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Bangkok police offer public apology, but do not admit to extortion of Taiwanese actress


snoop1130

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BP has a story today saying some of the cops have confessed.  A committee is meeting to discuss IF they should be dismissed!  It seems RTP have the same points system that road-users have: you get THREE get-out-of-jail cards per annum!

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11 hours ago, Puccini said:

A Thai newspaper from which forum rules prohibit us to quote says that the police admitted today that they extorted 27,000 Baht  from the actress.

 

I guess we have to wait until this information is published in a permitted news source until it can can posted here. Look out for it. Thiti Saengsawang of the Metropolitan police is said to have given this information.

This was in a Thaiger video item too. Said one of the accused policemen admitted it had happened.

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3 hours ago, nigelforbes said:

A better approach of course might have been to say oops, I'm sorry, I didn't know vaping equipment is illegal in Thailand (which is true), of course I should be charged (which is also true)...let's go. At the station, the coin may drop with more senior people, hmm, this is the first person we've ever charged for this crime, perhaps we should let her go. Or, in court the judge may have the same reaction, if indeed a lawyer in the meantime didn't intervene. There's no extortion, there's no bribery charge and the fine would likely be less. 

Or she could have given them a pizza.

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the real crime is the law is to protect tobacco companies and is applied only on foreigners just like many other shakedown interactions by bb to tourists.

a friend of mine was done for 10k while many Thia's openly use same.

police wont care many videos of bribery online

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Here you go the start of the Michael Jackson moon walk to slowly walk it back!  This is the Thai way of apologizing admit guilt thereafter all is go, a misunderstanding slap on the wrist a transfer to a resort until the smoke clears then back to business as usual!????????

Edited by thailand49
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As per another thread "we have investigated ourselves and found no wrongdoing".

 

Of course they can apologize and deny in the same breath - it's the RTP. In  a country where you can blame a dead friend for your watch collection, believability is really at the low end of their priorities. 

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Chuwit has his interview in English in IG.   You need to log into IG to see it. 

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CoERC1tgqe3/?igshid=NjcyZGVjMzk=

 

He seems such a man who gets it.  He complains that the Thai people just accept this corruption.  He admits he pays so he is part of the problem.  He says there is a casino on every block like 7-11.  The Thai people just need to accept this as how it is.  

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1 hour ago, Elkski said:

Chuwit has his interview in English in IG.   You need to log into IG to see it. 

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CoERC1tgqe3/?igshid=NjcyZGVjMzk=

 

He seems such a man who gets it.  He complains that the Thai people just accept this corruption.  He admits he pays so he is part of the problem.  He says there is a casino on every block like 7-11.  The Thai people just need to accept this as how it is.  

Nice find - I like Chuwit - amazed he never got shot to be honest.

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8 hours ago, bamnutsak said:

The Bangkok sidewalk police (tessakit) are back to extorting tourists for littering (cigarette butts). Opening bid is 2,000 baht.

 

I am very much against littering, but would like to see the "law" equally enforced with both tourists and Thais. And the fine is more like 200 baht.

The official fine has been 2000 baht ever since the law went into effect 20 or so years ago. For the first couple of years, there were even notices posted at airport immigration counters informing arriving passengers of the penalty. 

 

You're absolutely right, though, that during that entire period, the law has always been used pretty much exclusively against foreigners (and pretty much exclusively for cigarette butts and ash - dump a sack of trash out the window and you're fine).

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15 hours ago, khunjeff said:

The official fine has been 2000 baht ever since the law went into effect 20 or so years ago.

"Up to 2,000 baht fine", is the wording, I think.

 

Yes, I was thinking of the jaywalking fine, which seems to settle at 200 baht, but can range from 100 to 1,000 baht.

 

 

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