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King Power Airport Scam...


beej

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This has been going on for a while now, and I've been told of quite a few people about this happening, finally its hitting the news a bit more. It ******* sucks, and stinks of what this place has become.

  

British couple fights Bangkok airport extortionists

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

Times online reported on Sunday the couple 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 April 25. They were accused of taking a Givenchy wallet worth 121 pounds 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. The online claimed 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. They alleged the bribes were paid to an intermediary named Sunil "Tony" Rathnayaka, a Sri Lankan national in his fifties who works as a "volunteer" interpreter for Thailand's tourist police "Our main motivation is to protect other innocent British tourists from being caught up in this nightmare," said Ingram last week. "We 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 pounds from the Britons. He said the money was for police bail and for a payment to a figure he called "Little Big Man" who could withdraw the case against them. "In Thailand everyone knows it's like that," he said. "They can go to jail or they can just pay a fine and go home. It is corruption, you know?" Rathnayaka also agreed that the "bail" — about 4,000 pounds — 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 "bail". 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.
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This has been going on for a while now, and I've been told of quite a few people about this happening, finally its hitting the news a bit more. It ******* sucks, and stinks of what this place has become.

  

British couple fights Bangkok airport extortionists

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

Times online reported on Sunday the couple 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 April 25. They were accused of taking a Givenchy wallet worth 121 pounds 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. The online claimed 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. They alleged the bribes were paid to an intermediary named Sunil "Tony" Rathnayaka, a Sri Lankan national in his fifties who works as a "volunteer" interpreter for Thailand's tourist police "Our main motivation is to protect other innocent British tourists from being caught up in this nightmare," said Ingram last week. "We 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 pounds from the Britons. He said the money was for police bail and for a payment to a figure he called "Little Big Man" who could withdraw the case against them. "In Thailand everyone knows it's like that," he said. "They can go to jail or they can just pay a fine and go home. It is corruption, you know?" Rathnayaka also agreed that the "bail" — about 4,000 pounds — 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 "bail". 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.
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beej, you are right, kings power is more expensive then all other stores. But, I dondt belive the story, there must be something happened and I think the couple doesnt tell the whole truth.

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pluggy don't think two I.T. professionals would go out of the way to shoplift at a store with alot of surveillance cameras. The fact that the newspaper article had a person talking about off someone called "little big man " just screams corruption to me ! just my two cents.

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Shocking stuff

Whether they were guilty or not, hmmm well as the prosecutor's office stated they had no case, I guess that means there was no Givenchy wallet on them, as having the said item, or cctv footage, surely would make a solid case??

Maybe there is more to the story, but certainly sounds like a scam - why would Sunil "Tony" Rathnayaka, a Sri Lankan national receive the 'bail' money??!!! A vounteer translator...lol

Last time I passed through, I looked at getting a carton of ciggies - 999b, I asked the service why buying them in a 7/11 would be cheaper than the duty free? (at the time 630b)

As expected, I got the obligatory uninterested shrug :)

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GM: The King has nothing to do with King Power. King Power is a duty free shop. How could you say such a thing?

I know there is lots of corruption. I have seen some. But in 7 years here I have never had any trouble. I have been pulled over for things I was guiilty of and for some things that were completely questionable. And I preferred the pay as I go option. It was cheaper. And I have never had a scary experience with the police shaking me down in any alley.

My opinion is that for the most part if you keep out of trouble it does not find you that easily

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Admin - whew! That was a close call... the post you removed was well out of order!

PJack - actually I sent him a PM to tell him to get rid of it and warned him about what he said...I hope he understands how serious that was.

Anyway - to change the subject - I too am horrified about this scam - I know Kingpower are horribly overpriced, but to have this sort of thing going on is not acceptable.

I do wonder if Kingpower are actually aware that the store is being used as a venue to target victims - they may not be in on it at all - at least I hope not.

I also hope that the couple get their day in court and hit the scammers for all they have...of course, then it will be dangerous for them to return here, but I guess it is probably off their list of future holiday destinations now anyway...

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Actually I had not read the rest of PJacks reply - he is absolutely right - I have lived in the kingdom 17 years and never had anything wrong. Yes the odd speeding "fine"...but never a nasty word, and they were always extremely polite - and they were right in any case...hehe! I know the BIB get a bad writeup in foreign media - corruption and the like, but I also know that many of them do a very unpleasant job in very unpleasant surroundings, for bugger all regualr (official) pay...

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Anybody who steps foot into one of those King Power rip off shops deserves anything that happens to them.

People need to do their souvenir/last minute shopping elsewhere. I suggest Family Mart.

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The same scam also appeared in a few magazines this year but nothing too big has come of it.

What I understand happens is you by something in the duty free and they slip in the ''stolen'' item extra into the bag without you seeing. Everyone thats been caught by this scam IMO would never steal a thing.

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this unfornutate even reminds of what happened to me a couple of years ago when i purchased something at one of the duty free shops in the new airport. I paid with a 1000 baht note for an article that had cost me just a few hundred bahts. i received the change that included a 500 baht note.THen i went back to BKK a few months later and when paying for something in a shop in bkk with the 500 baht note i brought back, i was told that this was fake money. i apologized saying i was unaware and i paid with another note. i was lucky that the shopkeeper had not reported on me. this is really LOS (Land of Scams).

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I just returned today from a week touring around Thailand with my parents who are over visiting from America. During our travels, we were hit by one scam after another, including one even by the little old grandmotherly laundry lady in Chiang Mai. Needless to say, my parents won't have much good to say about Thailand to their friends when they return home. It seems that the fewer tourists that come, the more the Thais cheat them, resulting in fewer tourists who get cheated ever more. As their host, I was ashamed that my parents had to witness these shameless scams.

As for this scam at the airport, I have heard about it before and the people who are scammed are in no way responsible for what happened to them. The way it works is that the King Power employees put an item into your bag after you have made a purchase, leaving you to assume that it is a free gift. Then they report you to the police for shoplifting.

Some other reports of this scam can be found here:

http://www.google.co.th/search?hl=th&rlz=1C1GGLS_en-GBTH291TH303&q=bangkok+airport+free+gift+shoplifting+scam+police&btnG=%E0%B8%84%E0%B9%89%E0%B8%99%E0%B8%AB%E0%B8%B2&meta=

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primetime - no, it wasn't censorship...you are probably not aware of the extremely tough lesse majeste laws operating here. Coupled with the fact that the comment that was removed was in extremely poor taste from the point of view of the huge majority of Thais, and in fact you will find that Admin has done that person a favour by removing it. No joke...

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