shows the picture on the day he and his Thai bride attended a traditional wrist-tying ceremony in Sukhothai Province on August 30, 2024.

BANGKOK — A Swedish man is heartbroken after being tricked into marriage by a Thai woman, losing nearly 360,000 baht. The woman was already married, and her soldier husband even came to threaten him at the police station. This led him to file a complaint through the media in Bangkok.

On September 5, Ahmet, a 42-year-old Swedish national, came to file a complaint with Ekkaphop Luangprasert, an advisor to the Minister of Interior and the founder of the Facebook page ‘Sai Mai Tong Rod’ (Sai Mai Must Survive), at the page’s office in Bangkok. He hoped that by making his story public, he would receive help and protection.

Ahmet explained that he met the Thai woman through a dating app on June 17 this year. By July, the woman had deceived him into agreeing to marry her, asking him to transfer 359,000 baht for wedding expenses for an August ceremony at her home in Wat Ko Sub-district, Si Samrong District, Sukhothai Province. He transferred the money out of love.

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Ahmet and the rescue worker who helped him join a press conference with the Sai Mai Tong Rod page team at the page’s office in Bangkok on September 5, 2024.

When he arrived in Sukhothai on August 25, the Thai woman took him to a temporary room, claiming it belonged to her relative. After that, he couldn’t contact her for two days. On August 28, Ahmet began to realize he had been tricked and left the resort to seek help from Thai officials.

He first encountered a rescue worker who was responding to floods and told him his story. The rescue worker helped by contacting the woman, leading to a discussion and an agreement to get married the next day, August 29, at 9:00 am.

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A screenshot from a WhatsApp chat where the Thai woman asks Ahmet, a 42-year-old Swedish national, to transfer money to her for a wedding ring.

However, when the time came, the woman informed Ahmet that the village headman was unavailable, so they changed plans from a wedding to a traditional wrist-tying ceremony on August 30, with the rescue worker as a witness.

Later, the woman asked the rescue worker to delete a post showing her tying wrists with the foreigner. Shortly after, a man called the rescue worker, claiming to be the bride’s husband and that they weren’t divorced, threatening to sue Ahmet.

The rescue worker, therefore, informed Ahmet, who was shocked as he knew nothing about this. He asked the rescuer to take him to Si Samrong Police Station to file a complaint against the woman for fraud, but the police refused to accept the complaint.

While at the police station, the woman’s husband, a soldier from Tak Province, came to confront Ahmet, pushing him and using offensive language in English. This frightened Ahmet, who feared for his safety and wanted his money back. He decided to seek help from the “Sai Mai Tong Rod” page.

Ekkaphop said that after this, the Sai Mai Tong Rod team will take Ahmet back to Si Samrong Police Station to file a complaint again.

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Diamond Thief Filipino Is Caught Returning to Thailand

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The CCTV shows that Mr. Rolly committed a theft of diamond jewelry from a department store in the Pathumwan area, Bangkok, in March 2024.

BANGKOK — A Filipino thief who had stolen a diamond necklace from a Bangkok mall returns overconfidently to commit another crime, only to be arrested at Suvarnabhumi Airport.

Pol. Maj. Gen. Thiradet Thammasuthir, Commander of the Metropolitan Police Investigation Division, announced the arrest of Mr. Rolly, a 49-year-old Filipino national, at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Samut Prakan Province at around 3:30 a.m. on Thursday.

The arrest was made on the basis of an Arrest Warrant dated May 25, 2024, issued by the Southern Bangkok Criminal Court for “Theft by Disguise or Other Means to Prevent Recognition.”

Mr. Rolly had entered Thailand on March 26, 2024, and later committed a theft of diamond jewelry from a department store in the Pathumwan area.

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The Filipino suspect who had stolen a diamond necklace from a Bangkok mall returns overconfidently to commit another crime, only to be arrested at Suvarnabhumi Airport on September 5, 2024.

According to CCTV footage at the store, he approached a jewelry display and took advantage of a moment of distraction by the staff to steal a diamond necklace of 9.40 carats and 20 grams of gold worth over THB 250,000 ($7,420) before fleeing the scene.

The Metropolitan Police Investigation Division 1 (MPI1) then began an investigation and discovered that Mr. Rolly fled Thailand on the same day he committed the crime. MPI1 officers worked with Pathumwan Police Station and analyzed CCTV footage to identify the suspect.

On the morning of September 5, 2024, the surveillance team discovered that Mr. Rolly had returned to Thailand and was about to commit another crime. MPI1 officers then set up a stakeout and were able to arrest him at the scene of the crime. During the arrest, he confessed to being the person in the CCTV footage. Court proceedings will follow.

Pol. Maj. Gen. Thiradet warned gold stores, jewelers, and other retailers to be wary of well-dressed customers with strong profiles who may pose as thieves. These individuals often take advantage of moments when store staff are distracted or inattentive to steal items.

Store operators are advised to increase their security measures, ask for IDs or passports before displaying products, install high-definition CCTV cameras, and set up alarm systems linked to nearby police stations.

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Bangkok RHVAC and E&E 2024 Fairs Launch Grand Opening

The Department of International Trade Promotion (DITP), Ministry of Commerce has cooperated with Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Industry Club and the Electrical and Electronics Industry Club, the Federation of Thai Industries, to organize Bangkok Refrigeration, Heating, Ventilation and Air-Conditioning 2024 (Bangkok RHVAC 2024) and Bangkok Electric and Electronics 2024 (Bangkok E&E 2024), featuring a variety of products and services from well-known local and overseas manufacturers as well as exciting activities such as seminars in hot topics and green innovations exhibitions under the concept of “One Stop Solutions for Net Zero Future” during 4-7 September, 2024 at BITEC, Bangkok.

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Mr. Ekachart Seetavorarat, Deputy Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Commerce, revealed that this activity is part of the policies set by Mr. Phumtham Wechayachai, Minister of Commerce to expand the market for Thai products following the global trend. The electrical and electronic industry generates more than 660,000 job employment and is vital to Thailand’s trade and export. Thailand ranks the world’s No.2 manufacturing and exporting country for air-conditioner and the world’s No.6 for refrigerator and refrigeration system.

“Bangkok RHVAC and Bangkok E&E is a trade arena for Thai entrepreneurs to meet and create trade partnership with buyers/importers from across the world. It also encourages product development to answer the needs of local and international industrial sector and consumers as well as creates universal business networking”, said Deputy Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Commerce.

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This year’s fair is back in full strength over 20,000 square meter exhibition space. The 14th Bangkok RHVAC and the 10th Bangkok E&E is organized under the theme of “One Stop Solutions for Net Zero Future”. It will feature new environmental friendly technology trend that answering the needs of both manufacturers and consumers with a goal to achieve NET ZERO emissions within 2065.

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The trade shows have 300 exhibitors in 800 booths from Thailand, ASEAN, China, Hong Kong, Korea, India, Middle East and Europe which are manufacturers of air-conditioning products, refrigerators, freezers, compressors, experts in cold storage design and construction as well as leaders in electrical and electronic products including home appliances, industrial/power supply, IT, lighting, parts and accessories. It is expected to attract more than 10,000 visitors from across the globe and generate more than 4,500 million baht of trade value.

There will be highlighted activities such as “One Stop Solutions for Net Zero future” Exhibition; “Product Highlight” and “OZONE and e-Waste”. Moreover, there are many interesting activities including seminars in hot topics for those in the industry such as “Certification Guidelines for Ammonia Refrigeration System as Required by Law to Reach Carbon Neutrality”, “HVAC and Nearly Zero Energy Building Approach”, etc. and panel discussions with green influencers such as Mr. Wannasingh Prasertkul and “3WheelsUncle” to move forward to Net Zero Future.

Last but not least is this year special “Virtual Trade Show”, which provides an opportunity to meet with leading manufacturers and producers from around the world through online platform without participating in the show at https://ditpvirtual.com/RHV024.

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Bangkok RHVAC 2024 and Bangkok E&E 2024 will be held during 4-7 September, 2024 at Hall 98-100, BITEC, Bangkok. This trade show will be open for trade visitors during 4-6 September, while public visitors will be invited to shop and visit the exhibition booths on the last day of the event. For more information and pre-registration, please visit www.bangkok-rhvac.com.

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