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Police Raid 32 Koh Phangan Nominee Firms

Thai police launched a major operation on Koh Phangan on May 13, raiding 32 companies suspected of using Thai nominees to illegally hold land on behalf of foreign investors. More than 300 officers took part in the coordinated crackdown, which targeted businesses linked to land ownership worth more than 150 million baht.

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The operation was led by Pol General Samran Nualma, deputy national police chief, alongside Pol Lieutenant General Noppasilp Poolsawat, commissioner attached to the Office of the National Police Chief. Officers from specialist police units, immigration police, Provincial Police Region 8, Surat Thani police, Krabi police and Koh Phangan Police Station were deployed across 32 locations on the island.

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Authorities said the companies under investigation collectively hold 37 land title deeds. Officers seized corporate documents, shareholder records, company registration papers, land deeds, lease agreements, financial records, bank account details and evidence of international money transfers. Digital evidence and computer equipment were also confiscated during the searches.

Police are also pursuing four suspects linked to alleged illegal foreign business operations and nominee shareholding arrangements. The group includes one foreign national and three Thai nationals accused of helping foreign investors circumvent Thai ownership laws.

The raids targeted luxury villas, commercial premises and a law office suspected of coordinating nominee arrangements for foreign property ownership. One of the main sites searched was a luxury villa complex in Moo 7 of Koh Phangan subdistrict, consisting of around six villas owned by a company now under investigation.

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Pictures courtesy of Daily News

The crackdown came on the same day as Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s inspection visit to Surat Thani and follows wider investigations by the Department of Special Investigation and the Department of Business Development. Authorities are reviewing more than 11,400 companies in Surat Thani province.

The Prime Minister later joined a raid an alleged illegal pool villa and ordered an investigation into the financial transactions after discovering that an Israeli national was owning it using a Thai national as a nominee.

Anutin Charnvirakul arrived at the residence in Moo 7, Ban Cholok Lam, Koh Phangan Subdistrict, Surat Thani Province, where a villa company is located. He gathered with accompanying ministers and government officials responsible for the Koh Phangan area for a discussion in front of a pool villa that had been reportedly illegally constructed.

Investigators are examining whether foreign investors used Thai nominees to control land, tourism businesses and hotels in violation of the Foreign Business Act. Officials are also checking whether some hotels operated without licences and whether foreign nationals were working illegally or in occupations reserved for Thai citizens.

According to Department of Business Development figures, 3,213 of Koh Phangan’s 4,761 registered companies involve foreign investment, representing around 67% of all registered firms on the island. Israeli investors account for 22% of those companies, followed by French investors at 13% and British investors at 11%.

Daily News reported that authorities said investigations will continue into financial transactions, company ownership structures and the legitimacy of shareholder investments. The government said legal foreign investment remains welcome but warned that nominee structures, illegal land ownership and unlicensed business operations will face stricter enforcement.

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image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now Dailynews 14 May 2026

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impulse Star Member

impulse

Advanced Member

Good Lord !

Some serious booty play must be happening around those nether regions to say the least .....

More like a disturbance in The Force.

VillageIdiot Silver Member

VillageIdiot

Advanced Member
40 minutes ago, BusyB said:

I'm sure 'many ' of them knew it was dodgy. I've heard them talk - they thought they had it all stitched up.

As for those who were scammed. Surely the fact that you're being asked, cajoled even, into doing all this with your life's savings, by your darling wife and her lawyer should raise a vague question? I think I'd have wanted a second opinion. Preferably at a Land Office in a different province.

And as I've always said and lived by my whole life: there's no point in settling in another country if you don't learn the language. Knowledge is power and you will always be vulnerable otherwise.

Good point about learning the language.

If you don't, it's a sensory deprivation akin to being deaf and dumb.

You're clueless as to what's going on around you.

BusyB Platinum Member

BusyB

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, VillageIdiot said:

Good point about learning the language.

If you don't, it's a sensory deprivation akin to being deaf and dumb.

You're clueless as to what's going on around you.

You also have no means of dealing with things effectively either. At best you have to rely on trusties.

VillageIdiot Silver Member

VillageIdiot

Advanced Member
55 minutes ago, BusyB said:

You also have no means of dealing with things effectively either. At best you have to rely on trusties.

Exactly.

The second good piece of advice for newbies is that if you get married here, make sure she is a decent girl from a good class of people - not some tart you picked up in a bar.

A good wife is a godsend anywhere, but especially in a country like Thailand.

They can be trusted to front for you in all kinds of ways, large and small.

Gknrd Gold Member

Gknrd

Advanced Member

And in other news, 100K + pensioners that bought land with nominees A$$holes puckered suddenly after reading the article and sucked the oxygen out of several popular retirement cities in Thailand.

wensiensheng Platinum Member

wensiensheng

Advanced Member
17 hours ago, BusyB said:

Strikes me they mean business big time this time.

In the past they'd just whack someone who'd caused a stir, like that Bandido further up. Then it all went quiet again.

I'd be very worried if I had a nominee setup right now. There's so much more cash and land involved for the government to get its hands on this time round.

Koh Phangnan seems a particular target. So many stories like this there over the last 3 months. The place must have just been taken over by farang (aided by Thais of course) and then somebody said enough is enough.

oustaristocrats Senior Member

oustaristocrats

Member
On 5/14/2026 at 10:11 AM, Yumthai said:

Then, for instance, who's gonna buy all these multiple millions baht condo units in BKK. Thais (who can afford) alone would not fill the offer.

It could be indeed over-developed, but construction business generates a lot of income over several years for many local people directly and indirectly involved into long term building projects.

That's short-sighted income, greedy project developers don't care about the long-term, build now, full pace, foreigners wil buy and eventually it becomes a mess for everyone.

The economic growth of only 1.6% in Thailand this year is because of the saturated property market and dependency on tourism, they forgot to develop their own industrial identity. The 4.0 corridor is still just screw driver factories. Where is 'made in Thailand' ?

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