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Wanted Red Bull heir has left Singapore after abandoning private jet


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2 minutes ago, Artisi said:

Would think the poor little boy would be lucky if he get it up to undertake any form of tossing.

 

He only has to keep patting himself on the head. Im sure he has many cronies doing the same to him constantly.

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1 minute ago, Thunder26 said:

I'm curious, with all the money they have, couldn't they close the case by paying the family of the victim, as it is usually done?

 

I believe it was attempted but the family also wanted justice. And good for them.

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3 hours ago, shady86 said:

I'm pretty sure he could get a passport easily with his wealth

Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
 

USD25k gets a pauper like me an official new passport from a South American country, imagine what is available to him?

Sure Thacksin can give him a few pointers  :shock1:

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20 minutes ago, Reigntax said:
23 minutes ago, Thunder26 said:

I'm curious, with all the money they have, couldn't they close the case by paying the family of the victim, as it is usually done?

 

I believe it was attempted but the family also wanted justice. And good for them.

 

The brown envelopes only clear the civil case, the criminal case the family has no say in.

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7 minutes ago, reenatinnakor said:

He has billions... Why didn't he offer the family more money? 100 million or something would have made him a free man and the other family happy.

Sent from my LG-H990 using Thailand Forum - Thaivisa mobile app
 

Coz they are greedy and selfish and think about nobody but themselves or kin? And they believe they are divine by amassing a fortune. Therefore in this society, they answer to no one. Sadly, in the messed up view of the amart, if the murdered policeman had more "merit," he would not have PUT HIMSELF in harms way and try to shame the family of the accused. As well as put them and the darling prince through such a public ordeal. Shame on the officer. He is to blame. 

Messed up mentality. But it exists. 

 

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1 hour ago, Thunder26 said:

I'm curious, with all the money they have, couldn't they close the case by paying the family of the victim, as it is usually done?

They did pay the victims family 100,000 USD or the equivalent of , but they also made the family sign a document saying that the family could not press charges , regardless of what the keystone cops do , or do not do.

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6 minutes ago, NE1 said:

They did pay the victims family 100,000 USD or the equivalent of , but they also made the family sign a document saying that the family could not press charges , regardless of what the keystone cops do , or do not do.

 

You must be a family member, or may be the lawyer, that you have such sensitive information as which documents they signed.

Edited by janclaes47
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i am really shocked he has been so sloppy.

 

he as had 5 years to plan for this day.

 

many countries he can live in and hide out.

 

he could have gone to frickin' California for gods sake and then got a driver license in a different name.

 

super easy. the police can't ask you about your immigration status when they pull you over.

so no passport needed.

 

millions of illegals living like this is in the USA. 

 

and just change your hair and wear glasses and live low key.

 

or why does he not just go to Laos and live in a giant compound until 2027?

 

 

 

 

 

 

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5 hours ago, jaltsc said:

"The case is being closely watched in Thailand where it has fuelled complaints that the justice system favours the rich and famous, allowing them to break the law with impunity."

 

Might as well complain about the weather. Entitlement for the rich and powerful is prevalent in this part of the world and  is accepted. Poor people state that if they become rich, they would break the law if it benefits them. 

 

People don't want to see justice or a crackdown on these crimes. What they want is the same privilege to get away with breaking the law. 

 

 

So, you mean just like America then :smile:

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44 minutes ago, janclaes47 said:

 

You must be a family member, or may be the lawyer, that you have such sensitive information as which documents they signed.

Probably the family can't claim further civil damages, but it's not stopping criminal charges being pursued. 

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Thai police seek help of Interpol in finding Vorayuth
By The Nation

 

5f45475b128b6ac3448e45a7e0e9dc18.jpeg

Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya

 

BANGKOK: -- The Foreign Affairs Division of the Royal Thai Police force is to contact Interpol to help locate Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya, the heir to the Red Bull fortune who is accused of a hit-and-run collision that killed a police officer in 2012.

 

Deputy national police spokesman Pol Colonel Krissana Pattanacharoen said on Thursday they were seeking an Interpol Blue Notice, which asks member countries to locate, identify or obtain information on a person of interest in a criminal investigation.

 

Once Vorayuth’s location is known, the Office of the Attorney-General can seek his extradition.

 

Thailand has extradition treaties with 16 countries including the United States, United Kingdom and Northern Ireland, Canada, Belgium, China, South Korea, Indonesia, Australia, the Philippines, Cambodia, Hong Kong, Laos, Bangladesh, Fiji, Malaysia and India.

 

An immigration record had shown Vorayuth left Thailand on April 25 for Singapore, where his private jet reportedly remains. It was believed he left Singapore for another destination on a commercial flight.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/news/national/30314236

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2017-05-05

 

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28 minutes ago, webfact said:

Once Vorayuth’s location is known, the Office of the Attorney-General can seek his extradition.

Too little to late! AND a waste of ink. Even with his pea sized brain and resources will figure where to go = untouchable.

 

Just hope the Office of the Attorney-General are feeling good about themselves and the embarrassment they have created. Or maybe just feeling self pity about the inevitable drying up of their "Tea Money".

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The really sad thing about this whole affair is if he would have just shown up once nothing would have happened to him and this incident would be history. It really highlights the sad state thailand is in as a country and as a people as even now with all of this BS he will never face any kind of justice and his family or country doesnt seem to care.

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13 hours ago, Jonathan Fairfield said:

"Having his passport revoked will pressure Vorayuth to travel back to Thailand, as no country would allow him to enter without it,"

R these guys for real, you can buy Citizens all around the world, der..................

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13 hours ago, A1Str8 said:

The ministry said they would revoke the passport as quickly as possible. That was some time ago. They could have revoked it already and then the boy would stop traveling. 

By the way why does he call himself boss? Lol. Looks more like a man, who has to run and hide like an animal, to me. 

Apparently the police call him Boss........

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13 hours ago, 2008bangkok said:

Looks like the world is getting smaller for "Boss". Revoke his passport and he cannot go anywhere apart from expelled back to Thailand.

 

Maybe he should ask Julian if he got any space in the Ecuador Embassy.

He already has a 2nd passport. Plenty of time to prepare for this.

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3 minutes ago, F4UCorsair said:

He may as well be in prison, trying to stay out of sight, looking over his shoulder, living out of a suitcase, and can't freely return home.  Money is of little use now, except to use it trying to hide.

He won't skip a beat with another citizenship, especially living and visiting countries without an extradition treaty with Thailand. 

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Boss is the first to know what is going to happen. That is how he slips through. Plans will probably already have been made for a second passport, if he doesn't hold one already, by the time anything happens (if) on his current Thai passport - same as Thaksin. What is the end game here? Avoidance not justice and if he does receive a future sentence it is likely a light one ...........

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