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Restaurant Owner Exposes Corrupt Officials, Left with Only 2,000 Baht


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A 37-year-old restaurant owner from Nakhon Ratchasima, known by the alias "Mr. Berm," has filed a formal complaint accusing local officials of years-long extortion, which has left him with only 2,000 baht. Berm claims he had been forced to pay monthly bribes to both police and administrative officers, a practice that eventually bankrupted him and led him to seek legal help.

 

On 24 October, Berm presented evidence to lawyer Ronnarong Kaewphet, the chairman of the Justice for All Foundation in Nonthaburi, asking for assistance in exposing the corrupt officials. Berm brought along documents, chat logs, bank transfer slips, and audio recordings, all of which allegedly show how police and local authorities collected money from him.

 

The payments, which he said ranged from 5,000 to 30,000 baht each month, started in October 2022 and continued until April 2024. Despite obtaining verbal permission from district and provincial offices to operate his restaurant-bar without a business licence, Berm was regularly harassed for payments by law enforcement officers under the pretext of licensing issues.

 

He further revealed that his business was also burdened by the police demanding free alcohol, sometimes up to two or three bottles a month, each worth around 300 to 400 baht. This additional financial strain contributed to his restaurant's eventual closure.

 

Facing continuous threats of arrest, Berm said he had no choice but to comply with their demands to keep his business running, making payments three times a month.

 

With his business collapsed and left with only 2,000 baht, Berm and his family travelled from Nakhon Ratchasima to Nonthaburi to meet with lawyer Ronnarong.

 

He stated that, although he risks being charged for participating in the bribery, he decided to come forward because he has nothing left. Berm is determined to expose the corruption that destroyed his livelihood, even if it means facing legal consequences.

 

Lawyer Ronnarong affirmed that the evidence provided, including conversations and money transfers, clearly points to systemic corruption involving both police officers and local administrative officials, reported Daily News.

 

He stated that the Justice for All Foundation plans to take the case to the Crime Suppression Division for further investigation and legal action against the implicated officials. However, Ronnarong acknowledged that Berm himself could also face legal repercussions for his role in paying bribes to law enforcement.

 

Picture courtesy: Daily News

 

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-- 2024-10-25

 

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17 minutes ago, OneMoreFarang said:

Or: Play by the rules and get inspected and look if they can find something illegal.

Yes, and then they will find or plant some evidence of wrongdoing anyway.

 

Just maybe he should have blown the horn a little bit before it all went down the drain. Or, did he think it would get better? 🤣

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4 hours ago, webfact said:

On 24 October, Berm presented evidence to lawyer Ronnarong Kaewphet, the chairman of the Justice for All Foundation in Nonthaburi, asking for assistance in exposing the corrupt officials.

 

4 hours ago, webfact said:

However, Ronnarong acknowledged that Berm himself could also face legal repercussions for his role in paying bribes to law enforcement.

So can we report immigration officers to them ? and will those paying said bribes also face legal repercussions ? Oh hang on no paper trail.

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6 hours ago, OneMoreFarang said:

 

Maybe he should have considered an official written permission. Then he could have refused bribery demands.

 

It seems to me often restaurant and bar owners have choices like do you allow smoking indoors? If yes, pay x amount and the police won't complain. Do you want to open longer, pay extra.

Or: Play by the rules and get inspected and look if they can find something illegal.

 

Obviously, corruption is widespread, but it seems to me many people are willing to pay for the authorities not to enforce the laws.

 

Until they don't, and abide by the rules, nothing will change.

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7 hours ago, webfact said:

The payments, which he said ranged from 5,000 to 30,000 baht each month, started in October 2022 and continued until April 2024. Despite obtaining verbal permission from district and provincial offices to operate his restaurant-bar without a business licence, Berm was regularly harassed for payments by law enforcement officers under the pretext of licensing issues.

It's how Thailand rolls...

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On 10/25/2024 at 5:37 AM, webfact said:

Lawyer Ronnarong affirmed that the evidence provided, including conversations and money transfers, clearly points to systemic corruption involving both police officers and local administrative officials, reported Daily News.

that is also blackmail. I think that 10 years in prison would be a deterrent for the perfect police officers

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19 hours ago, TheFishman1 said:

The police here take their cut and any business that’s opened or they harass them and make them pay TIT

Not true. We have a cafe in NST for several years and never had any issue or request. Police come in a number a times a week for lunch or coffee and pay full price without any question. As for a business license they are readily available and can be gotten no problem and they are not expensive. I suspect there's some hidden info not give in the article that caused the "victim" to not apply for the license. 

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Decades ago I lived in Phnom Penh. A philanthropist was disallowed from opening a medium sized free school because he wouldn't pay bribes. No real reason, nothing below board .. pay or not .. we don't care. The school was never built and he later left the country

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