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Bullman, the Norwegian killer and fugitive from Thai justice lands in Oslo on a false name and passport


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Killer is believed to have been lying low in a Southeast Asian country since he was last seen at the Norwegian Embassy in Hanoi. His return on Saturday using a false name and passport and thus evading an Interpol arrest notice is bound to raise questions about international security as well as the operations of the international police body.


Fugitive killer Roger Bullman who has been in hiding since skipping bail in Phuket in September 2019, on Saturday, touched down in Oslo on a flight from Paris with a false name and passport thereby evading an Interpol arrest warrant. It brings to an end his long flight from the clutches of Thai authorities after he feared being imprisoned in the kingdom over a week after strangling a UK IT engineer at a 5-star Phuket hotel and later being granted bail by local police pending an investigation into the circumstances of what was a violently lethal confrontation between two men, next door neighbours on holidays with their families on the famed holiday island.


57-year-old Roger Bullman, looking gaunt and frail compared to how he appeared when last seen, returned home to Oslo in Norway on Saturday just under three years after he killed 34-year-old IT engineer Amital Bajaj at a five-star hotel in the Karon area of Phuket on August 21st 2019.

 

by James Morris and Son Nguyen

 

Top photo caption: Bullman skipped bail on Monday, September 2nd 2019, just hours after being photographed swimming in the pool of a luxury hotel (left). It was our last sight of him before Saturday, although he was identified some months later at the Norwegian Embassy in Hanoi.

 

Full story: https://www.thaiexaminer.com/thai-news-foreigners/2023/05/28/roger-bullman-norwegian-killer-returns-to-oslo-amital-bajaj-murder/

 

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-- © Copyright Thai Examiner 2023-05-29
 

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Norwegian accused of murder in Phuket has returned home
by Miabell Mallikka

 

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A 50-year-old Norwegian man accused of murder has returned home to Norway, where he has turned himself in to the police. That is according to Norwegian TV 2.

 

The man has admitted that he killed a British family man at a luxury hotel in Phuket back in 2019. He himself explains to the media that he acted out of “necessity.”

 

For almost four years, in fear of a Thai prison sentences, he has lived at several unknown addresses around the Asian continent.

 

Full story: https://scandasia.com/norwegian-accused-of-murder-in-phuket-has-returned-home/

 

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-- © Copyright ScandAsia 2023-05-29
 

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8 minutes ago, Artisi said:

Extradition by any chance, or would that be too much effort for the Thai system to organise, considering the BIB couldn't get it organised for the murder of one of their own? 

Thailand has an extradition treaty since 1999. Nowadays Thailand has signed Extradition treaties with 14 countries, including the United States of America, United Kingdom, Canada, France, Norway, China, South Korea, India, Poland, Peru, Australia, Sri Lanka, Belgium and Ukraine.

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10 minutes ago, HappyExpat57 said:

Thailand has an extradition treaty since 1999. Nowadays Thailand has signed Extradition treaties with 14 countries, including the United States of America, United Kingdom, Canada, France, Norway, China, South Korea, India, Poland, Peru, Australia, Sri Lanka, Belgium and Ukraine.

Did you miss the point being made by any chance? 

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He himself said that he flew from Bangkok to Paris on a false passport.  So they had one last chance to catch him, but failed.  Most likely he will not be sentenced in Norway.  This is because the investigative material that will be sent from Thailand is too poor for the Norwegian police.

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1 hour ago, Paradise Pete said:

United Kingdom: Murder suspects can be granted bail but it is less common due to the seriousness of the crime.

A relative of mine is in remand for Attempted murder in the UK. just saying.

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1 hour ago, khunjeff said:

If the whole world seems to know about his arrival in Norway using a false name and passport, why wasn't he immediately arrested for that by Norwegian authorities? Even leaving aside the murder charge, flying around under a false identity or with forged documents isn't something that's taken lightly by any government. Or are the articles somehow suggesting that the Norwegian embassy in Hanoi knowingly issued the bogus passport to him?

It seems to read like that, so he boarded at least 2 flights with a fake passport. how did he manage to leave Hanoi and enter Thailand?

Edited by brianthainess
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