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Thailand agrees to British police help over murders


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Posted

The law in the UK is that should a citizen be murdered abroad and the body repatriated

then an independent autopsy has to be carried out before the body is handed back to the family, //

The law in Thailand is that a foreigners who die here (usually) get an autopsy,

and that bodies must be embalmed before being shipped backed to their country.

I wonder what a second autopsy could give on such bodies ?

Where do you get this from ?

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Posted

I'm not an expert on DNA and forensic investigation, but should the UK investigators be denied access to the suspects in order to obtain DNA could they not have the parents report to the Embassy or High Commission in Myanmar for a swab? RTP can't stop them from doing this because it is outside Thai jurisdiction. Then compare to perpetrators DNA back in the UK? I couldn't imagine the UK government/police and/or the victims' families NOT having as much evidence taken from the bodies before they were to be interred in such a criminal case. Makes no sense to bury potential evidence in an unresolved case

Well, strange and absurd things happen in cases like this when people's lives are suddenly in shambles, so I wouldn't be too sure that the families were thinking clearly enough to demand anything specific. But apparently, and from what other posters who seem well-informed have written on this thread in reply to my first post, the British police must have done all the necessary sampling. I sure hope they did, and a lot of people hope the same thing.

You mention the possibility that UK investigators might be denied access to the Burmese suspects. Wouldn't that be a clear indication that there's a monstrous set up behind their indictment, though ? Would the local cops take the risk of causing a huge outcry by denying access ? I really don't think they're that thick. If there was a set up, the people who did it would look for other, less conspicuous ways of clouding the facts, and tampering with the evidence is the first thing that comes to mind.

The strange fact in the present situation is that everyone more or less expects (and wants) the UK guys first and foremost to investigate the investigation, not so much the murders themselves.

It goes to show how little trust people have in the local police force. And when I say 'people', I don't mean only the foreigners. To all those who keep writing 'Thailand has done this, Thailand has said that, Thailand is trying to cover up this or that', I would like to remind that an enormous number of Thai people are just as critical and suspicious as the farangs about the way this case has been handled so far by 'their' police.

If it turns out that there was indeed a manipulation of any kind I can foresee how hysterical the Thai Bashing Brigade will get on this Forum, regardless of the fact that only a few people would actually be responsible for this manipulation.

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

My Prediction: The DNA results will match. Some will then claim the results were somehow rigged by the Thai police. The two will be convicted anyway. And so it goes..

And my prediction: The DNA results will match. The Police rigged them. The British Police will independently verify everything. The RTP will then be caught out for being the thieving, corrupt, disgusting, nasty, lying, scum they really are (yes I'm generalizing). They will also ask for the "mafia" families to supply DNA for testing. That will be refused. The suspects will "commit suicide" or simply be convicted anyway regardless of what the British Police do or say. Everyone forgets and life goes back to how it was. Welcome to Thailand - the Land of (fake) Smiles.

I've thought from the beginning that the police have the right individuals and here's why. Having lived in southern Florida for a number of years, I've seen drifters and the kinds of crimes drifters tend to commit, and this crime has had "drifter" written all over it from the beginning IMO.

As the old saying goes: a dog won't take a dump in his own backyard. I cannot easily see someone who lives on Koh Tao and makes their living there doing something like this. Maybe, but I don't think so.

Ah irony ...

With an alias like "Tom Joad" I assume you've done a close read of the book, or at least watched the movie, and that you have a high degree of appreciation for how local bosses and authorities often use, manipulate and abuse vulnerable migrant workers.

You should also be able to appreciate how the attitude you revealed in your post is one of the main reasons many local bosses and authorities around the globe feel they can get away with anything, and direct their preferred outcome of any situation.

And while most top dogs may be smart enough not to take a dump in their own backyard and have the self-control to avoid doing so, the arrogant youthful pups and street dogs they hang out with may not be so wise or have so much self-control.

It remains to be seen how this plays out, and I don't know which way it will turn or who the actual killers are (nobody does right now), but I think we're beyond labeling tendencies at this point. If we're not, then there's a lot of stereotypical tendencies that could be pointed out on both sides of the debate.

In any event, it will certainly be interesting to watch it unfold. I just hope that at the end of the day all of those involved in this horrific crime are arrested, charged, convicted and appropriately punished, whoever they are.

BTW if you're going to slap a label on somebody, I don't think "drifter" is the right one for a young man who has stayed in one location for a couple of years working and sending money to his family. Would someone from Texas who moved to Florida and lived in the same place and worked the same job for three years be considered a "drifter"? Regardless of guilt or innocence, "migrant worker" is a much better way to describe them. And if the two Arakanese men aren't "drifters" as you refer to them as, that kind of shoots down your whole theory, doesn't it?

Edited by Bleacher Bum East
  • Like 2
Posted

OH YEAA

This is what we wanted all along, objective reached.

BIG thanks to everyone who made a fuss and helped get the word out.

For once its one up to the good guys. clap2.gif

It's not over till the fat lady sings!

Haven't heard anything about the skinny lady (Ms Porntip) being allowed anywhere near the case, either. The RTP do NOT like her looking into their cases. She finds things she shouldn't. Now, boys, this is about Kho Tau, not bombsniffers so please stay on topic now i have mentioned her, which IS topic related..

Posted

Why was Nomsods father allowed on the crime scene. Why would he want to be there. I find that very strange. Could any member of the public simply pop over and help out...

Because he owns the island and the police.

He could literally get away with murder anything.

Even the president of the United States or the PM of the UK is not above the law ,Justice will be served one way or another ,nobody should be above the law !

Posted

This is good news in respect of the Burmese , their guilt or innocence should now be resolved in a fair and transparent fashion. I sincerely doubt the full story will ever emerge or that justice will be fully served but a crumb of comfort will be the knowledge that social media can be a force to be reckoned with in future.

Posted

If the UK didn't give a shit they would not get involved....Sure, all you crap talkers wait and see what happens.....

I really hope I can shoot a few here down in flames..........I really hope so.....thumbsup.gif

  • Like 2
Posted

Just saw on my twitter feed .. DPM Prawit Wongsuwan said British police will be only observers and will not involve in the investigation into the murders on Koh Tao.

Posted

The law in the UK is that should a citizen be murdered abroad and the body repatriated

then an independent autopsy has to be carried out before the body is handed back to the family, //

The law in Thailand is that a foreigners who die here (usually) get an autopsy,

and that bodies must be embalmed before being shipped backed to their country.

I wonder what a second autopsy could give on such bodies ?

Where do you get this from ?

UK FCO -- Information Relating to Deaths in Thailand

Repatriation

Thai undertakers will provide the special caskets required for the international carriage of human remains. A local civil registry death certificate, a certificate of embalming, and a certificate permitting transfer of the remains to the UK is required to repatriate the deceased.

https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/284901/Information_Relating_to_Deaths_in_Thailand_Jan_2014_-_lastest_edition.pdf

Posted

Just saw on my twitter feed .. DPM Prawit Wongsuwan said British police will be only observers and will not involve in the investigation into the murders on Koh Tao.

I saw too mate. Now's when we see how genuine the PM's words and promises were

Posted

Really? You believe there are some British police officers 100% fluent in Thai, some 100% fluent in Burmese and, some 100% fluent in the uncommon dialect spoken by the 2 accused.

Are you Thai?

Somebody working for the British Government certainly is. There was a full translation of the FCO statement released in parallel to the English announcement. I doubt they had somebody run down the local Thai restaurant to get it done.

Thanks for that. Aren't there some real dummies on this forum? The British police (as well as other European police) have people working for them who speak fluent Thai, Russian, French, and on and on. In Los Angeles, the L.A.P.D. have officers and detectives who speak fluent Thai, Vietnamese, Chinese, Korean, Russian, Spanish........come on people, these are professional homicide detectives from a special unit trained in International matters. Do some of you think the U.K. is going to send a few village bobbies or hobby bobbies to Thailand for an International murder investigation? Some of you should use your brains before posting!

Brains, now that is a real stretch for some.

Posted (edited)

My rating for both David Cameron and General Prayuth Chan-o-cha has just stepped up a notch,

Both of them are knob ends.

As for Prayuth, this is just a humiliating climb down as Thailands place in the world pecking order finally sinks in. He now knows hes a big fish in a small pond.The UK means 1 million tourists and billions in trade each year to Thailand. Thailand means a few high so students and a few cases of Scotch in trade to the UK.

He simply is in no position to start a diplomatic incident from this position. Sadly it took him weeks to realise this.

I very much doubt if calling him that is allowed in the new regime.

Do you think if Cameron tells British people they can't travel to Thailand, they'd listen to him?

Edited by Neeranam
Posted

johnthailandjohn, jdinasia, sichonsteve and stutteringparrot seem to have gone strangely quiet. Can't think why.

Probably licking their wounds and waiting on more instructions -- stay tuned ................

  • Like 1
Posted

Interviewed as he landed at Suvarnabhumi, the self-appointed PM stated that the British police would be observers, not conduct their own investigation (which seems obvious, but some TV members apparently needs to be reminded that a foreign police force has no jurisdiction outside of its own territory).

I would post the link to the interview, but unfortunately, it's on the website of a newspaper which shall-not-be-named-and-definitely-not-linked-to.

Posted

Going to be interesting to read to posts here IF the British police confirm, that the Thai police has indeed done an excellent job and arrested the right guys!!whistling.gif

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

Interviewed as he landed at Suvarnabhumi, the self-appointed PM stated that the British police would be observers, not conduct their own investigation (which seems obvious, but some TV members apparently needs to be reminded that a foreign police force has no jurisdiction outside of its own territory).

I would post the link to the interview, but unfortunately, it's on the website of a newspaper which shall-not-be-named-and-definitely-not-linked-to.

not sure about that.

in 2002 australian police conducted investigation in Bali

327856-bali-bombing-aftermath.jpg

116424-bali-bombing-10th-anniversary-bef

Edited by kaobang
Posted

Interviewed as he landed at Suvarnabhumi, the self-appointed PM stated that the British police would be observers, not conduct their own investigation (which seems obvious, but some TV members apparently needs to be reminded that a foreign police force has no jurisdiction outside of its own territory).

I would post the link to the interview, but unfortunately, it's on the website of a newspaper which shall-not-be-named-and-definitely-not-linked-to.

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand back to square one :/

Posted

They already know. MI6 exists for a reason & they are not fools.

You really think Britain's MI6 exists would get involved? Don't you think they might be a little busy doing their real job at the moment? Do you know what their remit is?

Maybe the SAS and SBS are already here in droves too. Disguised as tourists sitting on bar stools recounting their adventures, or dive instructors, or TEFLers?

Maybe the SAS and SBS are already here in droves too. Disguised as tourists sitting on bar stools recounting their adventures, or dive instructors, or TEFLers?

Strange you should say this, but I have often wondered if there hasn't already been UK police (probably CID) on the island posing as tourists the moment this all started to look sour.

That often sat in the back of my mind. Obviously not able to openly investigate, but to sit in bars chatting with people and collecting intel.

You think they wouldn't do this?

I would suggest there are always a few here - floating around, finger on the pulse, collecting intel, watching for their own crims on the lam, watching out for others looking towards the UK - you don't really think the western world countries sit round at home hoping to have a good insight to what is going on outside their own country, do you?

Posted (edited)

johnthailandjohn, jdinasia, sichonsteve and stutteringparrot seem to have gone strangely quiet. Can't think why.

Probably licking their wounds and waiting on more instructions -- stay tuned ................

Those guy's remit was to convince everyone on this forum that the Burmese where the guilty party. Sadly in the end they didn't even believe it themselves.

They are now starting a 10 year stretch or are a part of the concrete evidence we were all supposed to buy into.

Edited by bertty
Posted (edited)

Interviewed as he landed at Suvarnabhumi, the self-appointed PM stated that the British police would be observers, not conduct their own investigation (which seems obvious, but some TV members apparently needs to be reminded that a foreign police force has no jurisdiction outside of its own territory).

I would post the link to the interview, but unfortunately, it's on the website of a newspaper which shall-not-be-named-and-definitely-not-linked-to.

While in other newspapers it states that they are being allowed to 'help' or 'assist' in the investigation and also DNA retesting was also specifically pointed out by diplomatic sources.

But I see you have spent all day now trying to badger the entire thread that the UK HAVE NO RIGHTS.....

It is personally starting to pi** me off.

You clearly are of the deranged mindset that you don't WANT the UK police to have any hand in clearing this whole charade up.

It seems to fit your wishes that they are snubbed out.

I seriously have to stick you on the ignore list...... I don't trust your desires in this. I find your attitude as about as distasteful as it gets.

Consider yourself exposed.

Edited by wackybacky
  • Like 1
Posted

Australian Travel Warning for Thailand is currently: "Exercise High Degree Of Caution"

If Thailand PM doesnt play ball I'll make sure the Aussie Embassy gets enough complaints about assaults and robberies that they will up the warning to "Do not Travel"..

If other countries follow suit then tourism should drop another 50% which will result in a few billion baht lost.

Maybe then they can reconsider the importance of protecting hiso's and decide if they have any respect for foreigners.

Posted

Interviewed as he landed at Suvarnabhumi, the self-appointed PM stated that the British police would be observers, not conduct their own investigation (which seems obvious, but some TV members apparently needs to be reminded that a foreign police force has no jurisdiction outside of its own territory).

I would post the link to the interview, but unfortunately, it's on the website of a newspaper which shall-not-be-named-and-definitely-not-linked-to.

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand back to square one :/

well not really, a few smart coppers will collect a mile of good info standing around as "observers", this can be feed into the right areas - including any "proper" legal assistance the accused have looking after their interests, also to the UK news papers etc. Don't ever think that all the Poms are a useless lot of umbrella carrying top hat wearers.

  • Like 1
Posted

The UK cops must have something imo. They could've easily got DNA from family members of the accused or perhaps from the accused themselves via the Burmese authorities. The UK cops have access to the bodies. If the DNA matched (and only the two suspects' DNA was present), perhaps they wouldn't be that bothered imo, especially if they felt it wasn't tampered with. If the DNA was 'planted' perhaps there is DNA of one of more people apart from the two accused. Perhaps there is no DNA present from the two Burmese. Who really knows?

Either way, I don't think the cops would be coming over if they didn't smell a rat on this one. Hopefully, they'll be left to do a proper job without interference.

Big test for Thailand coming up.

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