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Blue Diamond Affair: The mystery of the stolen Saudi jewels


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"Thai customs. All items imported from abroad had to be checked as they entered the country. But because he knew Thai officials could not resist a bribe, Kriangkrai stuffed an envelope with money and a note and put it in his cargo. The note said his cargo had pornographic material inside, and he would prefer it not to be searched.

His plan worked,"

 

And the beat goes.????

Edited by khwaibah
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2 hours ago, fforest1 said:

Dont have such a attitude....No telling who the Saudis stole some of the loot from....The loot was mostly likely stolen many times over many centuries...

How does that change anything?

 

This guy stole it and got punished for it. He came away well as his act costed the country billions and 3 people paid with their lifes.

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7 minutes ago, Bob12345 said:

3 people paid with their lifes.

 

More than that.... At least 6 and counting....

 

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In early February 1990, two officials from the visa section of the Saudi embassy in Bangkok were driving towards the compound in the Thai capital. About a half a mile from their destination, their car was attacked by gunmen and both men were killed. At about the same time, another gunman entered the apartment of one of the men's colleagues and shot him dead.

 

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Weeks afterwards, a Saudi businessman, Mohammad al-Ruwaili, was despatched to Bangkok to investigate what might have happened to the missing hoard. But he too was targeted - he was kidnapped and, while his body has never been found, he is widely believed to have been murdered.

 

Quote

It would later emerge that police tasked with finding the missing jewels had instead embezzled some of it, extorted the gem dealer, and murdered his wife and son. The police chief in charge of the original investigation, Chalor Kerdthes, ended up serving 20 years in prison.

 

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4 hours ago, metempsychotic said:

you seem to have missed the most important point, the seized jewelry does not all make it back to saudi, and the shipment back contains counterfeits 

 

Cheap poorly done ones, according to various accounts.

 

It would seem, those involved didn't even try very hard!

 

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5 hours ago, metempsychotic said:

you seem to have missed the most important point, the seized jewelry does not all make it back to saudi, and the shipment back contains counterfeits 

Might well have the stolen goods returned, just that they were fake to start with. 

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1 hour ago, anterian said:

The diamond is not lost, it will eventually resurface, perhaps after the death of the current owner. I wonder what story will be used to explain its reemergence. 

Well, Thailand has an ex military politician who can explain in great detail how it works for watches, maybe he is available to help with a fool-proof story. 

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2 hours ago, anterian said:

The diamond is not lost, it will eventually resurface, perhaps after the death of the current owner. I wonder what story will be used to explain its reemergence. 

"Oh look what we found when we were cleaning up. It must have slipped behind the couch cushions." 

With all the flimsy, unrealistic excuses used by the Thai government I would not be surprised to hear that.

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