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Thai-British Beauty Queen Duped Out of 4M Baht, Suspect Arrested


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Posted

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Picture courtesy: MGR online

 

Thai authorities have arrested a 40-year-old woman believed to be part of a scam operation that duped Thai-British beauty queen Charlotte Austin out of 4 million Thai Baht. The suspect, known only as Parichat, was apprehended in Chaiyaphum province over the weekend.

 

Pol Lt Gen Trairong Phewphan, acting commissioner of the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau, detailed that Parichat was involved in a scam run by a group based in Cambodia. The suspect and her husband allegedly travelled illegally from Sa Kaeo province into Cambodia, where Parichat was coerced into opening a bank account for a Chinese-led scam operation.

 

Once in Cambodia, Parichat was taken to a building where the scam was being orchestrated. Here, she was paid a nominal fee of 3,500 Thai Baht to open a bank account, using her identity, for the gang. This building housed roughly 20 Thais, and within its walls were mock offices posing as legitimate Thai authorities.


Lt Gen Trairong revealed that the beauty queen’s funds were first transferred into Parichat's account, subsequently converted into digital currency, and then moved to an account linked to a Chinese suspect. The investigation continues as authorities work to dismantle the broader network involved.

 

This alarming scheme unraveled after Charlotte Austin, the 5th runner-up in Miss Grand Thailand 2022, was deceived by a call on December 7th. The caller posed as an official from Thailand's Department of Special Investigation, falsely implicating her in a money laundering case associated with Stark Corporation.

 

In a state of fear and confusion, Austin was instructed to transfer 4 million Baht under the pretence that this would absolve her from suspicion. She made a series of transactions totalling the amount but, as anticipated by the perpetrators, never saw her money returned.

 

Austin's ordeal has thrown a spotlight on the increasingly sophisticated methods employed by scammers and the cross-border challenges faced by law enforcement in tackling these crimes. The arrest of Parichat marks a significant step forward, but the ongoing investigation underscores the complexity of dismantling such operations and bringing all responsible parties to justice, reported Bangkok Post.

 

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-- 2024-12-16

 

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Posted
Just now, bradiston said:

All it does for me is to shine a spotlight on the increasing stupidity of the victims. At what point does an enormous red flag not get raised, causing you to figure something looks just a little sus? Illegal entry into Cambodia? Opening a mule account? Forcing you to transfer millions? Are these every day activities?

Perfectly put.  Idiots!

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Posted

Maybe too much make up affected her brain for being so gullible. It always amazes me these “beauty queens” having millions of Baht. Prize money in these beauty contests is not great. How do they acquire such wealth?

Posted
1 hour ago, bradiston said:

All it does for me is to shine a spotlight on the increasing stupidity of the victims. At what point does an enormous red flag not get raised, causing you to figure something looks just a little sus? Illegal entry into Cambodia? Opening a mule account? Forcing you to transfer millions? Are these every day activities?

Greed is a wonderful cloak to conceal all these con-artists 

Posted

These scammers are incredibly convincing. My half Thai, half English friend was almost caught out by the exact same scam. 

She called bs on it at the beginning but they had copies of her Thai passport and ID as well as knowledge of her Thai bank accounts. They knew where she worked and showed her an arrest warrant and court case documents with her name on it. These documents had the official stamp on them and when our workplace lawyers took them to a judge, he said they were absolutely legit until he noticed that the case number didn't make sense. 

They sent her to a clone website representing the courts where she was able to view the case against her. She even had a video call with the caller who was dressed in official police uniform and could see other "police officers" in the background. They were threatening her with arrest at work and that they would take away her kid. 

All of this caused a huge amount of stress and panic and in situations like this, you don't think clearly. 

 

So not all victims a greedy or stupid.

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Posted

Do you think this girl would’ve known when she’s being illegally entering Cambodia going to a warehouse and she’s thinking is legitimate when she got back to Thailand to open her account she should’ve went right to the police first anyways the liability of some of these people are just unbelievable TIT

Posted
4 hours ago, webfact said:

 but, as anticipated by the perpetrators, never saw her money returned.

 

 

sorry lovey !     your 4 mil is long gone ... :violin:

I love it when Thais scam Thais,  makes my day worthwhile ... 

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