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Airport scams net 8,000 pounds a pop!

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  • Airport scams net 8,000 pounds a pop!

    I find the following story so unbelievable...
    Like if someone was organizing a campaign against Thailand ?

    June 28, 2009
    British couple fights Bangkok airport extortionists
    Two tourists were held by an airport gang until they paid up £8,000
    Michael Sheridan

    A British couple who were falsely accused of shoplifting in Bangkok airport and were forced to pay £8,000 in bribes to secure their release are to take legal action for compensation.

    They were the victims of an extortion racket that has ensnared other foreign travellers at the airport, which handles most of the 800,000 British visitors to Thailand every year.

    Stephen Ingram, 49, and Xi Lin, 45, both technology professionals from Cambridge, were detained by security guards as they went to board Qantas flight QF1 to London on the night of Saturday, April 25.

    They were accused of taking a Givenchy wallet worth £121 from a King Power duty-free shop and were handed over to the police. An official release order from the local Thai prosecutor€™s office subsequently conceded there was no evidence against them.

    They were freed five days later after a frightening ordeal in which they said they were threatened and held against their will at a cheap motel on the airport perimeter until they had handed over the money.

    The bribes were paid to an intermediary named Sunil €œTony€ Rathnayaka, a Sri Lankan national in his fifties who works as a €œvolunteer€ interpreter for Thailand€™s tourist police (motto: €œTo serve and to protect€).

    €œOur main motivation is to protect other innocent British tourists from being caught up in this nightmare,€ said Ingram last week. €œWe intend to take every legal means to recover our money and obtain justice.€

    Last week Rathnayaka admitted in a telephone interview that he had received cash and money transfers amounting to more than £7,000 from the Britons. He said the money was for police bail and for a payment to a figure he called €œLittle Big Man€ who could withdraw the case against them.

    €œIn Thailand everyone knows it€™s like that,€ he said. €œThey can go to jail or they can just pay a fine and go home. It is corruption, you know?€

    Rathnayaka also agreed that the €œbail€ €” about £4,000 €” was never returned to Ingram and Xi. Thai law says bail should be refunded.

    In a detailed statement the couple said they were first detained at an airport office of the tourist police and later taken to cells at a police station in an isolated modern building on the fringes of the airport.

    Rathnayaka confirmed that he met them in the cells on the morning of Sunday, April 26, and arranged the €œbail€. The police kept the couple€™s passports. Rathnayaka then escorted Ingram and Xi to the Valentine Resort, a lurid pink motel a few hundred yards from the runways. They were to remain there for four days.

    During that time, Rathnayaka warned them not to tell anyone about their plight, especially the British embassy, lawyers, friends, family or the press.

    However, on April 27 they sneaked out of the hotel and found their way to the embassy, where they met Kate Dufall, the pro-consul.

    According to the couple, she told them the embassy could not interfere with the Thai legal system and put them in contact with Prachaya Vijitpokin, a lawyer.

    Vijitpokin and a colleague, Kittamert Engchountada, of the Lawyers Association of Thailand, urged them to stay in the country to fight the case and have since assembled a dossier for potential prosecutions.

    However, Ingram said the couple were so terrified by this stage that they decided to meet the demands for money, which they raised by bank transfers from Britain direct to Rathnayaka€™s account. The Sunday Times has copies of the transactions.

    Ingram and Xi were put on a British Airways flight to London early on Friday, May 1, having received their passports with official documents from prosecutors and police stating that no charges were to be brought against them.

    They have said they are willing to return to Thailand and testify to try to stop the extortion if the government will guarantee their safety.

    That could become a priority for Thailand, which has suffered a series of blows to its tourist industry through economic and political upheaval.

    Inquiries last week established that Rathnayaka and his accomplices have continued preying on tourists who end up in police custody after being accused of theft from the airport duty-free shop. €œI am just helping people,€ he explained. €œI don€™t get paid to do this. All the embassies know me.€

    Officials at the Danish embassy confirmed that a Danish woman fell into Rathnayaka€™s hands about two weeks ago and was allowed to leave Thailand only after handing over more than £4,500.

    When a Sunday Times journalist posing as a businessman in trouble contacted Rathnayaka last week, the first thing he said was: €œIf it€™s a case, for example, of shoplifting at the airport duty-free then I can help. Bail is 100,000 baht (£1,800).€ He later declined an interview, saying the Sri Lanka embassy €” which employs him as an interpreter €” had told him not to speak.

    The Foreign Office said consular officials had offered to raise the case with the Thai authorities at the time but had been asked by the couple not to intervene.

    A spokesman for King Power duty-free said the company had strict rules for evidence to be submitted to the police in shoplifting cases, but added: €œWe cannot control what happens after that.€

    Additional Reporting: Andrew Chant

  • #2
    sounds like thailand
    wont stop me going, as im returning home they must think WTF how he get here

    stevie

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    • #3
      LINK to the story HERE!  

      Business as usual in the good old LOS!

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      • #4
        The story is so totally unbelievable.

        The guy that told them not to speak with the embassy...

        First they are afraid, then bold enough to "sneak out" of their hotel.

        Huh? hotel? They weren't even arrested, or what?

        Then the embassy didn't want to "interfere with the Thai legal system", but then the foreign office wanted to raise the case..

        The embassy and the lawyers should have been able to find out if there were charges against them??

        Then, provided with lawyers and Embassy backing they are "terrified" and chose to pay ??

        huh?

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        • #5
          (manarak @ Jun. 28 2009,05:01) The story is so totally unbelievable.


          First they are afraid, then bold enough to "sneak out" of their hotel.

          Huh? hotel? They weren't even arrested, or what?

          huh?
          They drugged the guard that was standing outside their pink hotel room door using Diethyl Ether they cooked up themselves using a stick on underarm deodorant, 15 match sticks, & a pencil eraser.  MacGyver used this same formula in the episode that aired January 14, 1985 to escape from the Mexican Chicken farmer that held him hostage in the brick out-house with a broken toilet. Don€™t you remember?
          Attached Files

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          • #6

            LOL - looks just like my toilet after I tried spicy indian food for the first time.

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            • #7


              As Warner Wolf would say, "let's go to the videotape".

              Videotape

              King's Power Statement

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              • #8


                aaaaaaaah

                at last the only viable explanation.
                Their story just didn't make sense.

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                • #9
                  I think we should just boycott King Power
                  seriously pig headed,arrogant,double standard smart ass poster!

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                  • #10
                    to me it looked like they shoplifted so fuck them !
                    dont you think brits have enough shit thrown at them when were abroad because of the stupid minority.

                    cost them in the end 555


                    steviep

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                    • #11
                      I've been biting my lip on this for a while, speculating whether they were actually innocent or guilty. The video surveillance shows she is a thief and a fraud and it is plain for all to see now. Their credibility is now 0 so everything about their original story is bound to be made up. Especially got to love this gem: "Our main motivation is to protect other innocent British tourists from being caught up in this nightmare".

                      Should add that slandering a business in Thailand is an extremely serious offense. King Power can get a huge judgement over this if they push for it and I hope they do. Consider the notstickman guy was prosecuted for slander and lost a huge amount of dosh over a small thing he wrote on the web.

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                      • #12
                        There is a scam going on. I will steer clear of the duty free zone at the airport (cheaper to find what you want in the city anyway).

                        Journalist Andrew Drummond has been covering this the most:

                        http://www.andrew-drummond.com/2009/06/28/809/


                        Police volunteer admitted that 160 tourists were scammed (in April) including six Britons.


                        I can only summarise the case as this. People, whether guilty or not, are being shaken down for large sums of money after being arrested by King Power security at Bangkok airport.  A clear accusation says statements are changed in the police station to suite the result. I am not unused to these things.

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                        • #13
                          I'm not a fan of King Power and their monopolistic hold on the airports in Thailand but they did everything perfectly to explain their side of the story.

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                          • #14
                            Please see the attached article about a scam where travellers are framed for shoplifting in Bangkok airport and have to pay large amounts of money to get off. Very scary stuff! If you are travelling in or out through Bangkok, it might be a good idea to stay away from the duty-free shops till this gets sorted out. This is getting a lot of press (it was on the front page of the Singapore Straits Times) so hopefully the Thai government will do something to sort this out quickly.

                            http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8154497.stm
                            Pete

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                            • #15

                              Pete's and Manark's topics merged together

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