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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
National

15 nabbed in raids over scams

Deputy national police chief Torsak Sukvimol, centre, on Thursday shows luxury cars seized from Chinese and Thai suspects who were arrested over their links to a string of illegal businesses and call centre scams. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)

Police have arrested 15 Chinese and Thai citizens over their suspected links to a string of illegal businesses and phone scam rings, from which they seized assets valued at over 42 million baht, deputy national police chief Torsak Sukvimol said on Thursday.

Their arrest followed a crackdown ordered by national police chief Damrongsak Kittiprapas following a raid on a nightclub masquerading as a car wash in Yannawa district, and the death of a Chinese tourist after a night out drinking at a venue run by Chinese businessmen in Ratchada district.

The suspects were arrested on Wednesday following raids at three different locations across the capital.

Pol Gen Torsak said police first raided a house on Soi Kanchanapisek in Prawet district, where they arrested five Chinese nationals and three Thais.

They seized three cars, two motorbikes, 58 bottle of foreign liquor, 13 mobile phones, three notebooks, and 7 million baht in cash at the location.

The police then raided a house in Prawet district which is owned by a Chinese national named Lin Yian, where they found Mr Lin's father and two Thais.

Many items, including three cars, a luxury wristwatch, a passbook, suspicious ID cards and passports, as well as 7.5 million baht in cash were seized by police.

At Supalai Oriental Sukhumvit 39, they apprehended four Chinese nationals and seized eight brand-name bags, cigars, playing cards as well as 28 million baht in cash.

A check on Mr Lin's ID card showed that it was illegally produced by a state official in Chiang Mai's Fang district, using the identity of a Thai citizen named Yapasor Sawanyakeeree, who lives in the countryside as a corn farmer. Mr Lin also holds Thai and Cambodian passports.

The man is known to run a restaurant near the notorious Kings Romans Casino, in the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone (SEZ) over the border in Laos.

Police are expanding the investigation to see if there are other state officials, politicians and senior police officers involved.

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