Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Briton Details Thai Prison Ordeal in Bangkok

British national Oliver Hardy has described his experiences inside Thai prisons after serving one year and four months following convictions related to visa fraud and forged immigration documents.

Get today's headlines by email image.png

Hardy, 27, a heating engineer from Croydon, said he travelled to Thailand in January 2023 after saving for five years for what he described as the holiday of a lifetime. He was later convicted of remaining in Thailand after permission to stay had expired, leaving through an unauthorised route without immigration inspection, forging immigration stamps used for international travel, forging official seals and official documents, and using forged immigration stamps and documents.

According to Hardy, his problems began after he sought a Muay Thai visa to extend his stay in Thailand. He said he paid a man GBP1,200 to arrange the visa but later realised it was a scam after delays resulted in him overstaying his visa.

In December 2023, Hardy said he turned to a visa agency in Pattaya, paying GBP1,800 for assistance. He claimed the agency arranged travel through southern Thailand, Malaysia and Kuala Lumpur before he returned to Bangkok with what he believed was a valid 30-day visa. He said he later renewed the visa without issue.

IMG_4748.jpeg

The situation changed in February 2024 when Hardy travelled from Bali to Bangkok to visit his sister. He said immigration officials identified two passport stamps that were not recorded in the system and appeared to show travel to England that had never occurred. After questioning, he was detained and later charged with using forged documents and overstaying.

Hardy spent several days in an Immigration Detention Centre, where he said he shared a cell with around 120 inmates. He described severe overcrowding and poor conditions.

After 46 days, Hardy said he believed the charges had been dropped and that he would be released. Instead, he was returned to court and faced additional charges. He said the new charges carried a minimum sentence of nine years and a maximum of 24 years.

Hardy was transferred to Bangkok Remand Prison, where he alleged he witnessed violent assaults, suicide attempts and self-harm among inmates. He also claimed he was attacked by members of a prison gang and stabbed in the leg with a plastic shank.

Following approximately one year in Bangkok Remand Prison, Hardy was moved to Thon Buri prison. He alleged that some prison guards entered cells while intoxicated and assaulted prisoners with wooden sticks. Hardy said he was beaten on two occasions.

The Sun reported that he ultimately received a sentence of two years and eight months, reduced to one year and four months after pleading guilty to forging visa documents. Following his release, Hardy began travelling again and documenting his experiences on Instagram. He is currently in Vietnam and plans to reach Brazil by the end of the year.

image.png

Pictures courtesy of The Sun

Join the discussion? image.png

Already a member? image.png

image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now The-Sun 15 June 2026

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

Pasak110 Explorer Member

Pasak110

Member

The other surprising thing is on release he wasn't interviewed by one of the Thai based YouTube interviewers,

the Irish lad, or that pretend farmer out in the sticks....

Deported, and straight to departures?

NanLaew Star Member

NanLaew

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, wil iam not said:

I have never noticed that. On arrival the IO looks at paperwork, takes your photo, then stamps the passport and immediately passes it back to you.

Maybe they don't do it any more, or not as rigorously as they used to. I got a new passport 14 months ago and none of my Thai stamps have flight numbers noted.

TiT

YMMV

Sir Dude Gold Member

Sir Dude

Advanced Member

Messing around with your visa and doing this sort of stuff is a fool's errand these days... best to be legit as immigration has a fur up its backside now compared to back in the day and they sure enjoy rounding up muppets like this guy to make an example of.

WDSmart Platinum Member

WDSmart

Advanced Member
12 minutes ago, Scouse123 said:

I don't suppose the Thai prison system cares about your likes, dislikes or what you oppose, to be honest.

I didn't write my post for the Thai prison system. I wrote it for fellow AsianNow Forum participants, like you. 😊

JerryM Gold Member

JerryM

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, flaming dragon said:

I've been doing it for years, but with a reputable agent,

The definition of a 'reputable agent' is in Thai Penal Code Sec.143:

Section 143. Accepting Benefit by Member of Government

Whoever, demanding, accepting or agreeing to accept a property or any other benefit for himself or the other person as a return for inducting or having induced, by dishonest or unlawful means, or by using his influence, any official, ... to exercise or not to exercise any of his functions, which is advantageous or disadvantageous to any person (penalty)

Garouda Senior Member

Garouda

Member

Where was Stan Laurel?

Scouse123 Ruby Member

Scouse123

Advanced Member
34 minutes ago, Pasak110 said:

Looking at his height and that photo, he looks a big lad, should been able to handle himself in prison. Might have lost weight with all that quality food they have or can purchase. I imagine someone, friends etc and isn't there some sort of Pattaya based group that helps out foreigners who get banged up here?

Yeah,

Soi 6 has a prisoners' support group, I should imagine.😂

JJ-Thailand Silver Member

JJ-Thailand

Advanced Member

Don't ever use agents! Just visit the immigration office and sort it out yourself.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member

Is there a gofundme ?

fredwiggy Star Member

fredwiggy

Advanced Member

Should have had Stan Laurel bail him out and make a run for the border.

rocketboy2 Gold Member

rocketboy2

Advanced Member
36 minutes ago, Scouse123 said:

Yeah,

Soi 6 has a prisoners' support group, I should imagine.😂

yes.

it's called Blow & Go.

impulse Star Member

impulse

Advanced Member

He was later convicted of remaining in Thailand after permission to stay had expired, leaving through an unauthorised route without immigration inspection, forging immigration stamps used for international travel, forging official seals and official documents, and using forged immigration stamps and documents.

Must have visited Khao San road, eh?

thjames007 Senior Member

thjames007

Member
2 hours ago, wil iam not said:

How could he post on Farcebook if he was in the Monkey House?

Doesnt say when he was realeased does it? Fyi he got out at the end of 2025...

nausea Gold Member

nausea

Advanced Member

I knew a guy, back in the day, who allegedly used half a potato to forge an immigration stamp, and got away with it. Those days are long gone, i think.

wil iam not Gold Member

wil iam not

Advanced Member
16 minutes ago, fredwiggy said:

Should have had Stan Laurel bail him out and make a run for the border.

Bit late with that pun Wiggy, been done several times already.

Front Row Advanced Member

Front Row

Member

What’s that old chestnut? If you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime.

save the frogs Star Member

save the frogs

Advanced Member

I hate it when people sell books and make a ton of money off their prison experiences.

Just shows that normal lives are so boring no one wants to read about your boring life until you go to prison.

Legal Lifeline Silver Member

Legal Lifeline

Forum Sponsor
17 minutes ago, Front Row said:

What’s that old chestnut? If you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime.

True- but I am sure the prison was a holiday camp after living in Croydon

Andrew65 Platinum Member

Andrew65

Advanced Member

I know of one expat retiree who pays 20k Baht so that he doen't have to show the 800k per annum. He had previously done it the kosher way.

He's quite wealthy, and if I were in his situation I would just have carried on doing it the legal way. He probably needs around 800k pa to live on anyway. It also means that he has to make 4 trips a year to Pattaya (lives in Bangkok), previously it was one annual trip to C W and 3 X 90 day reports by mail.

James105 Platinum Member

James105

Advanced Member
6 minutes ago, Andrew65 said:

I know of one expat retiree who pays 20k Baht so that he doen't have to show the 800k per annum. He had previously done it the kosher way.

He's quite wealthy, and if I were in his situation I would just have carried on doing it the legal way. He probably needs around 800k pa to live on anyway. It also means that he has to make 4 trips a year to Pattaya (lives in Bangkok), previously it was one annual trip to C W and 3 X 90 day reports by mail.

He probably likes having an excuse to visit Pattaya. Using an agent costs about the same whether you use your own money in the bank or the agents. If he invests the 800k and makes even just 5% return then he is in profit.

Front Row Advanced Member

Front Row

Member
7 minutes ago, James105 said:

He probably likes having an excuse to visit Pattaya. Using an agent costs about the same whether you use your own money in the bank or the agents. If he invests the 800k and makes even just 5% return then he is in profit.

Please let me know which bank is paying 5% interest. Or perhaps I misunderstand the point you’re trying to make.

Patong2021 Diamond Member

Patong2021

Advanced Member
3 hours ago, FlorC said:

Harsh punishment for a victimless (not even a serious) "crime".

There are victims and the visa fraud is a serious crime, because it relates to a nation's national security.

spidermike007 Star Member

spidermike007

Advanced Member

In my wildest imagination I cannot imagine what it would be like to spend time in a Thai prison or any other prison for that matter. I visited a guy while living on Samui who got busted for dealing one kilo of ganja. The local cops gave him a choice of coming up with 1 million baht within 48 hours or going to prison. He was incapable of raising that money and he served an 18 month sentence. I visited him a few times and he told me that he slept in a room with 60 other men and if he slept on his back with his arms across his chest on a very thin mat that he would be able to avoid touching the guy next to him. No air conditioning and no fans and the only way to gain access to decent food was to be able to come up with some cash. He said the odors were overwhelming and it took a great amount of skill and diplomacy to negotiate his way through those days in prison.

The thought boggles my mind.

Andrew65 Platinum Member

Andrew65

Advanced Member
33 minutes ago, James105 said:

He probably likes having an excuse to visit Pattaya. Using an agent costs about the same whether you use your own money in the bank or the agents. If he invests the 800k and makes even just 5% return then he is in profit.

He's not a Pattaya guy, he goes there and comes back the same day. (gets a nosebleed if he leaves lower Sukhumvit)😁

Liverpool Lou Star Member

Liverpool Lou

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, Jonathan Swift said:

Agents use forged documents, such as 800,000 baht bank accounts that don't exist

Nonsense. Bank accounts to show the 800k balance have to exist that is why anybody using those services has to provide a bank account or have one opened in their name.

10baht Silver Member

10baht

Advanced Member
7 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

he travelled to Thailand in January 2023 after saving for five years for what he described as the holiday of a lifetime.

If he save 5 years for a trip to LOS and has been in jail all this time Plus 3000 pound spent and a side trip to Bali...where is all this money coming from?

Briggsy Diamond Member

Briggsy

Advanced Member

A tremendous amount of minimising and blaming others in his statements.

I don't see a person who sees rules and laws as anything that need to be followed.

It is not difficult to stay in Thailand if one really sets one mind to it. Yet he saw fit to pay large amounts of money to others to circumvent the system for him. Why?

baansgr Platinum Member

baansgr

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, Jonathan Swift said:

Now he'll use it for content, all's well that ends well. He'll get rich off this. Except you people who think you can trust "agents" with your personal affairs and immigration status, remember this story and do everything yourself, the right way. Agents use forged documents, such as 800,000 baht bank accounts that don't exist. They all have stacks of brown envelopes at the ready. Spin the roulette wheel and hope you don't get caught.

Agents don't used forged documents.

baansgr Platinum Member

baansgr

Advanced Member
58 minutes ago, Front Row said:

Please let me know which bank is paying 5% interest. Or perhaps I misunderstand the point you’re trying to make.

Plenty UK banks still offer 5% or almost...just look at Raisin

James105 Platinum Member

James105

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Front Row said:

Please let me know which bank is paying 5% interest. Or perhaps I misunderstand the point you’re trying to make.

Trading212 for cash used to be 4.8% but looks like that has gone down to 3.8% for GBP which still returns a guaranteed 30,400 baht (still 10k profit on visa), but I was really referring to holding it in indexed funds. The S&P500 has an average return of 10.56% as an example. Keeping it in a typical Thai bank account has an average return of 0% for comparison.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.