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Kuwaite Realizes His Date For Nite Is Not A Woman


britmaveric

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Kuwait man realizes his date for the night is not a woman but a man who steals his Pocket PC after he refuses to pay.

03_01_3.jpg

Police were called to the front of the Royal Cliff Beach Resort after a Kuwait National reported the theft of his Pocket PC by a Ladybody. The suspected thief had been detained by hotel security. Police Major Sanae oversaw the case which led to the arrest of Khun Sakhon aged 22.

The story begins when Mr. Mohammed Anhala from Kuwait was tavelling back to the Royal Cliff Hotel after a night out when he spotted what he thought was a woman on the street near the Second Road entrance to the Royal Garden Plaza in South Pattaya. He ordered his taxi to stop and pick up the woman who accompanied him back to the Hotel for an arranged fee.

To Mr. Anhala’s surprise, inside the room, it soon became clear the woman was in fact a transsexual and he decided to send Khun Sakhon on his way. However, the Ladyboy demanded payment for her time which was not forthcoming. He then allegedly stole the Pocket PC from the room and left. After a few minutes, Mr. Anhala realized that the item was missing and pursued the suspected thief who was detained by the entrance to the Royal Cliff. Khun Sakhon confessed to the theft and was charged.

-Pattaya City News

Tuesday 3rd January 2006

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Kuwait man realizes his date for the night is not a woman but a man who steals his Pocket PC after he refuses to pay.

03_01_3.jpg

 

Police were called to the front of the Royal Cliff Beach Resort after a Kuwait National reported the theft of his Pocket PC by a Ladybody. The suspected thief had been detained by hotel security. Police Major Sanae oversaw the case which led to the arrest of Khun Sakhon aged 22.

The story begins when Mr. Mohammed Anhala from Kuwait was tavelling back to the Royal Cliff Hotel after a night out when he spotted what he thought was a woman on the street near the Second Road entrance to the Royal Garden Plaza in South Pattaya. He ordered his taxi to stop and pick up the woman who accompanied him back to the Hotel for an arranged fee.

To Mr. Anhala’s surprise, inside the room, it soon became clear the woman was in fact a transsexual and he decided to send Khun Sakhon on his way. However, the Ladyboy demanded payment for her time which was not forthcoming. He then allegedly stole the Pocket PC from the room and left. After a few minutes, Mr. Anhala realized that the item was missing and pursued the suspected thief who was detained by the entrance to the Royal Cliff. Khun Sakhon confessed to the theft and was charged.

-Pattaya City News

Tuesday 3rd January 2006

Well he must be used to some strange looking women if he couldn`t tell the difference :o

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Again according to PPN he knew she was a ladyboy but neither of them had a condom and he backed out of the deal because of this.

Normally you would think that the ladyboy would be backing onto the deal, but if the no condom requirement was really the case, why didn't Khun Sakhon sakoff? :o

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Kuwait man realizes his date for the night is not a woman but a man who steals his Pocket PC after he refuses to pay.

03_01_3.jpg

Police were called to the front of the Royal Cliff Beach Resort after a Kuwait National reported the theft of his Pocket PC by a Ladybody. The suspected thief had been detained by hotel security. Police Major Sanae oversaw the case which led to the arrest of Khun Sakhon aged 22.

-Pattaya City News

Tuesday 3rd January 2006

Remember this? It was in the paper, so it had to be true! :D

NEW POLICE RULES: No more showing of suspects or victims

BANGKOK: -- Journalists claim new code flies in face of fair and complete reporting. There will be no more pictures in the news of crime suspects covering their faces or of victims.The Royal Thai Police yesterday issued a new regulation on giving information and photo opportunities to the media, in a bid to protect suspects’ and victims’ rights.

The Crime Photographers’ Association of Thailand asked police in an open letter yesterday evening to review the regulation as hampering complete and fair crime reporting, which depends on the police and suspects as well as other sources.

The regulation generally prohibits police from taking victims or suspects to a press conference or letting reporters or photographers take ictures of them inside or outside a police station, on pain of disciplinary action, national police chief General Kowit Wattana said.It brings the release of information by the police into line with the law, especially the Constitution, while letting officers explain the circumstances more briefly to the media, he added.

Assistant national police chief Lt-General Nawin Singhapalin said his team had been detailed to draft rules in line with the new hierarchy as some police regulations in this area were out of date.

Nawin said the parading of witnesses and victims, especially women and children, before press conferences had been a matter for concern, as had the possibility of media personnel embedding with police blowing confidential operations, given that criminals too follow the news.

“There will be no more pictures of a girl wearing a ski mask at a press conference or a suspect being beaten by onlookers during a crime reenactment, because the court says there is no need for such things,” Nawin said, though he conceded that taking a suspect to a scene to detect evidence such as hidden weapons would still be necessary, whereas a re-enactment would depend on the investigators’ judgement from case to case.

“We’ll see no more police on television programmes debating with viewers, because that tarnished the police’s image, though if the officers want to air personal views, they can with the permission of a superior,” he said.

Nawin dismissed speculation that the regulation was in response to Social Development and Human Security Minister Watana Muangsook’s recent request for a disciplinary probe of police officers who objected to his proposal for the searching of motels to detect sexual relations between youngsters.

“We’ve been working on the regulation since January; it’s only come out now because it took a lot of drafting,” he said.

He also said the regulations had nothing to do with the southern unrest and the suspicion in some quarters that the lack of press conferences after arrests there pointed to abductions by police.

--The Nation 2005-11-19

Good thing if it happens, but I'll believe it when I don't see it... :D

Q.E.D. :o

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