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Caught by social media: German expat who helped Thai wife sell BBQ chicken to be deported - he's wanted by Interpol


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Just now, owl sees all said:

"Caught by social media: German expat who helped Thai wife sell BBQ chicken to be deported - he's wanted by Interpol."

 

Do the Thai authorities to see justice dished out fairly? The Interpol system can work; sometimes!

 

Red Bull man has gotton rich because of the Austrian part-founder. Is he off the Interpol list now? Has he ever been on it even?

 

And the Red Bull driver won the race. Everyone's a winner.

Could you stop going on about the Red Bull heir ?

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1 hour ago, Farangwithaplan said:

Ignored the real points again, didn't you. Why did you need to refer to a 5 year old article by the esteemed Samui Times that had no hard facts in it to prop up you wild accusations. You aren't replying directly to my point because you simply cannot.

I suggest you reread your own original post again.

 

I'm having no trouble defining undesirables. People walking around any city in 'wife beater' singlets whilst intoxicated in nefarious parts of town is in poor social taste and will of course raise more interest from police in any country in the world when compared to a neatly dressed person. Add to that this country's religion frowns upon such attire in public and people who are guests in another country without the social know-how or self worth to dress in public as if they are in their own living room are asking to be scrutinised more closely.

 

It is poor form to have such low social standards as a visitor and then cry because they get attention of the law.

 

If you don't want to pee in a cup, dress better than a bum, don't be pissed or stoned, and don't be known to hang out in dodgy.

areas. But that doesn't suit your agenda, now, does it?

 

I understand you have to undermined the events as they don't fit neatly to your way of thinking , I'm sure the BangkokPost is also some kind of a small village newspaper for you.

(rules here forbid posting bangkokpost links if i recall) but u can google it 'police-stop-tourist-searches-public-urine-tests')

 

Anyway, your personal attacks shows just the kind of person you are, cocky, Snobbish and patronizing..

I just feel sorry for your close ones, I'm sure you give them one hell of a time.. god forbid if they wear flipflops..

 

 

 

 

 

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22 minutes ago, sanemax said:

Previously arrested for that and probably already served a punishment for that  

is actually wanted in his native Germany on charges related to drug trafficking, robbery and child pornography

 

From the report on first page

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14 minutes ago, LongTang said:

 

Anyway, your personal attacks shows just the kind of person you are, cocky, Snobbish and patronizing..

I just feel sorry for your close ones, I'm sure you give them one hell of a time.. god forbid if they wear flipflops..

 

 

 

 

 

If having self respect and avoiding others who don't, choosing to dressing appropriately in another's country with a basic minimum standard of decorum, avoiding drunks and junkies is cocky, snobbish and patronizing, yes I am.

 

What do flip flops have to do with it? If you are going to cherry pick my comments, put them in context. You forgot the whole scenario: " shows enough drunk people wearing wife beater shirts and flip flops." Is what I wrote.

 

Can you see how the whole context of what I said is changed because you blatantly ignored my points about the drunk people and the wifebeater shirts to go with the flip flops. What you did there is the not honest and you did so in an attempt to discredit my statements. Keep it up and I will continue to reply and call you out on it. I'm happy on how what I write portrays me. Can you say the same?

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41 minutes ago, owl sees all said:

"Caught by social media: German expat who helped Thai wife sell BBQ chicken to be deported - he's wanted by Interpol."

 

Do the Thai authorities want to see justice dished out fairly? The Interpol system can work; sometimes!

 

Red Bull man has gotton rich because of the Austrian part-founder. Is he off the Interpol list now? Has he ever been on it even?

 

And the Red Bull driver won the race. Everyone's a winner.

So nothing to do with Thai authorities who have no jurisdiction to make arrests in Austria.   What interest would the Austrian authorities have in arresting someone who has committed no crimes in Austria but is wanted for traffic offences in Thailand?

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22 hours ago, webfact said:

is actually wanted in his native Germany on charges related to drug trafficking, robbery and child pornography.

I also hear his wanted for war crimes in the 40'...

Helping the SS.

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4 minutes ago, Just Weird said:

So nothing to do with Thai authorities who have no jurisdiction to make arrests in Austria.   What interest would the Austrian authorities have in arresting someone who has committed no crimes in Austria but is wanted for traffic offences in Thailand?

I promised @sanemax that I'd stop going on about Red Bull man, so no more comments; for now, on this thread.

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38 minutes ago, Farangwithaplan said:

If having self respect and avoiding others who don't, choosing to dressing appropriately in another's country with a basic minimum standard of decorum, avoiding drunks and junkies is cocky, snobbish and patronizing, yes I am.

 

What do flip flops have to do with it? If you are going to cherry pick my comments, put them in context. You forgot the whole scenario: " shows enough drunk people wearing wife beater shirts and flip flops." Is what I wrote.

 

Can you see how the whole context of what I said is changed because you blatantly ignored my points about the drunk people and the wifebeater shirts to go with the flip flops. What you did there is the not honest and you did so in an attempt to discredit my statements. Keep it up and I will continue to reply and call you out on it. I'm happy on how what I write portrays me. Can you say the same?

 

Avoiding drunks and junkies is Not cocky, snobbish and patronizing, But insulting other poster as if they are IS (talking about context)..

 

It was also nice of you to remove the BangkokPost part from my quote which actually relates to sober well dresses people that got urine tested in pubic.

 

Ye, I'm happy that i try to avoid stigmatizing people on their looks but judge them on their deeds.

 

 

Edited by LongTang
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18 minutes ago, LongTang said:

 

Avoiding drunks and junkies is Not cocky, snobbish and patronizing, But insulting other poster as if they are IS (talking about context)..

 

It was also nice of you to remove the BangkokPost part from my quote which actually relates to sober well dresses people that got urine tested in pubic.

 

Ye, I'm happy that i try to avoid stigmatizing people on their looks but judge them on their deeds.

 

 

Would you 2 give it a rest? If you want to continue this pointless off topic rubbish then PM each other 

Edited by brianj1964
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19 minutes ago, brianj1964 said:

Would you 2 give it a rest? If you want to continue this pointless off topic stuff then PM each other 

 

Agreed, My apologies to the forum members  :jap:

 

P.S: You could have avoided editing the 'stuff' into 'rubbish'...

 

Edited by LongTang
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I've just watched a series about gangsters in Chicago in the 1930's +, and one of the most successful who was never caught and consequently never spent a day  in jail said it was all down to keeping a low profile, and keeping your picture out of the papers.

 

Seems like this guy should have watched it!

 

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1 hour ago, Just Weird said:

So nothing to do with Thai authorities who have no jurisdiction to make arrests in Austria.   What interest would the Austrian authorities have in arresting someone who has committed no crimes in Austria but is wanted for traffic offences in Thailand?

No, but if he is on the Interpol list, surely the Austrian police are obligated to deport him to the country where he is wanted for those "traffic" (murder?) charges 

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23 hours ago, Thaiwrath said:

Not the sharpest knife in the draw, should have stayed under the media radar !

I can't let it slide, the idiom is "not the sharpest knife in the drawer". 

See those sliding things used to store things in, yea those are called drawers

And the idiom "not the sharpest knife in the drawer" is usually used to point out someones stupidity usually for not knowing the simplest of things. 

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2 hours ago, bristolgeoff said:

he should have kept below the radar if he wanted to stay.he stuck his head above the pulipet and now he is caught.who he  paid the tea money to stay in Thailand that is no longer important he will leave go to prison in germany and banned.not clever

He should have kept his head down??? You mean you’d be happy if a wanted pedo, drug dealer and robber was  running about free. My personal opinion is good riddance to the pos and hope he get a long jail sentence. 

Edited by Tongjaw
Grammar
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13 minutes ago, bananafish said:

I can't let it slide, the idiom is "not the sharpest knife in the drawer". 

See those sliding things used to store things in, yea those are called drawers

And the idiom "not the sharpest knife in the drawer" is usually used to point out someones stupidity usually for not knowing the simplest of things. 

Perhaps English is not the first language of the poster?Many words in English sound similar but spelled differently , , and can have different meanings.

Read/Read/Red

Spelt/Spelled

Drawer/Draw

 

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3 hours ago, billd766 said:

He is a German citizen.

 

That means that he can go almost anywhere in any EU country without checks and leave the EU in the same way. He can catch a plane and apply for a visa on arrival (certainly in Thailand) which gets him to an Asian country. He can bribe someone from another country to land him in Thailand which he did.

Therefore it’s the EU to blame for allowing wanted criminals to freely move around its borders. Certain posters here are blaming Thailand for allowing him to enter.  However, if they would take the time to read the complete article they would gather the full story. He entered Thailand before the Interpol arrest warrant was issued. He then left and re-entered illegally. Good work on the Thai police side in getting another bad guy out. 

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3 hours ago, Vacuum said:

He's not.

What´s so difficult to understand at this part of the article: "...is actually wanted in his native Germany on charges related to drug trafficking, robbery and child pornography."?

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1 hour ago, bananafish said:

And the idiom "not the sharpest knife in the drawer" is usually used to point out someones stupidity usually for not knowing the simplest of things.

In Germany we say: He is not the brightest candle on the torte ????

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5 hours ago, Duck J Butters said:

No, not true at all. I'm from Malibu, California. Not wanted by anyone. I'm free to go back to the USA anytime I want. I moved to Thailand because it's awesome and because it's financially advantageous. Who wouldn't want to live in Thailand if they could? Everyone I know in America is super jealous that I get paid to live in Thailand ( at age 30 ) and would come live here in a second if they could pull it off. The main reason people can't live in Thailand is because of money. Most people don't have jobs that allow them to work remotely from anywhere in the world. But when you look at which country has the highest percentage of digital nomads, it is Thailand. Chiang Mai is the digital nomad hub of the universe. Why would all these ultra-rich software engineers live in Thailand if it was such a crappy place? When you visit https://nomadlist.com/, you will see that Bangkok and Chiang Mai and Phuket are consistently in the top 10 cities in the world to live in and work remotely. Digital nomads are typically badass software engineers that are so good at what they do that US/European companies are willing to pay them high six figure salaries to not live in the US. It's a huge tax-advantage to both the employer and the employee ( at least in the US ). What moron wouldn't go live in Thailand, get paid mid six figures, get a massive tax break, and live in a super fun, virtually lawless country that caters to men where the cost of living is exponentially less? You would have to be very dumb not take this opportunity to live in Thailand.

Screen Shot 2019-07-03 at 11.07.05 AM.png

Though I am not in your position in terms of income, I agree with alot of what you say. I too consider the lifestyle to be pretty damn good, despite the heinous army attempting to muck things up. Hopefully, the Thai people will figure out a way to get rid of them permanently, sometime soon. 

 

As much as I like to complain about the hapless cops, I too prefer them to the police state in California. 

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