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Canadian Tourist Robbed During Night in Pattaya Hotel


webfact

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3 hours ago, webfact said:

fbc333f7f5bda6c813837e859b916c70ea6254c67c1c73f85a407f5133154c8b.jpg

 

A Canadian tourist’s relaxing night turned alarming when two Ugandan women allegedly stole his cash while he slept in his Pattaya hotel room.

 

Chonburi Immigration Police have recently arrested two Ugandan nationals, Ms. Mariam, aged 38, and Ms. Sheebah, aged 28, at a hotel in the Khao Pratamnak area of South Pattaya, Chonburi province.

 

7b67269655c896628717f5b97e2389516fb3134b8fc73fe7d3ff39bbf65746e5.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

The arrest follows an issuance of a warrant by the Pattaya Provincial Court on charges of “jointly committing theft at night” on June 17.

 

The incident was reported by Mr. Khalid, the Canadian tourist, who informed Bang Lamung Police Station that he had been robbed by the two women.

 

b9a6e118f3a051b4e1f8c6a983cc450171ac0ed3e5512114c801796e5ab965b8.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

According to Mr. Khalid, the event unfolded on June 10 when he invited the two Ugandan women to his hotel room on Pattaya-Na Kluea Road for a few drinks and to spend the night. He paid them 2,000 baht each for their time.

 

Mr. Khalid claims he eventually fell asleep and, upon waking, discovered that approximately 90,000 baht in Thai and foreign currency he had kept in the safe was missing. Despite the women’s consistent denials, saying they had merely given the man a relaxing massage, evidence suggests otherwise.

 

bbd1051fa6e844d650c88a8b86fa59fd74d87e782d96580622578304eb91fd23.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

Police have combed through CCTV footage and gathered other forms of evidence, leading to the firm belief that the women are responsible for the theft. Consequently, they were taken into custody for further legal procedures.

 

This story underlines the need for tourists to exercise caution and vigilance while enjoying the vibrant nightlife in tourist hubs like Pattaya. Local authorities assure that they are committed to maintaining safety for all visitors to the area.

 

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

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-- 2024-06-18

 

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55555555555555:cheesy:

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1 hour ago, balo said:

Mr Khalid from Canada , with 90000 in cash.  Ever heard of credit/debit cards ? 

I think maybe his intended purchases require cash.

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1 hour ago, balo said:

Mr Khalid from Canada , with 90000 in cash.  Ever heard of credit/debit cards ? 

 

Seriously?  You'd travel halfway around the world with less than $3,000 USD in cash?   Especially as a tourist.

 

What happens if comms are down (for a myriad of reasons), or if your 2FA phone gets lost or stolen or damaged?  Or your wallet gets filched on the MRT with all your credit and debit cards in it?  It'll take days to clear up that mess and that can get mighty hungry, even if you've paid hotels in advance.  With my banks back home, even longer if it happens on a Friday because they won't be open until Monday, even the phone number on the cards.

 

I generally keep $4,900 USD separate from my wallet, because $5K is the non-report limit for some of the countries I visit.  Sometimes, I'll go for years between dipping into it.  But when I needed it, I needed it. Usually because the bank "detected unusual card use" and 2FA didn't go through, for SIM issues.

 

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1 hour ago, jacko45k said:

Not all the same..... some use a master key. Some even require a computer connection  to open them. Seen it done. I guess one could test 9999 or 0000 or even 1234. Some require 6 characters. You may get locked out for a spell.

Hard to drop them if they are securely fixed to the wall.

Most just require a strip of sheet metal. 

 

In any event, everyone in housekeeping knows how to open them. 

 

If you have valuables, hide them. The safe is the first place to look. 

 

90K baht is only about US$2,500, I travel with that and pay everything with credit cards.

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1 hour ago, BritManToo said:

I thought the girl on the sofa wearing the little black dress looked quite attractive.

there's no photo credit listed beneath tha photo so that's AI generated... check out the next photo below that one of the 2 African aunties with the proper photo credit!

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4 hours ago, webfact said:

fbc333f7f5bda6c813837e859b916c70ea6254c67c1c73f85a407f5133154c8b.jpg

 

A Canadian tourist’s relaxing night turned alarming when two Ugandan women allegedly stole his cash while he slept in his Pattaya hotel room.

 

Chonburi Immigration Police have recently arrested two Ugandan nationals, Ms. Mariam, aged 38, and Ms. Sheebah, aged 28, at a hotel in the Khao Pratamnak area of South Pattaya, Chonburi province.

 

7b67269655c896628717f5b97e2389516fb3134b8fc73fe7d3ff39bbf65746e5.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

The arrest follows an issuance of a warrant by the Pattaya Provincial Court on charges of “jointly committing theft at night” on June 17.

 

The incident was reported by Mr. Khalid, the Canadian tourist, who informed Bang Lamung Police Station that he had been robbed by the two women.

 

b9a6e118f3a051b4e1f8c6a983cc450171ac0ed3e5512114c801796e5ab965b8.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

According to Mr. Khalid, the event unfolded on June 10 when he invited the two Ugandan women to his hotel room on Pattaya-Na Kluea Road for a few drinks and to spend the night. He paid them 2,000 baht each for their time.

 

Mr. Khalid claims he eventually fell asleep and, upon waking, discovered that approximately 90,000 baht in Thai and foreign currency he had kept in the safe was missing. Despite the women’s consistent denials, saying they had merely given the man a relaxing massage, evidence suggests otherwise.

 

bbd1051fa6e844d650c88a8b86fa59fd74d87e782d96580622578304eb91fd23.jpg

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

Police have combed through CCTV footage and gathered other forms of evidence, leading to the firm belief that the women are responsible for the theft. Consequently, they were taken into custody for further legal procedures.

 

This story underlines the need for tourists to exercise caution and vigilance while enjoying the vibrant nightlife in tourist hubs like Pattaya. Local authorities assure that they are committed to maintaining safety for all visitors to the area.

 

Picture courtesy: Siam Rath

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

-- 2024-06-18

 

Get our Daily Newsletter - Click HERE to subscribe

Obviously not a "Happy ending" at least for the Canadian🥴

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9 minutes ago, mogandave said:

If you have valuables, hide them. The safe is the first place to look. 

Hotel rooms don't offer much opportunity to play hidey hidey  from 2 women, and I would certainly not feel  secure. I seriously doubt most room maids could  open safes..... and a strip of metal will not do anything to the substantia metal bolts they mostly have. I feel more confident with the larger hotels who I hope take things more seriously. The only problem I had was a place using lockers with padlocks behind reception.... they gave me a key but had another. Another was a pal who stayed in a condo place and the manager lady had a wayward drug taking son and he knew where the over-ride key was..

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34 minutes ago, mogandave said:

 

In any event, everyone in housekeeping knows how to open them. 

Best type of safe can only be opened with the self configured number combination or the mechanical key. 

And at a decent Hotel not every cleaner has access to the big Hotel safe with the mechanical keys.

But cheap hotels have cheap safes.

 

And even for master code: not everyone please but trusted staff.

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2 minutes ago, KhunBENQ said:

Best type of safe can only be opened with the self configured number combination or the mechanical key. 

And at a decent Hotel not every cleaner has access to the big Hotel safe with the mechanical keys.

But cheap hotels have cheap safes.

I was talking about room safes, not the hotel safe. 

 

It has been my experience that even nicer hotels typically have safes that are not very secure. 

 

But you go ahead and trust them.

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4 hours ago, webfact said:

tourists to exercise caution and vigilance while enjoying the vibrant nightlife in tourist hubs like Pattaya. 

 

what he's really trying to say  ....

 

translation  =   don't trust anyone in Pattaya at night,   you'll get robbed

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12 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:
2 hours ago, ChasingTheSun said:

Canadian passport maybe, but not a Canadian.

Doesn’t look like a native does he. 

 

not at all. natives are more like mohawk or ojibwe. or you meant white people ? 

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1 hour ago, cdemundo said:

He didn't say anything about race.

You were the first one to mention race.

 

 

oh ok. so what exactly did the poster mean ? spell it out for me. 

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3 minutes ago, stoner said:

 

so what exactly is a canadian then ? ehhh.

 

Dudley Do-Right and Sweet Polly Purebred  Nell Fenwick.

 

(Oops, almost conflated my Saturday cartoons) 

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