PomPolo Posted January 16 Posted January 16 Well this is a new one here - all I can say is good luck getting that 49% back in a company meeting - you can always learn lessons but can't fix stupid! As a Brit not going to defend this Brit 555
kiwikeith Posted January 16 Posted January 16 4 hours ago, dpeti73 said: This happening when you buy something here for 100% price but you can own only 49% and the relationship going wrong Big question is his partner probably put nothing into it, then maybe she had some land , more to come I hope.
soalbundy Posted January 16 Posted January 16 3 hours ago, Baba Naba said: If it was a replacement deed, then it was not forged, just duplicated and it was a legal document. Am I missing something? Yes, he lied to the land office saying the original was lost.
soalbundy Posted January 16 Posted January 16 6 minutes ago, PomPolo said: Well this is a new one here - all I can say is good luck getting that 49% back in a company meeting - you can always learn lessons but can't fix stupid! As a Brit not going to defend this Brit 555 Yes, a right Muppet, he succeeded with the fraud then came back. 1
Lazybones Posted January 16 Posted January 16 4 hours ago, Baba Naba said: If it was a replacement deed, then it was not forged, just duplicated and it was a legal document. Am I missing something? Yes, he forged documents to obtain the replacement deed.
BusyB Posted January 16 Posted January 16 2 hours ago, Ironmike said: You'd need to be a complete moron to return here after doing that hope he rots in the Hilton. I was wondering about that. Maybe he's been set up?
Samh Posted January 16 Posted January 16 3 hours ago, Bundooman said: Yes. He was duplicating it fraudulently. That's illegal, yes? I guess if Thais do it it called replacement of lost deeds. 1
save the frogs Posted January 16 Posted January 16 4 hours ago, MalcolmB said: Our scumbags seem to love Pattaya. Like moths to a flame bashing pattaya every chance you get man there's a lot of nice people in pattaya. scumbags are the minority. 1
norsurin Posted January 16 Posted January 16 4 hours ago, har0165 said: 1. Just enjoy the lifestyle here, don't do business here. As a foreigner, everything is set up to work against you. 2. Don't get married. Speaking from experience. Totally agree with u.I once build a house in surin..after i get divorced i just left.Now my in-laws live in the house.Not a big loss.. about 350.000 baht.Me and my exwife have 2 kids together and i visit the grandparents everytime im in Thailand.Only for a day.Past is past.I will never get married again..i enjoy my freedom.My exwife and our kids moved to my country 18 years ago.Kids get educated and have good jobs here.I meet my kids on a daily basis and sometimes i meet my ex.We talk together but never about our past.A friend of me build a house in khon-kaen.He paid it cash.About 800 K.The house and the land was in his wife name.He find out that she have borrowed 600 K in the local bank with the house as a security for the loan.Well..the marriage ended and he never went back.
PingRoundTheWorld Posted January 16 Posted January 16 3 hours ago, Ironmike said: You'd need to be a complete moron to return here after doing that hope he rots in the Hilton. Before you judge so harshly: who paid for the land? my guess would be he paid 100% or close to it, but when he figured out either she's stepping out on him or about to leave he decided to act. His only mistake was to return to Thailand afterwards. (ok his first mistake was getting married, and second mistake starting a company and buying land with the wife) Legally speaking if he did forge documents then yes, it's fraud, but morally speaking if he was the one who financed the company 100% it is not.
swerve Posted January 16 Posted January 16 Power to this guy. Hope he gets away with it. Thais forge signatures to steal from others regularly. 1 1
SbuxPlease Posted January 16 Posted January 16 Seems like things went sour with the business relationship and he tried to get out in a sneaky way. Who knows, maybe he's playing nasty because she is too, or maybe he's just a fraudster. How could we ever know? Perhaps look at who the initial investment came from. I've heard of cases where a foreigner who could prove to the court that all the funds are from him should be returned to him when the land sells. Courts aren't totally unreasonable in Thailand.
Keeps Posted January 16 Posted January 16 5 hours ago, MalcolmB said: Our scumbags seem to love Pattaya. Like moths to a flame Who, Aussies? This is about a Brit, not one of yours..... 1 1
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 9 hours ago, Baba Naba said: If it was a replacement deed, then it was not forged, just duplicated and it was a legal document. Am I missing something? I'd guess that what you're missing is that he may not have been authorised to sell on his sole signature and the documents were issued based on a false police report as the charges include providing false statements and instructing officials to record false information in official documents.
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 9 hours ago, ronnie50 said: It gets worse than that. If married (to a Thai) and your spouse runs up huge credit card debts or bank loans (with or without your knowledge), the creditors can come after you to recover 100% of the debts if she won't/can't pay. That's incorrect. Loans taken out or debts incurred by spouses solely in their name and only benefitting that person do not become a liability of the other spouse.
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 7 hours ago, Cabradelmar said: Would be interesting to know who put up the initial 20m. Baht Where was it reported that B20m was put up originally? He sold the assets for B20m.
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 6 hours ago, Samh said: He seemed to be a bit young to have the odd £465,000 kicking around. How old is the man whose face you cannot see reported to be? Where was it reported that he had B20m originally?
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 6 hours ago, kiwikeith said: Big question is his partner probably put nothing into it, then maybe she had some land , more to come I hope. Bigger question is, how did you know that to probably be the case? 1
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 5 hours ago, Samh said: I guess if Thais do it it called replacement of lost deeds. Not if they file a false police report indicating the the document has been lost.
Liverpool Lou Posted January 16 Posted January 16 4 hours ago, swerve said: Thais forge signatures to steal from others regularly. Do they? Any examples of this regular activity?
still kicking Posted January 16 Posted January 16 6 hours ago, save the frogs said: bashing pattaya every chance you get man there's a lot of nice people in pattaya. scumbags are the minority. Ablolutely all my friends live in Pattaya, everybody has a good job or is self-employed 1
Captain Flack Posted January 16 Posted January 16 A post breaking forum rules has been removed. Rule 17. ASEAN NOW news team collects news articles from various recognised and reputable news sources. The articles may be consolidated from different sources and rewritten with AI assistance These news items are shared in our forums for members to stay informed and engaged. Our dedicated news team puts in the effort to deliver quality content, and we ask for your respect in return. Any disrespectful comments about our news articles or the content itself, such as calling it "clickbait" or “slow news day”, and criticising grammatical errors, will not be tolerated and appropriate action will be taken. Please note that republished articles may contain errors or opinions that do not reflect the views of ASEAN NOW. If you'd like to help us, and you see an error with an article, then please use the report function so that we can attend to it promptly.
Mickeem Posted January 16 Posted January 16 6 hours ago, RT555 said: $578,000....why come back.. Probably to arrange the assets transferred out of the country with the bank
kiwikeith Posted January 17 Posted January 17 9 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said: Bigger question is, how did you know that to probably be the case? I did not say I know, I said probably, and more to come from this story I hope. We all know it's usually the female that empties the Falang out, but as I said probably and I hope the full story comes to surface.
Thaindrew Posted January 17 Posted January 17 21 hours ago, Samh said: How could the new deeds be in the name of the foreigner. Isn't the legal owner the company? its strange for sure but he was able to sell it using the new deed
rangerboy Posted January 17 Posted January 17 As someone said she only found out when she went to sell it and keep all the money what goes round comes round
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