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Man Arrested Over Fake Czech Massage Job Scam in Bangkok

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Pictures courtesy of Thaitabloid

Police have arrested a 37-year-old man accused of involvement in a scam that lured victims with false promises of massage and childcare jobs in the Czech Republic, causing losses amounting to several hundred thousand baht. The suspect was detained in Bangkok after allegedly allowing his bank account to be used in the fraud, which affected multiple victims seeking overseas employment.

The arrest was announced on 20 January 2026 by Pol Maj Gen Wittaya Sriprasertparb, commander of the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Division (ATPD). Acting on his orders, officers from Sub-Division 4 of the ATPD arrested Mr Ekarin, aged 37, under an arrest warrant issued by the Criminal Court. The warrant, numbered 4268/2568 and dated 22 July 2025, charges him with jointly deceiving others by claiming he could arrange overseas employment and unlawfully obtaining money or benefits through that deception.

The case began after a group of victims filed complaints with the ATPD, stating they had been contacted by a Line application user named “jj”. This individual claimed to be able to arrange massage work and childcare jobs in Prague, Czech Republic. Victims were told to transfer money in advance as processing fees, with assurances that the funds would be refunded once employment commenced.

After transferring the money, victims reported that they could no longer contact the Line account. It then became clear that no jobs or travel arrangements existed and the victims were unable to travel abroad as promised. Authorities later confirmed that the total financial losses from the scam amounted to hundreds of thousand baht.

Investigators gathered evidence and issued summonses for two suspects. The first suspect, Mr Kittipong, reported to investigators and confessed to the charges. The second suspect, Mr Ekarin, failed to appear, leading the court to issue an arrest warrant, after which police tracked him down and arrested him in the Yannawa district of Bangkok.

Thaitabloid reported that during questioning, Mr Ekarin stated that in 2023 he sold his bank account to an acquaintance of a friend for 500 baht. He claimed there was no further contact after the sale and said he later learned that the account had been used in the scam. Police have now transferred him to investigators at Sub-Division 4 of the ATPD for further legal proceedings.

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Key Takeaways

• Police arrested a 37-year-old man linked to a scam offering fake jobs in the Czech Republic.

• Victims lost hundreds of thousand baht after transferring advance “processing fees”.

• Investigators are continuing legal proceedings against all suspects involved.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now from Thaitabloid 2026-01-22

 

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Oh, how many stupid people there are. Trusting a person you just met in LINE app and never knew him or her before.

55 minutes ago, Hakuna Matata said:

Oh, how many stupid people there are. Trusting a person you just met in LINE app and never knew him or her before.

Yeah. and especially a bloke who is covered in tattoos. They should have cxeched his credentals out better.

On 1/22/2026 at 5:10 AM, Georgealbert said:

Thaitabloid reported that during questioning, Mr Ekarin stated that in 2023 he sold his bank account to an acquaintance of a friend for 500 baht.

There's really no hope if there are people around who are willing to "sell" their bank account for a measly 500 baht - that well and truly makes Thailand a paradise for scammers!

The suspect was detained in Bangkok after allegedly allowing his bank account to be used in the fraud, which affected multiple victims seeking overseas employment.

Czech mate

2 hours ago, Hakuna Matata said:

Oh, how many stupid people there are. Trusting a person you just met in LINE app and never knew him or her before.

Very true- but many meet complete strangers through thaifriendly and other Thai dating sites every day

Get the word out far and wide:

If you have to pay in advance for a job, or even pay the fare to the interview, DON'T. It's a scam.

Only ever work for pay, never ever pay for work. Anywhere. No deposits, fees, processing costs, licensing, visa, transport, contract notarisation etc.

Never! Ever!

If it's a genuine offer, they'll cover it. If they can't or won't, then they can't or won't pay you either.

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