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  #136  
Old 13-06-08, 12:55 AM
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Thumbs down Copped-out Cop cops it! Blacklisted?

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Originally Posted by GWR View Post
What the hell was this cop doing on the loose anyway!:

Note the suspicion at the end of this article that this case might have some connection to either and/or both the 'new' Phuket 'Blacklist' (see previous posts) and the recent tragic deaths of 54 illegal Burmese workers while in transit to work in Phuket:

Quote:
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Ex-cop executed in Patong

PATONG: A former Kathu Police sergeant, dismissed for involvement in human trafficking and blacklisted as a threat to society, was shot dead early yesterday morning outside his home in Patong.

After receiving a call at about 4:30 am, Kathu Police officers found the body of Decho Kaewnabon, 37, also known as “Sia Decho” or “Sergent Decho”, beside his car in Soi Kuan Khok Yang, off Pra Barami Rd. K. Decho’s long-term lover, “K. Orn”, was at the scene.

Paramedics from Patong Hospital pronounced K. Decho dead at the scene. He had been shot three times in the back and once in the head, allegedly with a .38 handgun that had been fired by a man who made his getaway by car.

Kathu Police Superintendent Col Grissak Songmoonnak, who is leading the investigation, told the Gazette that K. Decho had been a sergeant at Kathu Police Station but was dismissed five years ago after being caught and charged for involvement with the illegal trafficking of alien workers.

“While K. Decho was a police sergeant, he was caught transporting unregistered Burmese workers to a construction site in Phuket. He was dismissed from the police force and charges were brought against him. However, court hearings were still underway at the time of his death,” Col Grissak said.

Col Grissak added that investigations will be overseen by Phuket Police Commander Maj Gen Apirak Hongthong as the killing involves a former police officer and a link to human trafficking.

“We are looking at three possible motives for the killing. It may be due to a conflict with another human-trafficking ring or conflict over construction contracts. We are also looking into adultery being a factor,” said Col Grissak.

Reports in Thai-language news media have linked K. Decho to the deaths of 54 Burmese workers who suffocated while being transported in a cold-storage truck from Ranong to Phuket in April.

He was also suspected of being listed on the government’s secret blacklist as one of Phuket’s influential figures.
http://www.phuketgazette.com/news/index.asp?id=6546

Thread on the numerous other examples of serious misconduct in the police:
http://www.angkor.com/2bangkok/2bang...ead.php?t=2305
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  #137  
Old 13-06-08, 03:30 PM
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Post The Disappeared

See also previous post on the disappearance of a prominent lawyer

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Originally Posted by GWR View Post
Link may expire:
http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_....php?id=128027

You could do worse that read this entire thread! There is MORE!
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Another troublemaker missing in Thailand
By Awzar Thi
Column: Rule of Lords
Published: June 12, 2008


[Photo: UPI - Nararat hold a photo of her husband Kamol, a 49-year-old delivery contractor and activist missing since February. (Photo/OSK Network)]

Hong Kong, China — The authorities in Khon Kaen probably did not like Kamol Laosophaphant. His campaign to expose corrupt council dealings over state railway land, among other things, reportedly had a group of police ready to beat him up just last year.

The 49-year-old delivery contractor told his family that he was worried for his safety. In January he took out a life insurance policy but did not let up his fight against the neighborhood “people with influence.”

Kamol, as it happened, had cause for concern. On Feb. 7 he went to the Baan Phai station to lodge one of a dozen criminal complaints that he was preparing against local officials. He never came back to his house only a few hundred meters away.

Kamol’s wife and brothers say that the family had contact with him until around 11pm. His wife missed a call from his phone shortly after. Then the line went dead.

They lodged a complaint with the station the next morning, but it was not taken seriously. The day after that, they made another to the Crime Suppression Division. Yet although his car mysteriously turned up outside a hospital some 20 kilometers to the north a few weeks later, four months on they still don’t know where he went.

Unsurprisingly, neither the provincial police nor those from Bangkok have made any headway. Instead, they have used the same tried and tested methods to derail the case as in other instances where fellow officers have been accused of committing crimes.

Speaking some time after Kamol disappeared, the deputy provincial chief stated that there was no evidence to implicate his boys and that he doubted that Kamol’s criminal complaints were sufficient motive for kidnapping. Instead, he said, the police had pursued the idea that Kamol had run off with a woman, and then that he might have been seized with the need to dump his car and go to Cambodia.

This sort of silliness is floated whenever a troublemaker goes missing in Thailand. After lawyer Somchai Neelaphaijit vanished in 2004 he was said to have run off because he argued with his wife. Later it was shown that the cause was not a marital dispute but a group of at least five men on a Bangkok road, four of them allegedly members of the same police division to which Kamol’s family complained.

But troublemakers like Somchai and Kamol are not typical disappeared persons. Their families consist of people who are reasonably well off, keep documents, can handle computers and government officers alike, and talk to the media.

By contrast, the families of most victims consist of people who haven’t finished school, who farm, sell vegetables and drive taxis for a living, people who are browbeaten by scornful investigators and readily threatened by the perpetrators and their agents. Their loved ones too may be troublemakers of a different type, perhaps having been accused of selling drugs or stealing motorcycles before disappearing, a type unlikely to attract public sympathy.

These people’s stories, the overwhelming number of stories of kidnapping and killing carried out at the behest of state officers in Thailand, rarely get told, let alone documented or investigated.

This is how come Pornthip Rojanasunant has said that her forensic science institute gets around 300 unidentified bodies a year from only the four out of Thailand’s 76 provinces in which it is mandated to work. It is how come when she went looking for Somchai’s remains at a dump she didn’t turn up his bones but did come across others’.

And it is how come when Pornthip proposed establishing a missing persons’ centre for the likes of Kamol Laosophaphant the police obstructed her plans at every step, for so long as there is no institutional response to their crimes, they are not really crimes at all.

Forced disappearances in Thailand are not a problem particular to the south of the country, not a peculiarity of internal conflict as they are in some parts of the world. Rather, they are a nationwide feature of what can be labeled as orderly lawlessness.

Orderly lawlessness is not lawlessness as usually understood. It is not anarchic, not law’s total absence but rather its diminishing to part time status; its delimiting from place to place and person to person, the expedient cutting and pasting of its norms and procedures, rather than the ensuring of its consistent adherence. Orderly lawlessness sometimes calls upon the police to behave according to law and sometimes contrary to it. At other times it leaves them to decide for themselves.

That’s why Kamol has not been seen since February and why his disappearance in Khon Kaen was just as probable as that of someone in Narathiwat, Bangkok, Kalasin or Tak, and also why no government of Thailand any time soon will bring a stop to the forces that made it possible: because like torture, forced disappearance is not an ailment but a symptom.

All this, of course, is academic to Kamol’s family. They need answers today. They need supporters for their campaign, people to keep his name alive as best they can. They need lawyers too, lawyers willing to try things that haven’t been done before, like lodging a case under section 90 of Thailand’s criminal procedure code, which allows for complaints to the courts where someone has been illegally detained.

Section 90 has been used with good effect recently, but only in cases of acknowledged custody, not those where the authorities have denied holding a person. Still, as habeas corpus has in some common law countries been stretched to include victims of disappearances last seen with police, it could be worth a try. And as Kamol is gone anyhow, what is there to lose?

Quote:
Awzar Thi is the pen name of a member of the Asian Human Rights Commission with over 15 years of experience as an advocate of human rights and the rule of law in Thailand and Burma. His Rule of Lords blog can be read at http://ratchasima.net
http://www.upiasiaonline.com/Human_R...thailand/7378/

Last edited by GWR; 13-06-08 at 03:34 PM..
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  #138  
Old 14-06-08, 07:32 PM
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Post Mentally unstable Kamala Kop

Judging by accounts I have heard of alcoholic cops, who haven't been to work for years, it's almost impossible to move a cop to a .... more suitable position:

Quote:
Friday, June 13, 2008
Kamala residents seek suspension of troubled cop

KAMALA: About 30 local residents this morning met Kamala Police Deputy Superintendent Lt Col Winai Kongkeaw to demand that one of his officers be removed from active duty because his behavior was “dangerous”.

At 11 am, the residents, including Phuket Provincial Administration Organization (OrBorJor) representative Sontaya Soontarak and other elected officials, explained to Col Winai that a police lieutenant under his command had been exhibiting strange and sometimes dangerous behavior following brain surgery some seven months ago, after he was involved in a car accident.

After the one-hour meeting, K. Sontaya told the media that villagers felt the officer’s erratic behavior required that he be suspended until his condition can be treated.

“Villagers say [the lieutenant] is not the same as he was before his operation… We don’t want him fired, just to get the treatment he needs.”

A villager who identified himself only as “Jamnong” said the officer sometimes went running around the village, staring people down with wild eyes and waving his gun around.

In one instance, he handed his weapon to a civilian and encouraged the person to shoot him with it, he said.

“We are afraid somebody is going to get shot. It’s like he has two personalities. Sometimes he is very nice, but sometimes very strange,” K. Jamnong said.

Col Winai told the Gazette that the villagers did the right thing by reporting these incidents, which he would raise with his commander.

“Before the accident he was a good policeman and had a good relationship with villagers. But after he came back from the hospital his public behavior has reportedly changed.

“People say they have seen him waving his gun around or parking by the side of the road and dancing while still in uniform,” he said.

“Together with the superintendent, I will consider these reports, which are serious because as a police officer he is in charge of security. We haven’t seen anything out of the ordinary at the police station, but we will check his health and find an appropriate solution,” he said.

19:25 local time (GMT +7)
http://www.phuketgazette.com/news/index.asp?id=6548
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  #139  
Old 25-06-08, 01:15 PM
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Unhappy Charoen Wat-aksorn and two killers dead in clink

Short excerpt from a long article
Quote:
4 years on from the loss of Charoen Wat-aksorn: What has society learned from his death?
Ongard Decha
24 June 2008


[Photo: Prachatai]

Charoen Wat-aksorn, together with the Bo Nok-Hin Krud villagers, had been struggling against the power plant project of the Gulf Power Generation Company in Prachuab Kiri Khan Province. In the end, the government had to halt the project. Then he and the villagers joined together in a struggle against a business which had trespassed on public land to build shrimp farms. This campaign was to protect the collective rights of the villagers.

On the night of 21 June 2004 at around 10.00 pm, Charoen was shot dead by gunmen at the Bo Nok intersection after he got off a bus and was heading into the village.

At first, we were led to believe that there had been some progress in the case after five suspects were arrested. Two of them, Mr. Saneh Lekluan and Mr. Prachuap Hinkaew, stated that they were the culprits but did not speak about the person that had hired them to kill Charoen.

The police later arrested two politicians who were brothers and a local lawyer. The case then was transferred to the Department of Special Investigation (DSI). The father of the two politicians was later arrested but there was widespread criticism at the lack of development in the investigation. The gunmen remained in prison, while the three other suspects were set free.

On 21 March 2006, before the hearing of witnesses began, Mr. Prachuap was found dead in prison. It was alleged that he died from a bacterial infection. As the court was hearing witness testimony, on 3 August 2006, Mr. Saneh was also found dead.

These incidents led many to think the case was increasingly suspicious because of the mysterious deaths of the two gunmen while they were detained in prison.

...........
Read more:
http://www.prachatai.com/english/news.php?id=683

Translated by Pokpong Lawansiri
Thai Language Source:
http://www.prachatai.com/05web/th/ho...ey=HilightNews

Last edited by GWR; 25-06-08 at 01:24 PM..
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  #140  
Old 21-07-08, 12:41 PM
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Thumbs down Land fit for bar-crawl cops?

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Quote:
From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, Saturday July 19 2008


[Photo: http://www.andrew-drummond.com]

The family and friends of a young backpacker who was gunned down by a policeman in Thailand have begun a nationwide poster campaign in Canada to demand the killer be brought to court.

Leading the ‘search for justice’ is Ernest Del Pinto, from Calgary, Alberta, whose 25-yr-old son was shot dead by a Thai policeman in the northern Thai village of Pai.

City buses in Calgary are now carrying the posters ‘Canadian Murdered in Thailand. When will be justice be served?’. The campaigners, who are also getting together a petition, plan to take the campaign to buses in Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver.

The move follows lack of action in Thailand and the exposure by the Thai National Human Rights Commission of a cover up into the ‘murder’ in January this year.

Mr. Del Pinto is also asking Canadians to stay away from Thailand until the matter is resolved.

Leo Del Pinto was shot in the chest and in the head by a Thai policeman in January. A Canadian friend Carly Reisig, 24, from Chilliwack, B.C. was also shot in the chest but she survived.

After the shootings local police chief Colonel Sombat Panya claimed that Canadians had made an unprovoked attack on Police Sergeant Uthai Dechawiwat in the northern village of Pai after he broke up a fight between them.

Uthai, he claimed, shot in self defence as he fell to the ground. His automatic had a hair trigger.

However witnesses and forensic evidence revealed by Thailand’s leading pathologist Dr. Pornthip Rojanasund contradicted the police story.

It was Leo who as he fell to the ground. He was shot in the chest and then a second shot was aimed straight at his head as he fell.

Witnesses under protection also said that Sergeant Uthai pistol whipped Ms. Reisig before shooting her under her left breast.

Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej ordered the Thai Department of Special Investigation to take up the case four months ago. Thai police are notoriously inefficient in investigating their own officers.

No policeman has yet to be prosecuted in connection with a government drugs war in Thailand which began in 2003 during which over 2,000 were killed, killed mainly, say human rights organisations, by policemen.

Family spokesman Ross Fortune said: “The officer concerned is still free and walking the streets and drinking in the bars. Is it not right for the family to feel upset?”

In Bangkok Kamol Kamultrakul of the Thai Human Rights Commission said: “We will be in touch with the DSI to discuss progress.”

Four years ago British backpackers Vanessa Arscott, 23, and Adam Lloyd, 24, from Devon, were gunned down by a Thai policeman in Kanchanaburi on the River Kwai.

Local witnesses to the shooting were scared to give evidence against the policeman, Sergeant Somchai Wisetsingh. But he was convicted and jailed primarily on forensic evidence.
http://www.andrew-drummond.com/2008/...ce-july-19-08/
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  #141  
Old 05-08-08, 11:40 PM
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Exclamation Traffick Policeman cops it!

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Bangkok traffic police officer shot dead by CM police during chase

Saksit Meesubkwang
Pol. Cpl. Rak Kamnasak (34), of the Highway Traffic Control Center 2 in Bangkok, was shot dead by Chiang Mai Muang district police officers on July 24 during a raid on a Chiang Mai house.

Information had previously been received that a property in Grand View Village had been identified as the base for distribution of pornographic CDs and amphetamines. When officers arrived at the house with a search warrant, Rak took his gun and fled, pursued by the officers. During the chase, he fired at the officers, who returned his fire, resulting in his being shot four times. He died at the scene. A pistol and spent bullets were found next to his corpse; 11,020 baht, 7 ATM and credit cards and two ID cards were found in his clothing. A police officer was shot in the thigh during the chase.

A search of the leased property revealed a vehicle, 3 computers, 3000 CDs, 50 YaBa pills, 2 M16 bullets, gambling equipment and a list of several customers’ names. All were confiscated to be used as evidence. The dead man had, according to reports, been selling illegal CDs in the Night Market and along the Thai/Myanmar border in Chiang Saen, and had been leasing the Grand View Village house for approximately one year in order to use it as a headquarters for his illegal operations.
http://www.chiangmai-mail.com/curren...hd3%20class=ll

Last edited by GWR; 05-08-08 at 11:46 PM..
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