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Sacked cop ‘Joe Ferrari’ involved in seizure of 410 smuggled high-end cars


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The dismissed former police superintendent in Nakhon Sawan province, Pol Col Thitisan Utthanaphol, had been involved in the seizure of 410 luxurious cars smuggled through into Thailand from Singapore and Malaysia during his service, with 270 of them reported to have been stolen abroad, according to Deputy National Police Chief Pol Gen Suchart Thiraswasdi.

 

Thitisan, aka “Joe Ferrari”, and his subordinates at Nakhon Sawan’s Muang district police station are accused of torturing a drug suspect in their custody to death, by covering his face with several layers of plastic bags. All are currently on remand pending the outcome of the investigation.

 

Citing a report into Thitisan’s involvement in the seizure of the cars and suspected money laundering, Pol Gen Suchart said it was discovered that 101 of the smuggled cars were reported to have been stolen abroad, before they were seized in Thailand, and 169 were reported stolen after their seizure, leaving 140 cars, the provenance of which is still being investigated.

 

Full story: https://www.thaipbsworld.com/sacked-cop-joe-ferrari-involved-in-seizure-of-410-smuggled-high-end-cars/

 

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So it is feasible that some of his wealth came from legitimate sources (the bounty paid to police involved to the seizure of illegal cars).  That system is wrong as no reward should be offered for normal police work.  Then again when the police salaries are woefully inadequate police will devise other ways of generating genuine income.

 

Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying every baht he 'earned' was from a legitimate source. Far from it.

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11 minutes ago, realfunster said:

 

Oh come on, please don’t fall for their nonsense.

 

What is more likely ? 

 

1) Unassuming Joe Ferrari is the car seizing super hero Thailand needs. All of this achieved from the innocuous central northern province of Nakhon Sawan, which for some strange reason is like a magnet for Lamborghinis or …

2) Joe Ferrari knows he can “cash in” stolen and smuggled cars in Thailand and is involved in an international car theft ring…

 

The insurance companies must be paying to get the cars back again and could help with inquiries on who receives the money .

 

 

 

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3 minutes ago, clivebaxter said:

The case is about him murdering a suspect with plastic bags for a corrupt payment of 2 million baht. not about his car collection

Makes for better reading than some poor soul murdered in custody . 

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You have to find it hard to believe that this guy has got all these cars taken from their owners as they were illegal etc and not one got the hump and tried to get revenge !

Would be interesting to know if any other cop has similar numbers of busts with illegal cars , I bet not even close . Plus how can he have so much money when the raids will be conducted by several policemen so surely that would water down his catch bonus . ????

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1 hour ago, clivebaxter said:

The case is about him murdering a suspect with plastic bags for a corrupt payment of 2 million baht. not about his car collection

Well yes, but with the car collection "explained" that only leaves the cash and the death in custody. The wheels they are a turning...

 

 

 

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1 hour ago, realfunster said:

 

Oh come on, please don’t fall for their nonsense.

 

What is more likely ? 

 

1) Unassuming Joe Ferrari is the car seizing super hero Thailand needs. All of this achieved from the innocuous central northern province of Nakhon Sawan, which for some strange reason is like a magnet for Lamborghinis or …

2) Joe Ferrari knows he can “cash in” stolen and smuggled cars in Thailand and is involved in an international car theft ring…

 

There are none so blind as those that will not see. 

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22 minutes ago, animalmagic said:

It's actually a very effective money laundering scheme. 

  1. Acquire ill gotten gains from drug trafficking or corruption.
  2. Send money to Malaysia to buy/steal high end cars.
  3. Pay a mule to bring them back.
  4. Know where the car will be and make the arrest.
  5. Mule gets minor fine for cooperating with police and released to do again.
  6. Car seized and commission earned - CLEAN money.
  7. Use clean money to buy car at govt auction.
  8. Sell for big profit - more CLEAN money.
  9. Repeat.

Trans national organised crime as defined by Interpol

That's one scheme for sure.

 

A lot of the higher end luxury and supercars are stolen from the UK then imported as legit, with the aid of corrupt customs officials.

 

Been going on for years.

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Joe Ferrari should have a Salem witch trial. In Salem the good citizens tied the suspected witch to a dunking chair, if she drowned then she wasn't a witch. If she didn't drown they made sure she did. I say tie several bags around Joes head, if he dies perhaps he was innocent. Probably not though.

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1 hour ago, LarrySR said:

Over 10 years ago, I recall a story of a man that had his car stolen, went to the police station to report it, saw his car in the parking lot, then watched a cop get in and drive it off. 

Investigation uncovered a car theft business run by police with an estimated 1,000 cars hijacked and exported to Cambodia. 

1,000 cars exported to a country where they drive on the right? That sounds somewhat unlikely.

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