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Posted
16 hours ago, webfact said:

 

The British suspect, who accidentally dropped a firearm in front of the venue, triggered a security alert that led to police intervention. On police arrival, he and his associates fled but were later captured. This British individual had a lengthy criminal record and past imprisonment in the UK for various offences.

 

 

Bit of a snaffu a farang dropping a firearm in front of a night club.  Hardly likely to able say. Whoops. Sorry guys. I do have a carry permit.  Here it is.

 

Why does Thailand issue visas to people with lengthy criminal records or are they all overstayers on transit visas?  They talk about wanting to get rid of foreign mafia types but seem happy to issue them more than tourist and transit visas in many cases.  Why not insist on home country criminal record like Thais have to produce to get longer stay visas to farang countries? 

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Posted
20 hours ago, save the frogs said:

maybe if a girl has one small tattoo on her ankle, it's cute

but a body full of tattoos frightens me

I think they want to look scary, must be, as they look ugly as well, but they like to look powerful and scary which overides ugly 

Posted (edited)
20 hours ago, save the frogs said:

maybe if a girl has one small tattoo on her ankle, it's cute

but a body full of tattoos frightens me

Here you are, contestant on MasterChef Thai born.

Nat-683x1024-1.jpg

Edited by still kicking
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Posted
6 hours ago, still kicking said:

Here you are, contestant on MasterChef Thai born.

Nat-683x1024-1.jpg

 

Yeah, she's not scary at all, is she?

Nice job disspelling stereotypes, still kicking!

 

Posted
21 hours ago, G_Money said:


Curious as how someone could fraudulently empty your UK bank accounts unless it’s a joint account.

 

And a victim of assault by a Thai gets blacklisted and deported?  Was that the only incident or did you do something else to cause the deportation?


Blacklisted and deported normally require a fairly serious offense.

 

Things are looking brighter now.

 

 

Legal written authority given to a, then, trusted third party, to access one account for the sole purpose of transferring specific funds to pay for my appointed lawyer but the bank gave full access to all my accounts and allowed the third party to transfer all funds to his own account.   

 

No other incident other than being assaulted at my rented home but, because I refused to pay the attending police officer 100,000 baht, I was handcuffed and my home was ransacked by the police while I watched.  I was left in a police cell without food or water for 3 days before being taken to court with charges trumped up by the RTP stating that I assaulted neighbour.

 

 

 

 

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Posted
On 6/6/2024 at 11:11 PM, Liverpool Lou said:

Because it is their right if they have not been convicted yet.

No it's not in Thailand. How many times have you seen news articles of Thais who have been arrested and not convicted being photographed reeanacting a crime scene for gawkers. They regularly show the faces of crime suspects. I worked at the Bangkok Post. This is definitely not a law or policy in Thailand's news organizations. . 

Posted
5 hours ago, spermwhale said:
On 6/7/2024 at 1:11 PM, Liverpool Lou said:

Because it is their right if they have not been convicted yet.

No it's not in Thailand. How many times have you seen news articles of Thais who have been arrested and not convicted being photographed reeanacting a crime scene for gawkers. They regularly show the faces of crime suspects.

Yes, it is their right, if they choose not to be initially identified.  That is why many photos show those accused individuals who are paraded before the press hiding their faces or their being obscured, they are not forced to show their faces, neither are they prevented from hiding them.  Faces of the accused shown in crime re-enactments in the media are always hidden (masks, dark glasses hats, whatever) in media photos. 

Posted
On 6/10/2024 at 4:00 AM, Dexxter said:

 

I dare the local LBs to try and nick his gold chain.

Probaly wouldn't be able to carry it,too heavy.

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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I notice you could find him and maybe other criminals at AKA Muay Thai. Feel bad if those guys are straight, bad timing to have a criminal wear your gyms shirt 😂 

 

Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 7:18 AM, save the frogs said:

who wears long pants in thailand?

fashion police

Just about every person on the Skytrain I've noticed, include me.

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Posted
1 hour ago, bangkok19 said:

Just about every person on the Skytrain I've noticed, include me.

No Skytrain in Pattaya yet!

Getting guys to even wear shirts here is not easy.

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Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 2:34 AM, SAFETY FIRST said:

 

 

 

Crikey, I woke up this morning hoping to read headlines about B.S. and his pal's but got to read about a few dodgy Aussies. 🇦🇺

 

Watch out, we Aussies are catching up to you Pom's. 

 

😎

 

Watch out, we Aussies are catching up to you Pom's.

 

...and seems both have beaten the Indians & Chinese to shame!

:laugh:

Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 11:07 PM, still kicking said:

Here you are, contestant on MasterChef Thai born.

Nat-683x1024-1.jpg

Natural beauty spoilt.

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Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 3:15 AM, webfact said:

Parallel incidents include another Australian man's arrest in Phuket in March for overstaying his visa and attempting to dodge a hospital bill following a motorcycle accident.

 

Moreover, another Australian was detained the same month for stealing a motorcycle from a Koh Samui rental shop and travelling with it to Koh Pha Ngan. 

Definitely in the same league as being part of an armed criminal gang.

Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 7:13 AM, Encore said:

 

I was blacklisted and deported > 5 years ago after being assaulted by a drunken Thai neighbour.  

 

While being held at a regional prison and IDC BKK, recuperating from a life threatening lung infection, my UK bank accounts were fraudulently emptied and I was left in debt by tens of thousands.  When deported, I lodged with my son and his family for a few months until healthier and then with ex-military friends for nearly 2 years.  

 

I was then fortunate enough to be allocated a tiny council bedsit during the Covid pandemic during which time I was almost totally reliant on charity to survive.  I spent 12-15 hours a day pursuing my own legal action against the bank because the authorities, including police and judiciary, were about as much use as a chocolate fireguard providing no help to recover my stolen funds.  Later, I managed to get a low paid job working from home for 2 years, during which time I won my case against the bank and recovered about 75% of my savings.  

 

During that time, I also appealed against the RTP immigration decision and, after their rejection, my case was filed with the Administrative Court and has been pending a hearing for nearly 2 years.  Another legal avenue is also being pursued.  

 

I receive the State Pension and, due to a divorce, half a military pension so am comfortable and currently residing in Cambodia with my Thai partner.  

Cheers for the openness. Good luck, mate. Is it easy getting long term stay right in Cambodia? I mean, after all, both you and your partner are foreigners there. 

Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 4:59 AM, scubascuba3 said:

Bogan aussies, criminal record checks would sort a lot of this out

A bit impractical given the millions who come here but perhaps home countries might flag wanted criminal's passports. 

Posted
On 6/6/2024 at 10:04 PM, SAFETY FIRST said:

Watch out, we Aussies are catching up to you Pom's. 

 

You should do, it's in your blood.

Posted
11 minutes ago, AAArdvark said:

A bit impractical given the millions who come here but perhaps home countries might flag wanted criminal's passports. 

Or better still, take them from them?

  • 1 month later...
Posted
On 6/7/2024 at 3:15 AM, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Picture courtesy: Khaosod

 

Immigration Bureau officers have detained an Australian man in Pattaya amid allegations of involvement in his home country's crimes and mafia gang connections in Thailand.

 

The man, identified only as Grey, was apprehended at his luxury residence following suspicions linking him to a foreign mafia group operating in Phuket. Details about the gang remain scarce.

 

The breakthrough in Grey's case was publicly disclosed during a press conference on 5th June. His arrest stems from previous events involving a British man who sparked an investigation in November last year after a mishap with a gun at a Phuket nightclub.

 

The British suspect, who accidentally dropped a firearm in front of the venue, triggered a security alert that led to police intervention. On police arrival, he and his associates fled but were later captured. This British individual had a lengthy criminal record and past imprisonment in the UK for various offences.

 

Untitled-1.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

Grey managed to evade immediate capture following some gang members' exodus from Thailand post-British suspect's arrest.

 

Continuous probes into his activities revealed multiple drug charges pending against him in Australia. Grey moved from Phuket to Pattaya, believing he might elude the intensified scrutiny but was ultimately caught by authorities.

 

Parallel incidents include another Australian man's arrest in Phuket in March for overstaying his visa and attempting to dodge a hospital bill following a motorcycle accident.

 

Moreover, another Australian was detained the same month for stealing a motorcycle from a Koh Samui rental shop and travelling with it to Koh Pha Ngan. 

 

These arrests highlight the ongoing efforts of Thai authorities to clamp down on foreign criminals exploiting the country as a hideout.

 

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-- 2024-06-07

 

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Increasing riffraff in Thailand. Lock them up or put them down? Better to deny entry. 

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