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Drunk Driver Kills Teen in Sattahip Wrong-Way Crash

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Picture courtesy of TMN

 

A 13-year-old boy was killed in Sattahip, Chonburi Province, t around 01:00 on 9 October 2025, when a drunk driver travelling the wrong way collided with his motorcycle. The crash took place on Sukhumvit Road near kilometre marker 2, leaving the victim dead at the scene.

 

Police, led by Pol. Lt. Pongphisut Mahasetthaworakun of Sattahip Police Station, attended the scene along with rescuers from the Sawang Rojanathammasathan Foundation. They found a black Mitsubishi Triton pickup truck facing the wrong direction, with severe front-end damage. Debris from the boy’s red-and-black Honda Wave 125 motorcycle was scattered some 20 metres from the collision site.


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The victim was identified as Thanachot Chanachot, a student at Phlu Ta Luang Wittaya School. He was found dead near the rear of the pickup truck. The driver, Wanlop Phrommasuwan, 59, a lorry driver, remained at the scene without injury and admitted to drinking high-proof liquor after work before driving the wrong way.

 

Wanlop told police he intended to travel from kilometre marker 1 to kilometre 10 but had driven just two kilometres when the crash occurred. Police confirmed his blood alcohol level was well above the legal limit. He was arrested and taken to Sattahip Police Station for questioning.

 

The incident has prompted public concern over road safety and drink-driving enforcement. Authorities reiterated that drunk driving remains a major cause of fatalities in Thailand and urged drivers to adhere to traffic laws. Local residents and the victim’s school are mourning the loss. Police have charged Wanlop with drunk driving causing death and legal proceedings are ongoing.

 

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Key Takeaways

 

• A 13-year-old boy was killed when a drunk driver went the wrong way on Sukhumvit Road in Sattahip.

• The driver’s blood alcohol level was over the legal limit, leading to his arrest.

• The crash has sparked calls for tougher traffic law enforcement and stricter drink-driving penalties.

 

Related Stories

 

British-motorcyclist-killed-in-Chiang-Mai-crash-horror

 

Chinese-driver’s-turn-causes-fatal-Pattaya-motorcycle-crash

 

 

image.png  Adapted by Asean Now from TMN 2025-10-11

 

 

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  • emptypockets
    emptypockets

    13 year old riding a motorbike at 1 in the morning. Very sad.

  • For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.     Ok. I

  • I would say the major cause of fatalities is the failure of 'authorities' to implement the traffic laws.

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  • Popular Post

13 year old riding a motorbike at 1 in the morning.

Very sad.

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

Authorities reiterated that drunk driving remains a major cause of fatalities in Thailand and urged drivers to adhere to traffic laws.

I would say the major cause of fatalities is the failure of 'authorities' to implement the traffic laws.

1 minute ago, mikebell said:

I would say the major cause of fatalities is the failure of 'authorities' to implement the traffic laws.

 

Surely it's more drivers not knowing them or if they do ignoring them?

That’s tragic.   A college friend was killed by a drunk driver during Thanksgiving break his freshman year.   I hate drunk drivers. 

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

13-year-old boy was killed in Sattahip, Chonburi Province, t around 01:00

I couldn't imagine at the age of 13 out at 1am riding my motorbike on the road. 

The world is a strange place. Poor parenting. 

 

We won't see that 13yo out riding his motorbike on the road at 1am anymore 

  • Popular Post

Issue number one is the fact that the police simply do not patrol the roads, nor do the lazy and nearly useless highway patrol, so people can get away with nonsensically driving on the wrong side of the road.

 

Issue number two is that traffic safety is just not taught nor enforced, and issue number three is that people are not sufficiently penalized for these kind of transgressions. This should be considered manslaughter and this clown should serve at least 20 years in a penitentiary, where his life will be altered in ways he could not have even imagined prior to turning the wrong way onto that road. 

3 hours ago, emptypockets said:

13 year old riding a motorbike at 1 in the morning.

Very sad.

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.

 

2 hours ago, mikebell said:

I would say the major cause of fatalities is the failure of 'authorities' to implement the traffic laws.

 

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

2 hours ago, SAFETY FIRST said:

I couldn't imagine at the age of 13 out at 1am riding my motorbike on the road. 

The world is a strange place. Poor parenting. 

 

We won't see that 13yo out riding his motorbike on the road at 1am anymore 

 

You have no idea  if it is poor parenting. What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling? Life is not easy for Thailand's poor. I doubt very much you will care if you see the boy on his motorbike anymore, so spare us the insincerity.

 

  • Popular Post
20 minutes ago, Patong2021 said:

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.

 

 

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

 

You have no idea  if it is poor parenting. What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling? Life is not easy for Thailand's poor. I doubt very much you will care if you see the boy on his motorbike anymore, so spare us the insincerity.

 

All of this happened in a culture where there is a lot of 'poor parenting', where there is just about not enforcement of traffic laws, and where the punishment for causing a tragedy on the roads carries less punishment than being late on taking care of a permission to stay in Thailand. Poor parenting would statistically have more of a chance of occurrence in this instance...

Using "Imagination", to come up with an excuse that would diminish responsibility for an event, should not be a way out of this...

 

What if, what if, and perhaps due to being poor, or any other explanation straight out an imaginary scenario..

22 minutes ago, Patong2021 said:

What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling?

Agree, what if he was out investigating a nearby UFO landing, protecting his family 

  • Popular Post
24 minutes ago, Patong2021 said:

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.

 

 

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

 

You have no idea  if it is poor parenting. What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling? Life is not easy for Thailand's poor. I doubt very much you will care if you see the boy on his motorbike anymore, so spare us the insincerity.

 

 

There is no excuse for a 13 year old to be riding a motorcycle at any time of the day/night.

A child should not have access to the keys of any motor vehicle, ever.

13 years old is barely a teenager, it is not mature.

 

Any parent that allows his children to carry out illegal activities, knowing that the act could cause serious injury or death to their child or to other innocent people, is not a good parent.

 

Anyone that thinks that it is ok to let a child ride a motorcycle on public roads is not ok in the head.

Would you allow your underage child to play unaccompanied with a loaded gun, after all he may be mature (in your eyes)?

 

 

 

  • Popular Post
41 minutes ago, Patong2021 said:

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.

 

 

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

 

You have no idea  if it is poor parenting. What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling? Life is not easy for Thailand's poor. I doubt very much you will care if you see the boy on his motorbike anymore, so spare us the insincerity.

 

 

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member

So, there are no adult's nearby that could have run the errand to your imaginary 24 hour pharmacy?

No neighbors, after all, it is an emergency.

 

or returning from a friend's home.

So you think that this is an acceptable excuse?

Never mind the driving incident, children should not be allowed out unaccompanied at 1am.

Allowing children to roam freely at that time in the morning is bad parenting.

 

 

30 minutes ago, Bert got kinky said:

 

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member

So, there are no adult's nearby that could have run the errand to your imaginary 24 hour pharmacy?

No neighbors, after all, it is an emergency.

 

or returning from a friend's home.

So you think that this is an acceptable excuse?

Never mind the driving incident, children should not be allowed out unaccompanied at 1am.

Allowing children to roam freely at that time in the morning is bad parenting.

 

you do not know the family circumstances. if someone banged on the door at 1 Am and asked you to run to the store to pick up  female sanitary supplies, would you do so? How about  toilet paper or baby formula or diapers?  How do you know an adult did not sent the boy out on the errand?  maybe there are no neighbors would help. I know that my neighbors would not welcome my waking them at 12:30 Am to run an errand for me. Would you do so?

 

I walked home from my friend's house one night after midnight. I was 14. I had stayed to watch a sports match, I was a responsible youth and my parents trusted me. On another night, my parents were on holiday. My older siblings were tasked with looking after me. I went over to my friends place and came back at around 3 Am, because I was annoyed by the debauchery going on. My siblings were either stoned or screwing and were unaware I had gone off. You know nothing about the  kid and assume the worse or that he is to blame or his parents are responsible for the tragedy. The only one responsible is the  drunk driver.

1 hour ago, Andre0720 said:

All of this happened in a culture where there is a lot of 'poor parenting', where there is just about not enforcement of traffic laws, and where the punishment for causing a tragedy on the roads carries less punishment than being late on taking care of a permission to stay in Thailand. Poor parenting would statistically have more of a chance of occurrence in this instance...

Using "Imagination", to come up with an excuse that would diminish responsibility for an event, should not be a way out of this...

 

What if, what if, and perhaps due to being poor, or any other explanation straight out an imaginary scenario..

 

well, you have no idea why the boy was out and have drawn negative assumptions. The deceased did not do anything wrong. It was the drunk driver who was speeding the wrong way down a road who is in the wrong.

35 minutes ago, Patong2021 said:

It was the drunk driver who was speeding the wrong way down a road who is in the wrong.

 

Not defending the truck driver in any  way  - but how do you know he was speeding??

 

If he was driving at 40km/h, and the motorcycle approached him at 90km/h - the impact would look like this.

I can't quite believe the number of people blaming the 13 yr old or his parents for the ridiculously stupid act by the drunk driver.  RIP.  I hope the key is thrown very far away after the drunk gets locked up.

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2 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.

 

 

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

 

You have no idea  if it is poor parenting. What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling? Life is not easy for Thailand's poor. I doubt very much you will care if you see the boy on his motorbike anymore, so spare us the insincerity.

 

 

 

Are you some kind of jerk, or are you just posting for the hell of it?

 

No 13 year old should be on a motorbike  -  at any time of day - for a sick relative or not.

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4 minutes ago, hotandsticky said:

No 13 year old should be on a motorbike  -  at any time of day - for a sick relative or not.

 

Hi - again - not trying to be a jerk, but, where do you live in Thailand?

In the semi-rural area that I live in - most kids aged 8 or older ride motorbikes. I live in a flat area , but the kids are too lazy to ride bicycles! and get around on these scooters/motorbikes.  Riding them to school - (even Primary School) is accepted practice around here.

We gave our 13 yo a bike a few months ago - to get to the bus stop for school.  She started going 'everywhere' on it - abusing the trust we had given her - so we have now taken it away from her. 

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Of course the drunk driver on the wrong side of the road has to take legal responsibility for this prang.   RIP young fella.

 

As a side note, I used to live in Trang City.   During the day, the police would set up their usual traps at the usual times and pull over motorcycles to do licence/rego checks then pocket the bribes.

 

But after 10.00pm or so, the streets belonged to gangs of underage kids on their loud bikes, sometimes three or four up, no helmets, no lights, screaming through red lights at blind intersections.......and the cops would do NOTHING. And there lies a significant cultural factor in Thailand's appalling fatality rate.

 

Circle the correct answer

 

The Royal Thai Police are:

  1. Lazy

  2. Incompetent

  3. Corrupt

  4. All of the above

 

  • Popular Post
2 minutes ago, G Rex said:

 

Hi - again - not trying to be a jerk, but, where do you live in Thailand?

In the semi-rural area that I live in - most kids aged 8 or older ride motorbikes. I live in a flat area , but the kids are too lazy to ride bicycles! and get around on these scooters/motorbikes.  Riding them to school - (even Primary School) is accepted practice around here.

We gave our 13 yo a bike a few months ago - to get to the bus stop for school.  She started going 'everywhere' on it - abusing the trust we had given her - so we have now taken it away from her. 

 

You are familiar with driving laws in Thailand?

 

I don't give a flying fart what happens in EVERY area of Thailand with underage kids driving illegally. It is neither culture nor 'the Thai way' - it is ILLEGAL for good reason. A 13 year old, let alone an 8 year old, has the maturity to deal with situations that crop up on Thai roads. 

 

I am sure that you are not a "jerk" but anyone who tries to justify a 13 year old being on a motocy at 1.00 am is being a jerk.

 

Please don't take it personally - I am taking issue with the post content, not the poster.

7 minutes ago, hotandsticky said:

You are familiar with driving laws in Thailand?

 

Yes - of course.

There are laws , just nobody follows them , because there is NO enforcement.

I agree that there is absolutely no justification for this boy to be out driving at 1am. 

Unfortunately, in my area, the 13 yos riding at night here are often high on yaba too. 

None of this is 'right' - but it is, unfortunately, commonplace. 

 

you're not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy

17 minutes ago, G Rex said:

 

Hi - again - not trying to be a jerk, but, where do you live in Thailand?

In the semi-rural area that I live in - most kids aged 8 or older ride motorbikes. I live in a flat area , but the kids are too lazy to ride bicycles! and get around on these scooters/motorbikes.  Riding them to school - (even Primary School) is accepted practice around here.

We gave our 13 yo a bike a few months ago - to get to the bus stop for school.  She started going 'everywhere' on it - abusing the trust we had given her - so we have now taken it away from her. 

 

I live near to the accident and also in rural Buriram - 19 years so I understand what you are saying. 

 

I also fully accept that you are trying to do your best as a parent. BUT, giving conditional access to the use of a motocy is like giving them a pack of 20 cigarettes and telling them they only smoke 2. Despite undoubted peer group pressure you have, IMO, made the right decision withdrawing the privilege. 

 

It is not your problem that the police are at every school gate and oversee the arrival of kids driving illegally (helmets, age, insurance, tax etc) and do sweet FA about it  -  actually, it is your problem because you have a 13 year old who expects to do the same as her school chums.

 

"Thailand has a high annual death toll from motorcycle accidents, with recent figures indicating over 14,000 motorcycle-related deaths in 2024 alone and an average of over 20,000 total road deaths per year, the majority of which involve motorcyclists. Motorcyclists account for roughly 80% of all traffic fatalities in the country". 

 

You are in danger of perpetuating those numbers.....

3 minutes ago, G Rex said:

 

Yes - of course.

There are laws , just nobody follows them , because there is NO enforcement.

I agree that there is absolutely no justification for this boy to be out driving at 1am. 

Unfortunately, in my area, the 13 yos riding at night here are often high on yaba too. 

None of this is 'right' - but it is, unfortunately, commonplace. 

 

you're not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy

 

 

It is a pity that your post sounds as if it condones what happens.

 

"We can't change it" is a valid but pitiful response.

 

What would I do?

 

 

As a smart ar5e I would teach my kid to ride a bike on waste ground/safe area and promise to buy them a bike when they are of legal age.

What a p*&& poor bunch of whiners there are today

 

ALL blaming the 13 year old when he was killed by a drunk driver who admitted to drinking

 

snip from the OP

 

 high-proof liquor after work before driving the wrong way at 1 AM.

 

NOBODY seems to care about the Thai boy or his family except to mention (in passing) that they were guilty of "poor parenting".

 

I know nothing about the boy or his family, not do I believe anybody poster here does, but so many posters jump to a conclusion long before any facts are known.

 

The fact that the drunk who killed the boy had been drinking  high-proof liquor after work before driving the wrong way. His words and not mine.

 

Is anyone blaming him?

 

No, they blame a 13 year old boy and his parents.

6 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

How can you be sure it wasn't the bike that was traveling above the speed limit. It's more likely. I've seen enough young kids riding their bikes like a bat out of hell. Often on the wrong side of the road. Have some on my car-cam.

Mind you, it's very seldom that you'll find me on the road after 1am.

5 hours ago, G Rex said:

 

Hi - again - not trying to be a jerk, but, where do you live in Thailand?

In the semi-rural area that I live in - most kids aged 8 or older ride motorbikes. I live in a flat area , but the kids are too lazy to ride bicycles! and get around on these scooters/motorbikes.  Riding them to school - (even Primary School) is accepted practice around here.

We gave our 13 yo a bike a few months ago - to get to the bus stop for school.  She started going 'everywhere' on it - abusing the trust we had given her - so we have now taken it away from her. 

I agree with your remarks that kids do drive motorbikes here, responsibly as well, as here it appears to be about the same as riding a bicycle......

The distinction here is that this kid was driving at 1 a.m., should have been at home sleeping, at a time when drunks could also be on the roads

The drunk driver most likely learned his "skills" (or habits) from riding a motorcycle at 13yrs old. Big issue here with people driving pick-ups etc in the same fashion as they ride motorbikes. 

9 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

For all you know he may have been on an errand for something for a sick family member, or returning from a friend's home. He may also have been a responsible and mature kid.

 

 

Ok. In this case, it was caused by an irresponsible drunk who was speeding. The impact damage indicates that he was traveling above the posted speed limit.

 

You have no idea  if it is poor parenting. What if the kid was sent  to fetch medicine for a sick parent or sibling? Life is not easy for Thailand's poor. I doubt very much you will care if you see the boy on his motorbike anymore, so spare us the insincerity.

 

 

Apologist nonsense... a 13 year old on a Motorcycle at 1am...  along with 1000's of others nation wide...   they don't all have unwell parents with no other choice but to get medication from a pharmacy that isn't open at 1am !!!! 

 

 

The age of the boy is somewhat moot though and we've been side tracked - this is another pished up driver who behaved with complete disregard for the law and lives of others...  A police force and authorities are so apathetic they 'will not' deal nation wide social-epidemic....

 

 

 

6 hours ago, G Rex said:

Hi - again - not trying to be a jerk, but, where do you live in Thailand?

In the semi-rural area that I live in - most kids aged 8 or older ride motorbikes. I live in a flat area , but the kids are too lazy to ride bicycles! and get around on these scooters/motorbikes.  Riding them to school - (even Primary School) is accepted practice around here.

We gave our 13 yo a bike a few months ago - to get to the bus stop for school.  She started going 'everywhere' on it - abusing the trust we had given her - so we have now taken it away from her. 

 

…and in doing so, you may already have saved her life. Now you have the chance to ensure she doesn’t climb onto the back of anyone else’s motorcycle – especially without a helmet.

 

But as you rightly pointed out, children on motorcycles are the norm here. You were, at first, accepting of that norm – as are so many others. And yet, even after more than two decades of living here, I still find it deeply troubling.

 

The acceptance and tolerance of drink driving in Thailand remains astonishing, the apathy of the police forces outrageous. It has been this way for decades, without any meaningful effort toward change – purely reactionary, addressing each tragedy only after someone has been killed. Proactive measures are rare, and the occasional half-hearted checkpoint is the best we usually see.

 

Just because something has become a social norm does not make it right. As foreigners, it is entirely reasonable for us to hold – and voice – opinions on such issues. In fact, many of my close Thai friends share the very same concerns.

 

We do not surrender our common sense or intelligence the moment we settle in another country, nor should we be expected to silently accept behaviours that cost lives through sheer recklessness. If we care, we have every right – and perhaps even a duty – to speak up - or at least voice concern where we can, though admittedly it is a fruitless battle (though I have persuaded many Thai friends to use a child-safety seat in the car, and ensure their kids are belted, its astonishing how many well educated people still don't see the issue while at the same time - they'll ride a high-end bicycle and go skiing with helmet, they won't wear a seatbelt here !!!).

 

Those who insist we are “just guests” and should keep our opinions to ourselves reveal, in my view, nothing more than self-centred apathy. They simply do not care.

Very tragic and sad for the young boy.

 

This time the driver being a local, cannot put the blame on one of us awful phalangs. 

 

Sad for the child's family. 

 

Unfortunately, nothing really will be done to fight against drunks on the road as with all the corruption aroung, even a blind man caught driving a car could possibly bribe his way through the checkpoint. 

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