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Police Rescue Student After Online Scam Costs Family ฿1 Million

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Pictures courtesy of Daily News

Police have rescued a male university student who was deceived into believing he was implicated in a money laundering case, leading to his confinement in a rented room and the loss of almost 1 million baht from his family. The intervention by the Anti-Online Scam Centre (ACSC) brought an end to the ordeal and reunited the student with his parents. Authorities said the case highlights the escalating sophistication and psychological pressure used by online fraud networks.

The incident came to light on 13 January, when senior police officers ordered an urgent investigation following a complaint from the victim’s parents in Buriram province. The family reported that scammers had claimed to have kidnapped their son and had already coerced them into transferring funds between 11 and 12 January, totalling more than 1 million baht. Investigators traced the student to an apartment building in Mueang district, Pathum Thani province and coordinated with local police and building staff to access the room.

Upon entry, officers found the student alone and visibly distressed, confirming that he had not been physically abducted. During questioning, he said the perpetrators contacted him by phone and video call, posing as officers from Mueang Loei Police Station and officials from the Anti-Money Laundering Office. They falsely accused him of involvement in money laundering and demanded money transfers to “verify his innocence”.

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The scammers initially persuaded the parents to transfer 490,000 baht. They later escalated the deception by claiming the student was in danger and instructing him to move to short-term accommodation, stage an assault, bind himself with rope, and apply fake blood. He was then forced to make a video call to his parents to demand a further 500,000 baht as a fabricated ransom.

After locating and securing the student, police immediately escorted him to be reunited with his parents. The family embraced and thanked officers for the successful rescue. Police confirmed that the losses stemmed entirely from fraud and intimidation, not an actual criminal investigation.

Daily News reported that Police Lieutenant General Jiraphop Phuridej warned parents, children and young people to remain calm and sceptical in similar situations. He stressed that genuine police or state officials do not conduct investigations by phone or video call, do not send arrest warrants online, and never demand money transfers to prove innocence. Victims or those at risk were urged to contact local police or call the 1441 hotline immediately.

Key Takeaways

• Scammers impersonated police and anti-money laundering officials to extort over 1 million baht from a student’s family.

• The victim was psychologically coerced into isolating himself and staging evidence to support a fake ransom demand.

• Police reiterated that authorities never investigate crimes or request payments through online communications.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now from Dailynews.2026-01-14

 

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