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Arrest in Thailand of second drug kingpin tightens dragnet on huge syndicate

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Arrest in Thailand of second drug kingpin tightens dragnet on huge syndicate

By Tom Allard, Panarat Thepgumpanat and Panu Wongcha-um

 

2021-02-06T020624Z_2_LYNXMPEH15022_RTROPTP_4_AUSTRALIA-THAILAND-DRUGS-ARREST.JPG

FILE PHOTO: Malaysian Customs display 1,187kg of Methamphetamine worth 71 million ringgit ($17.8 million) seized during a news conference in Nilai, Malaysia May 28, 2018. REUTERS/Angie Teo/File Photo

 

BANGKOK (Reuters) - A second senior leader of a vast drug syndicate has been arrested, a Thai narcotics official said, as a transnational dragnet tightens on the Sam Gor group, which police say dominates the $70 billion annual Asia-Pacific drug trade.

 

    The October arrest of Hong Kong citizen Lee Chung Chak in Bangkok preceded last month's high-profile arrest in the Netherlands of Tse Chi Lop, a China-born Canadian national who police suspect is the top leader of the syndicate, also called "The Company".

 

    Lee, 65, is a former prison mate of Tse's suspected of being involved in drug trafficking for four decades. A 2018 Australian Federal Police (AFP) document reviewed by Reuters outlining the top 19 targets in the syndicate described Lee as a "senior project manager responsible for big ventures of border controlled drugs".

 

The two arrests on different continents within three months stem from a decade-long investigation by the AFP, which also leads the multinational Operation Kungur task force targeting the syndicate.

 

    It is rare for suspected senior drug traffickers to be arrested and successfully prosecuted in the Asia-Pacific region.

 

    "The suspect was arrested by Thai Narcotics police on Oct. 1 based on an arrest warrant issued by a Thai court, which followed an extradition request by the Australian authorities," Lieutenant General Montri Yimyaem, head of Thailand's Narcotics Suppression Bureau, told Reuters when asked about Lee.

 

    "The extradition is currently being processed by the court."

 

In recent years, Lee has emerged as a rival to the Canadian as a major player in the region's drug trade, according to two investigators, who spoke to Reuters on condition they not be identified.

 

    "We understand his star had risen to be an equal or even a bigger player," said one of the investigators. "He's a very significant arrest in his own right.".

 

    Thai authorities seized a laptop and multiple phones when they searched Lee's serviced apartment in an upscale Bangkok area, a potential treasure trove of intelligence, the two investigators told Reuters. A third official added that a document and cash in several denominations were also seized.

 

    Lee is appealing the November approval by Thailand's Criminal Court of Australia's extradition request, said a source at Thailand's Ministry of Justice. Tse is in prison in the Netherlands, where a court has yet to rule on his extradition to Australia.

 

    Lee could not be contacted in prison, nor could his lawyer be identified by Reuters. A lawyer for Tse declined to comment. An AFP media officer declined to comment.

 

    The alleged role of Tse - whose nickname is Sam Gor, or "Brother Number Three" in Cantonese - as leader of the syndicate and the investigation into his activities was revealed by Reuters in 2019.

 

(A link to the Reuters Special Report: https://reut.rs/3oOjiIc)

 

    The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has estimated the syndicate made up to $17 billion from methamphetamine trafficking in the Asia-Pacific region alone in 2018. The UNODC representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Jeremy Douglas, compared Tse to the notorious Latin American cartel boss Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.

 

    Police also suspect the crime group traffics heroin, ketamine, cocaine and MDMA, known as ecstasy, multiple officials across the region have told Reuters.

 

    DRUG VETERAN

 

Tse and Lee were the subject of requests by the AFP for law enforcement authorities around the world to arrest them. They are expected to be charged in connection with importing illicit drugs a decade ago, the investigators say.

 

    The two men supplied drugs to a Melbourne-based drug ring and were recorded on intercepts directing the leader of the ring, Suky Lieu, the investigators alleged.

 

A judge's verdict rejecting Lieu's attempt to have his prison sentence reduced said that Lieu owned a small Asian grocery store and was regularly in touch with his Hong Kong-based drug suppliers, using as many as 60 phones and SIM cards and speaking in code. The verdict said Lieu was the leader of the drug ring. Tse and Lee were not named in the verdict.

 

    The two investigators told Reuters that Lee was arrested in Sydney in the 1980s, allegedly for being a manager of heroin couriers. He never went to trial because a key witness died, they said. Reuters could not independently confirm this.

 

Lee was sentenced to 140 months in prison in 1998 for playing a "supervisory role" in a conspiracy to import heroin into the United States, federal court filings there show. Lee - extradited from Thailand to face the charge - spent time in the Elkton penitentiary in Ohio while Tse was imprisoned there. 

 

    Tse was sentenced to nine years in prison for a separate conspiracy to import heroin into the United States. The two were released from Elkton within a month of each other after completing their sentences, U.S. Bureau of Prisons records show.

 

Police suspect Lee later played a key role for the syndicate overseeing drug lab operators in Shan State in northern Myanmar and regularly travelled there, the two investigators said. Shan State, which is largely controlled by ethnic armed groups, has been the epicentre of drug manufacturing in Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle for decades.

 

(Reporting by Tom Allard, Panarat Thepgumpanat and Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok; Additional reporting by Stephanie van den Berg in The Hague; Editing by William Mallard)

 

reuters_logo.jpg

-- © Copyright Reuters 2021-02-07
 
  • Popular Post

So it's an Australian  federal police  investigation  but the Thais  pat themselves  on the back for the investigation  and have a photo op

  • Popular Post

THe comment under the headline photograph reads as though the drugs were seized during the press conference.

Proof positive for the need for skilled subeditors.

 

3 minutes ago, Thechook said:

So it's an Australian  federal police  investigation  but the Thais  pat themselves  on the back for the investigation  and have a photo op

It was a trans national effort, and the drugs were seized by Thai officals, seems fair enough to me. Australian authorities cannot operate i Thai to make arrests , they have no jurisdiction, to my knowledge.

  • Popular Post

I wonder if the Heroin Minister was and is friends with the arrested.  However, a convicted drug dealer is still in power here working for the Government as a minister....wonder what his Mia Noi really thinks.  The drug seizure shown in the photo is from 2018.  It makes the story confusing unless you read the entire report for true clarity.  The Thais have arrested the second leader is the gist of the story, but the report gives a more in-depth background into the top two and the organization.  Multi national task forces have seen the take down of many drug empire here including the US's help with the dark web market place Silk Road.  

  • Popular Post

Whats the point in this "news" it was 4 months ago and the photo is from another raid nearly 3 yrs ago.

 

  • Popular Post
18 minutes ago, 2008bangkok said:

Whats the point in this "news" it was 4 months ago and the photo is from another raid nearly 3 yrs ago.

 

Distracting the general public?

Trying to look good whilst ignoring the real problems?

3 hours ago, rooster59 said:

Malaysian Customs display 1,187kg of Methamphetamine worth 71 million ringgit ($17.8 million) seized during a news conference in Nilai,

Those attending journalists must've been stoned out of their minds.

 

(P.S. I understand it is an unfortunate sentence construct.)

3 hours ago, Thechook said:

So it's an Australian  federal police  investigation  but the Thais  pat themselves  on the back for the investigation  and have a photo op

Photo op is of Malaysians - not Thai

7 minutes ago, Surelynot said:

If this carries on we might start to see MP's in the dock.

Surely not!

10 minutes ago, Surelynot said:

If this carries on we might start to see MP's in the dock.

Fat chance of that. 

 

Convicted Thai drug traffickers are OK in this government. 

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, 2008bangkok said:

Whats the point in this "news" it was 4 months ago and the photo is from another raid nearly 3 yrs ago.

 

You tink to mut, you troubn maka

6 hours ago, Tropicalevo said:

Distracting the general public?

Trying to look good whilst ignoring the real problems?

Bread & Circuses 

 

a couple of millennia a little changes. 

The war on drugs is corrupt nonesense

9 hours ago, rooster59 said:

Police suspect Lee later played a key role for the syndicate overseeing drug lab operators in Shan State in northern Myanmar and regularly travelled there, the two investigators said. Shan State, which is largely controlled by ethnic armed groups, has been the epicentre of drug manufacturing in Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle for decades.

 

With Lee's arrest, maybe the Burmese Generals want control (again) and hence the recent coup!

I can't believe so much meth is consumed.   From what I understand this drug ruins people's bodies and minds and lives.    If guilty these guys should be executed by gillotine on live tv With close up slow mo playbacks. 

On 2/7/2021 at 7:04 AM, rooster59 said:

It is rare for suspected senior drug traffickers to be arrested and successfully prosecuted in the Asia-Pacific region.

Especially in Thailand, usually only the mules are caught while the Mr Big's never even get named.. 

Mostly because of who they are, where they are employed of because of connections in the right places.

On 2/7/2021 at 2:29 PM, Surelynot said:

If this carries on we might start to see MP's in the dock.

Na, would be just a miss understanding

On 2/7/2021 at 1:04 AM, rooster59 said:

BANGKOK (Reuters) - A second senior leader of a vast drug syndicate has been arrested

...they will never learn! now, what about buyers not buying this s...t? this is the real embodiment of supply and demand law

What does this really mean?

 

It means that some general has tired of the old payout scheme and has decided to take over operations.

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