webfact Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 Over 500 victims filed a complaint against a social media influencer for operating a gold scam that caused losses exceeding 85 million baht. Representatives of the victims, yesterday, October 7, visited the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau in Pak Kret district, Nonthaburi province, near Bangkok, to seek justice after social media influencer Promtada “Mae Bainard” Nakcharoen, the company director of Tada Gold store, was implicated. One of the victims, Maysa, told ThaiRath that she discovered Mae Bainard and his gold shop through livestream videos on the TikTok app. Mae Bainard frequently launched jaw-dropping promotions to attract attention from netizens, offering, for example, 1 gramme of gold for 1,500 baht, whereas the market price is nearly 3,000 baht. Mae Bainard repeatedly assured his followers and clients that he could obtain gold accessories at very low prices because he purchased them directly from a factory. However, he refused to disclose the name of the factory. Maysa and other victims revealed that, although they initially received real gold accessories, they later lost their money when they placed further orders. There was also a VIP group whose members purchased large amounts of gold, often totalling 500,000 baht or more each time. The victims stated that Mae Bainard cultivated an image of trustworthiness by inviting numerous Thai celebrities and influencers to his birthday party. Their relationships with these notable figures led the victims to believe he would not deceive them; unfortunately, this was not the case. Acting Commander of the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau, Jirawat Payungtham, reported that there are over 500 victims in this case, with losses exceeding 85 million baht. Of these, 240 victims have already lodged complaints with the police, while the remainder have yet to do so. The commander explained that Mae Bainard’s actions constitute violations of criminal laws, the Computer Act, and the Consumer Protection Act. The police will interview each victim before summoning the suspect for questioning. The victims confirmed that this case is not related to the previous gold scam, which led to the arrest of two suspects, Korakarn “Mae Tak” Suwannabut and Karnphon “Pa Beer” Rueng-aram. by Petch Petpailin Photo via Facebook/ ตำรวจไซเบอร์ – บช.สอท. Source: The Thaiger -- 2024-10-08 2
Popular Post lordgrinz Posted October 8, 2024 Popular Post Posted October 8, 2024 If it sounds to good to be true..... I guess a sucker really is born every minute. 1 1 1
JoePai Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 discovered Mae Bainard and his gold shop through livestream videos on the TikTok app. 🤣 2
tomazbodner Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 1 hour ago, webfact said: Not sure "Wanted DEAD or Alive" would help in recovering their losses...
proton Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 1 hour ago, lordgrinz said: If it sounds to good to be true..... I guess a sucker really is born every minute. My Mrs bought a small chain off them via Facebook, still shows me crap from there, bargain diamonds last week! 1
brianthainess Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 Cheap gold for sale on social media, what idiots. 1
hotchilli Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 3 hours ago, webfact said: Maysa and other victims revealed that, although they initially received real gold accessories, they later lost their money when they placed further orders. There was also a VIP group whose members purchased large amounts of gold, often totalling 500,000 baht or more each time. 1
john donson Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 silly people... that's like elon gives you 2 btc, just send one first
worgeordie Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 3 hours ago, webfact said: , 1 gramme of gold for 1,500 baht, whereas the market price is nearly 3,000 baht. None of them thought for even 1 second , something is not right , it smells to high heaven, but greed got the better of them and they handed over their hard earned cash , no sympathy for them at all.,greed prevailed over common sense. regards worgeordie
CanadaSam Posted October 8, 2024 Posted October 8, 2024 3 hours ago, webfact said: The police will interview each victim before summoning the suspect for questioning. He scammed well over 2 million dollars! Do the police really think he is going to wait around in Thailand to be "summoned" and then locked up?
Popular Post redwood1 Posted October 8, 2024 Popular Post Posted October 8, 2024 Well if you cant trust buying very cheap gold from livestream videos on TikTok , who can you trust? 3
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