Who is Mae Moo?

Sunday, 18 May 2025

No malice intended; brutal lender; parting gift for druggie

Enterprising killer

Sai Han arrested for shooting to death his wife’s employer in Phetkasem

A Myanmar man arrested for shooting to death his wife’s employer in Phetkasem says the gun went off accidentally during a struggle.

Police nabbed Sai Han, 23, a Shan state man, for killing Yuttharoj Suwansumet, 70, a fitness centre owner and his wife’s boss, who had earlier offered him a job.

Sai Han shot the victim at his home on May 12 following a struggle when Yuttharoj tried to stop him from seeing his wife.

After the shooting, which Sai Han claims was accidental, the suspect took the victim’s gun, phone and vehicle and fled.

Police caught up with him in soi On Nut 65 the next night, by which time he had found a place to stay and a new job.

Sai Han, who has been working as a painter in Samut Prakan, told police via an interpreter that he went to visit his wife initially on May 8 at her boss’ house.

She had been working there since late last month, and he went there to ask his wife for 1,000 baht. He saw her boss, Yuttharoj, carrying a bag that contained a remote for the house door, car keys and a handgun.

Later, Yuttharoj invited Sai Han to work with him, so the suspect went back to Samut Prakan and quit his job.

However, his wife spoke to Yuttharoj, telling him her husband liked to drink and often abused her, which led to Yuttharoj deciding not to hire him after all.

This annoyed Sai Han, who on the day of the incident hired a taxi from Samut Prakan to return to the house.

He intended to “clear things up” with his wife but not to harm her, the suspect told police.

Arriving there, Sai Han borrowed the driver’s phone to call his wife to open the gate. No one came out, so he climbed over the gate.

When he reached the Thai-style house, he found Yuttharoj holding a gun, barring his way.

Sai Han insisted he would go in to see his wife, and the victim fired two warning shots into the ground.

Sai Han thought he had nothing to lose, so he jumped on the victim to protect himself, he said, resulting in a struggle over the weapon. It accidentally discharged, shooting Yuttharoj dead.

Sai Han’s wife came out to find out what happened, and Sai Han slapped her before grabbing the victim’s gun and bag.

He drove away evidently without knowing where to go, colliding with a motorcycle at a nearby intersection and grazing several houses as he sped away.

A group of locals surrounded the car and tried to open it, but he managed to escape.

Later, he drove to the area near the police Patrol and Special Operation Division on Vibhavadi Rangsit Road, where the car stalled.

The enterprising Sai Han got out and called a taxi to Rangsit Market before checking into a hotel for one night.

The next day, he took a bus to look for work in Soi On Nut 65 and found a job at a food shop.

He also took the victim’s phone to a phone shop to have it unlocked, paying 500 baht.

He planned to redeem it once he earned enough money.

However, he was arrested later that night at a rented room in Prawet district.

Police found Sai Han in possession of a .38 calibre revolver, along with one mobile phone, an ID card, and credit cards belonging to Yuttharoj.

He was taken for questioning at Phra Khanong station, where he denied planning the shooting, but declined to apologise to the victim’s family.

He denied having a grudge against the victim. He was arrested for premeditated murder, theft and burglary.

Kneecapping ‘accidental’
Chanaphol Liempet, nabbed after shooting a debtor in the knee

A Songkhla teen who employed brutal methods to collect outstanding debts has been nabbed after shooting a debtor in the knee.

Hat Yai police caught Chanaphol Liempet, 19, after calling borrower Sudarat Paenloi, 39, to his home and shooting her over a 3,000 baht unpaid debt.

Earlier, as she arrived outside his place, one of his henchmen is seen in CCTV images pulling her by the hair and striking her over the head with a gun.

He drags her inside, where Mr Chanaphol shoots her.

He told police he “merely” meant to shoot her in the foot but when she raised her leg to block the bullet, the bullet entered her knee instead.

The suspect fled the scene to a resort in the municipality, where police caught him later that night.

They seized evidence including a .357 calibre handgun, and bullets from a .38 calibre handgun, along with the white Isuzu D-Max pickup in which he fled.

Mr Chanapol admitted the offence and was charged with attempted murder and firearms offences. Police opposed bail due to his hot-headed nature, fearing he might threaten the injured party and witnesses.

Officers were also looking for his henchmen, including the man who grabbed the victim by the hair.

The incident as it unfolds on CCTV starts when Ms Sudarat turns up at the house on her motorcycle. A young man in a black shirt comes outside and pulls her by the hair, causing her to fall.

He then draws a gun from his waist and beats her about the head with it once.

Later he drags her into the house before returning to lift the fallen motorcycle and take Ms Sudarat’s bag into the house.

Shortly after, 4–5 people from inside came out and get into the pickup, while the man in the black shirt also drives away, leaving Ms Sudarat with Mr Chanapol.

About 30 minutes later, the pickup returns and parks in front of the house. Mr Chanapol opens the door, steps out, and fires a shot into the air in a moment of teen exuberance before both he and the black shirted man drive away.

Around 4.40pm, a woman from the house opens the door and drags Ms Sudarat, who has been shot, out to the front to send her to hospital.

Police say Mr Chanapol shot the victim in the left knee with a .357 calibre gun. They were calling in his accomplices.

Smooth passage to the afterlife
Pornchai’s body was found in a rice field with 500 baht stuffed in his pocket

An Udon Thani loner was found shot to death in a rice field with a 500 baht note stuffed in his pocket, a parting gift from his killers to help relatives send him into the next life, police say.

Phen district police found the body of Pornchai, also known as Big (no surname given), 27, shot in the forehead, right temple and left chest.

Police found no signs of a struggle, though did turn up a modified lighter, a sign that he took drugs, they said.

His mother, Pensri, 57, was crying over her son’s body and refused to allow officials from a rescue foundation to take Big to hospital, insisting on conducting religious rites at home.

Police explained that in the case of a homicide, the body must be taken for an autopsy.

She relented, though later paid a visit to the hospital and spirited the body from the morgue, news reports said.

This forced senior police and rescue staff to pay a second visit to her place to retrieve it. Eventually she relented.

Samai (no surname given), 51, who discovered the body, said he was a relative of Big’s.

He had gone out to check on fishing traps at the local stream that morning and found Big dead by the water. Big had few friends, was rarely involved in fights and spent his days alone in the rice field, he said.

Pensri, the mother, said she saw her son the night before, playing on his phone at home.

After that, they went to bed, and she did not know when he left for the rice field. She heard dogs barking around 2am.

Big’s motorcycle was still parked at home because it had run out of petrol.

Pol Lt Col Seksan Rueweth, deputy chief investigator, said Big was arrested for possession of methamphetamine and firearms in 2015, when he was 16.

Before the incident, he had asked his mother for 200 baht before leaving the house, and he was later found shot dead.

Police were focusing on the possibility of a drug deal gone wrong.

Big, he said, may have bought drugs from a dealer from another village to use and sell.

When the dealer came to demand payment, and they failed to reach an agreement, he shot Big several times to make sure he was dead.

With that done, he stuffed a 500 baht note into Big’s pants pocket to help the family defray funeral costs and as a form of sending him off to the afterlife, according to local beliefs.

Police are investigating.

Sunday, 11 May 2025

Fortunes slip; jealous son strikes; random drive-by

Soothsayer goes to work

Boy, the 16-year-old victim

A 16-year-old boy from a well-known Bangkok school was defrauded by a fortune teller for three years, during which he lost 500,000 baht, his mother says.

“B”, who contacted activist lawyer Ronnarong Kaewpetch, chairman of the Foundation for Justice in Society, about her concerns, said the fortune teller persuaded her son to take part in bizarre rituals, including stripping naked, and had an ink tattoo put on his back.

He also persuaded her son to invest in a business, which made big losses, and buy talismans in the belief they would bring him good luck. She says he manipulated her son into selling the family’s belongings and hand over the money as fees for his readings and rituals.

Her son, known as “Boy” in news reports, kept most of this activity secret from his parents. They found out only when he broke up with his girlfriend, who said he had been duped.

Mr Ronnarong took the pair on the TV show, Hone Krasae, to air their claims. Ajarn Seree, as the fortune teller is known, also agreed to appear, despite Mr Ronnarong saying he faced legal action for his conduct.

Mr Ronnarong later took B and her son to the Crime Suppression Division to lay a complaint against Ajarn Seree, who is based in the Rama II area, for child abduction, child molestation, and fraud against the public. He may also face charges related to the mental and physical well-being of minors.

Boy said he met Ajarn Seree through a friend in his second year of high school when he was stressed about love.
Ronnarong Kaewpetch


He paid 5,000 baht for his first fortune reading, when the fortune teller mentioned he had problems in love. That corresponded with his real-life situation and led him to believe in the fortune teller’s accuracy.

After that, he began to communicate with the fortune teller almost daily.

One day, the fortune teller scheduled a ritual at an apartment, instructing him to strip and apply gold to his body, including his genitals, claiming it was a way to “enhance his fortune.”

He was also advised to break up with all his girlfriends, including his then ex-girlfriend.

After getting a new girlfriend, she mentioned feeling as if someone had cast a spell on her, prompting Boy to consult the fortune teller again. He was told that “the family’s fate is doomed”.

Boy also recounted how the fortune teller had instructed him to create a doll with his parents’ names and burn it in a coffin, claiming it was a way to remedy his misfortune.

He was told to do something similar to help his ailing grandfather, who was suffering from lung cancer. The grandfather, Ajarn Seree said, would live for another 10 years; he passed away a year later.

Ajarn Seree, a fortune teller
The fortune teller also suggested Boy start a business at a school, claiming “this is a good time for fortune; anything you do will succeed”.

Boy ended up suffering significant losses. Ajarn Seree insisted on continuing the rituals, with Boy pawning his phone and computer to pay for them. He also took the lad to get a tattoo of an oil yantra on his back, without telling his parents.

Boy said he had never believed in superstition before and was unaware that he was being manipulated until his girlfriend broke up with him and opened his eyes to the deception.

During the time he was under Ajarn Seree’s influence, he lost a total of over 500,000 baht. The fortune teller provided him with various items, including a naga statue, a Buddha statue, and various talismans.

An academic who appeared on the show scoffed at their quality, saying they were made of plastic or nothing more than beach souvenirs.

B, the mother, said she initially had no idea Boy was secretly consulting a fortune teller or engaging in superstitious practices until her son’s girlfriend told her. She took him to see a doctor and consulted Mr Ronnarong, believing the issue had broader social implications.

Ajarn Seree, she said, played with her son’s mind, turning him from a successful, outgoing student into a young man with a depressive order who talked about taking his own life.

Speaking on the TV show, she challenged Ajarn Seree: “He used to be a good child, disciplined, and saved money, but after meeting you, he has lost everything. He has become depressed and wants to end his life. I had to take him to a psychiatrist. Do you see the problem with this child? His life is completely ruined.”

Asked how he would take responsibility, Ajarn Seree replied: “If you ask how I should be responsible, I admit I was wrong to reach out to help you. If you ask why money is involved, well, I have said before that we must believe in ourselves.”

He agreed taking money from the boy, but insisted he did not engage in any form of abuse. Police are investigating.

Mum meets the wrong man
 Police round up suspects after a Si Sa Ket man was shot in the back.

A Si Sa Ket man was shot in the back allegedly by the son of a local woman he was seeing, who had earlier tried to stop their relationship, to no avail.

Sitthichok, or Min (no surname given), 28, originally from Ubon Ratchathani province, was shot near an irrigation canal in Si Sa Ket’s Muang district on May 4 after falling victim to an ambush.

The victim was shot in the middle of his back with the bullet lodged inside, leaving him in critical condition. Rescue workers took him to hospital.

Pol Col Narinth Buppata, chief of Si Sa Ket Muang police, said officers had nabbed six suspects, including two women and one minor. The suspects were identified as Film (the shooter), Kong, Tu (aged 15), Tee, Priew, and Milk (no further details given).

After the attack, they went into hiding in Kantharalak district but police tracked them down.

Pol Col Narinth said Sitthichok developed a close relationship with the mother of Chatchai, or Kong, 22 (one of the suspects). Kong’s mother took good care of Sitthichok, buying him things and giving him money.

Kong tried several times to stop Sitthichok seeing his mother, but to no avail. In a fit of anger, Kong laid a plot with the Film (the alleged shooter), along with Priew (Kong’s girlfriend) and Milk (Film’s girlfriend).

They used Milk’s Facebook account to contact Sitthichok and lure him out for a meeting by the canal.

Kong arrived in a car driven by Tee, with Priew and Milk also inside. When Sitthichok arrived, he saw Kong’s group was larger and tried to escape on his motorcycle.

Coincidentally, Tu was riding a motorcycle with Film (the shooter), who cut off Sitthichok’s own motorcycle. He lost control of the vehicle and fell into a canal.

As Sitthichok tried to run away, Film allegedly shot him with a .38 calibre revolver in the back.

Police have initially charged all six suspects with attempted murder and firearms charges. The victim is recovering.

A moment to react
One of the six suspects being nabbed

A teenager in Buri Ram was shot in the lung in a drive-by attack which his mother believes was a case of mistaken identity.

A group of teens were passing a sepak takraw court in their village in Huai Rat district when one pulled out a gun and shot at the boys on the court.

Nattawut, or Cartoon (no surname given), aged 17, was shot once in the chest. Relatives took him to Huai Rat Hospital before he was transferred to Buriram Regional Hospital, where reports say his condition is now stable.

Relatives of the victim said 10 teenagers from the village were playing sepak takraw and hanging out near the court, adjacent to the village road, when the attack occurred. Suddenly, two motorcycles passed by, and one teen riding on the back pulled out a gun and fired.

The victim’s mother, Pittinan, 38, said her son usually plays sepak takraw with friends in the village every evening. She suspects the assailant shot the wrong person as her son had never had any issues with anyone, she said.

Police later arrested a 16-year-old youth, one of the group involved in the attack, at a house in a neighbouring village of Nong Waeng subdistrict. They seized a homemade .38 calibre firearm along with a motorcycle without a licence plate.

The youth, “A”, admitted he and the victim were from different villages and the two groups had been in a long-standing feud for nearly two years, with the most recent flare-up occurring at New Year. A admitted to being part of the shooter’s group but claimed he did not know the victim.

Before the incident, a friend named “Mook,” aged 18, invited the group to ride motorcycles together. They went on two motorcycles with four people, passing by the sepak takraw court.

Mook, who was riding as a passenger on the front motorcycle, pulled out a gun and fired at the teenagers. Nattawut fell to the ground, injured, while the others fled.

Police identified three other teenagers involved, including the shooter, aged 14, 16, and 18. Authorities asked their guardians to bring them in for questioning and have issued summons for them.

Sunday, 4 May 2025

Droopy druggie loses sex drive; pole rage; hubby's vengeance

Poor performer shown the door

Suki turns himself in to the police

A despondent Chaiyaphum man says his family life has fallen apart after his two wives left him thanks to drug-related erectile dysfunction problems.

Surachai, or Rin (surname withheld), 48, originally from Kaeng Khro district, walked into Muang police station in Udon Thani after travelling to the province, asking to be put in jail.

Bemoaning the state of his family life, he said he’d popped two methamphetamine pills that morning in the hope police would arrest him.

He was brought in by a volunteer from a local rescue foundation, who said Rin turned up at their door asking for a lift to the station. After deciding he was not hallucinating, the foundation agreed.

Deputy superintendent (investigations), Pol Lt Col Saharat Termtorwatanakul, said Rin, who makes a living collecting scrap and selling ant eggs, voluntarily approached police. “He said he did not want to pursue life ‘outside’ any more as his family had fallen apart.”

He had intended to save money for the future but couldn’t, as he spent it all on drugs, taking 4-5 pills a day at 40 baht each. Worse, his wives kept leaving him.

Rin said he had married twice, and both relationships ended badly. His first wife, named Kahlong, lived in Sakon Nakhon province and was a widow with three children.

They were together for 28 years before separating. When their kids had grown up, she found a new partner and left him. He now felt deceived into raising them.

Later he married his second wife, nicknamed Bug, who like him came from Kaeng Khro district in Chaiyaphum.

They were together for three years without having any children, but this relationship, too, failed when she found a new man.

He attributed their separation to his inability to perform sexually, which frustrated his wives, leading them to seek new partners.

Confusingly, Rin said his drug habit was no big deal, as he’d been doing it so long, while also admitting it had probably robbed him of his sexual drive.

“Using meth is not a big deal; I’ve been doing it for over 10 years. But what hurts is that my wife says I can’t perform.

“I admit it’s true; I might not be able to because I’ve been using meth for so long,” he said.

His ex-wife and her new husband often mocked him about his sexual issues. Before travelling to Udon Thani four days before, locals had chased him away with a knife, he added, without elaborating.

Pithaya Chahphukham, a volunteer from the Udon Thani Dharma Promotion Foundation, said Rin walked in asking for a ride. “After assessing him, he seemed normal, so I helped him get to the station.”

A urine test showed Rin was positive for meth. But police told him they could not send him to jail as he wished, as these days they’d rather divert drug users to rehab. As for his sexual problems, they advised him to see a doctor.

Angry driver stabbed in fight
The attack no one saw coming

A woman in Pattaya says she is bewildered by an attack outside her home which left her husband with serious knife wounds.

Police were called to a Na Klua sub-district home, part of a single-storey row of five connected rooms, to find Phuwadon (no surname given), 35, an employee at a local hotel, stabbed in the left side of his abdomen and hip.

He had fought with a neighbour, Thanom (no surname given), 50, a security guard, who lives in an adjacent room and was waiting to surrender.

Urai, 52, Thanom’s wife, said she and her husband were inside their place when they heard a crashing sound outside.

Her husband raced outside to find his neighbour, Phuwadon, had crashed his car into a pole holding up the roof.

He asked if Phuwadon was hurt, but the driver started yelling and challenged him: “Why? What? If you want it, come and get it”.

Phuwadon, she said, punched her husband and they started fighting. At one point she heard her husband say, “So you have a knife too, do you?”

She told reporters she does not know where the knife came from, but insists her husband went outside unarmed and did not mean to attack Phuwadon.

“We moved there just a month ago and have never had trouble with them,” she said.

Phuwadon’s wife, Nam Fon, 48, said she wasn’t at home at the time of the attack but sent someone to check on her husband after calling and failing to get a response.

When she got back she saw police cars lining the street and her husband injured with his intestines hanging out.

She and her husband did not know Thanom and his wife, and had no prior dealings with them. When she saw Thanom at the scene, she asked him why he stabbed her husband, but he did not reply, she said.

Bang Lamung police charged Thanom with assault. The victim has been patched up after doctors operated on his wounds.

‘Kik’ flees in nick of time
Surachai, or Rin, is visiting the police

A Chaiyaphum woman was shot dead after her farmer husband caught her having sex with another villager, news reports said.

Khon Sawan police nabbed Suki (surname withheld), 57, for killing his wife Chalong, aged about 53, with a shotgun he kept in the bedroom.

The man she was sleeping with, “A” 62, a retired civil servant from a cooperative, managed to flee.

Suki, who was waiting with his gun to surrender when police arrived, said he would have shot him too, given the chance.

Coming home exhausted from a hard day in the fields, as news reports put it sympathetically, he said he heard strange noises coming from inside.

News reports say he broke in to find his “beloved wife” in bed with A.

He found the sight too much to bear, so grabbed his hunting rifle and shot his wife in the side.

The shot pierced her heart, killing her. She was lying dead in a pool of blood in front of the bathroom when police found her.

Suki said he intended to shoot her lover too, but A was too fast for him and ran from the house.

Deputy investigator Pol Lt Col Chaiwat Tunchaipoom said police charged him with premeditated murder.

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Mistaken ID kill; athletic thief; grave robber’s fright

Deadly Songkran play

Apinan Paphuchakhan stages a re-enactment

A Buri Ram electrician who shot at two men on a motorcycle from the back of a pickup, killing one, says he mistook them for rivals.

Lahan Sai district police nabbed Apinan Paphuchakhan, 20, for killing Thanandorn “Poj” Sitho, 25, who had recently returned home after completing his military service.

Mr Apinan, son of the assistant village head, was in the back of a Toyota Revo pickup when he came across Thanandorn and a friend, Surachai “Pe” Muaklek, 23, on their motorcycle.

Thanandorn, who lives in the same village as the suspect but did not know him, was returning from his girlfriend’s house on April 14.

Sitting in the back of the pickup, Mr Apinan shot the pair with a short shotgun at an intersection leading to Sawaeng Phatthana village on the Lahan Sai-Ban Kruat Road about 2.30am. Thanandorn was shot in the chest and Mr Surachai in the torso, leaving both seriously injured.

Despite their injuries, Thanandorn and Mr Surachai managed to ride their motorcycle to seek help from a nearby shop.

The owner of a local Isaan restaurant and nearby residents took them to Lahan Sai Hospital, but Thanandorn succumbed to his injuries.

Mr Surachai, in a critical condition, was transferred to Buriram Hospital for further treatment.

Under questioning, Mr Apinan said he and five friends were driving when they encountered the pair on the motorcycle.

He mistakenly believed they were rivals with whom they had previously had trouble, so pulled out the weapon and shot them before fleeing. He expressed regret upon learning the victims was not rivals at all.

Thanandorn’s father, Samran Sitho, 60, said the victim was his only son who had recently returned home after completing military service. His son planned to look for work after the Songkran festival and had never been involved in any conflicts.

Tueng (no surname given), 48, the assistant village head and suspect Apinan’s father, visited his son at the police station before going to pay respects to Thanandorn’s family.

He expressed his sorrow over his son’s actions, which resulted in the death of a fellow villager, and promised to support the victim’s family as much as he could.

The atmosphere was filled with grief, with both fathers — one mourning the loss of his only son and the other lamenting his son’s actions — embracing and crying together.

When Mr Apinan was nabbed at his house, police found the weapon and ammunition hidden in a Mitsubishi pickup truck. He bought the firearm and ammunition online.

Despite claiming he was sorry for the shooting, he had made no apparent effort to contact police. Speaking after his arrest, he said he did not know for sure who he was shooting and only realised the gravity of the situation when the police turned up.

Mr Apinan was charged with murder and firearms charges. He claimed he acted alone and the driver of the vehicle and the other passengers, totalling five people, were not complicit. Police are looking for them.

Thief outruns the law
Pheeraphon ‘Oat’ Jamphathong climbs the fence

An Udon Thani thief gave police a run for their money when he escaped while being taken to the Udon Thani provincial court, claiming later he was fleeing home to be with his mother.

Ban Dung district police were escorting suspect Pheeraphon “Oat” Jamphathong, 26, to be detained on drugs and theft charges when he took flight.

Police had removed his handcuffs, and Pheeraphon, an agile runner who easily outpaced the police, took the opportunity to flee from the court towards the Udon Thani Public Health Office.

He temporarily gave his pursuers the slip. Ban Dung police were forced to call the 191 radio centre and get Udon Thani city police involved in the hunt.

Reviewing CCTV images as they tried to track down the escapee, police searched routes out of town. They were aided by good citizens who provided tips that the suspect was heading towards Bus Station No. 1 in Udon Thani municipality.

When patrol police turned up at the spot and found Pheeraphon walking out of the station, he fled again.

Three or four officers gave chase, and near the Rungthavee intersection, Pheeraphon rapidly climbed over a fence into the Charoen Hotel.

Officers tried to intercept him in front of the hotel, but he escaped into a canal and then ran back onto the road towards the Ruamthavee intersection, where officers surrounded him.

A motorcycle taxi driver blocked his path and kicked the suspect as he ran across the road. He fell, and officers jumped on him.

Speaking to reporters, Pheeraphon, whose face is clad with fading tattoos, said he fled because he did not want to go to jail and was trying to find a way back home.

He was nabbed by Ban Dung police on April 15 after stealing a power drill, a grinding machine, a wrench, a chainsaw, and nine bottles of white spirit (fiery Thai alcohol), along with some cash from a local grocery store.

“Before my arrest, I was involved in a drug case with 30 pills and released a little over a year ago. This time, I stole white spirit and some tools from a resident in Ban Kho Kiew, and the police caught me again.

“I decided to escape to return home and find work. I live at home with my mother and was worried about her,” he said in tears.

News reports say he has been arrested four times previously. After his latest hijinks, police charged him with escaping from custody and took him back to Udon Thani court for legal proceedings.

Restless spirit has a week to act
The strange burial site for Sutthanan ‘haem’ Tuenjai 

The grave of a young Udon Thani man killed in a road accident over Songkran was robbed when he was barely in the ground.

While his mother is distraught, a local monk has offered comfort, saying the victim’s spirit is bound to get revenge unless the money is returned.

A Facebook user named “Yodchai Service Air CCTV” posted a picture of the victim’s desecrated grave with the cover removed.

The post read, “Can anyone provide information? A drug addict broke into the grave to steal money from the body in Phen district, Udon Thani. This is truly disgraceful”.

Reporters visited the cemetery at Wat Pa Phra Na Hai where the body of Sutthanan “Haem” Tuenjai, 20, was buried.

They met Phra Ruangdej Neungkeaw, 56, and Phra Jaeng Othor, 77, also Sutthanan’s grandfather, sitting in the monk’s quarters.

The monks took reporters to the site of the desecrated grave, which was assembled from four connected cement pipes. The thief, who took a cash offering left inside the coffin, left Sutthanan’s body partially exposed above the ground.

Phra Jaeng said his grandson died after crashing his motorcycle into the back of a pickup truck on April 14 and was brought to the temple for nightly prayers.

Relatives placed the body in the grave on April 15 because, according to local belief, those who die unnaturally must be buried or placed in a grave for three years before a proper funeral can be held.

If cremated immediately, it is believed that someone in the village or a relative may die.

However, hours after the body was placed in the grave and plastered over, a thief opened the grave cover, which they believed was still wet, and stole money which his relatives, friends, and villagers had placed in the coffin.

The thief is thought to have taken about 3,000 baht which was meant as a donation for the deceased to use in the afterlife.

Pen Tuenjai, 50, the young man’s mother, and Pornputharn, aged 22, his sister, were among mourners at the cemetery.

Ms Pen said Sutthanan was the younger of her two children. After finishing junior high school, he opened a motorcycle repair shop at home.

On the evening of April 14, he went out to visit a friend in Ban Dung, about 20 kilometres away. He left home and, about 6km away, had his fatal accident.

Ms Pen said she took part in a ceremony to place his body in the grave.

Later, his father placed a wreath from the other party involved in the accident on the grave and discovered the cover was open.

Checking the coffin, they found the money had gone, leaving only a 20 baht note in the coffin and another 20 baht note in front of the grave. Upset, they covered the grave with fresh plaster to make sure it could not happen again.

Ms Pen said and her daughter visited the grave to tell Sutthanan they did not wish to seek revenge or complain to the police about the theft. They hoped he could rest in peace.

Phra Ruangdej Neungkeaw, one of the monks, said the thief will face the consequences for his misdeed even if he evades the law. He found out about the theft when he went to the victim’s family home to offer prayers.

“Even if his mother wishes to take no action, the owner of the money may be restless and come back to reclaim it himself,” he said.

“Anyone who does such a thing is committing a sin. Since the deceased died unnaturally, the spirit will linger here for another seven days,” he added.

No word was to hand as to whether the thief, spooked by the thought of revenge from the afterlife, is having second thoughts.

Sunday, 13 April 2025

Pregnancy scam bites; hammock attack; canine kill

Pitter, patter of tiny feet

Natthapong

A Nonthaburi man is warning netizens of a woman who hatched a pregnancy scam, duping him of 100,000 baht over a four-month relationship.

Natthapong (no surname given), 24, a driver for a private company, complained to police after the woman, identified as Mew, 22, in news reports, claimed she was pregnant with his child a month after they met.

They met on Facebook last November and the relationship developed quickly, he said.

“She showed me a pregnancy test after being in the bathroom for about 20 minutes. I was excited but also worried about how our parents would react,” he said.

He invited Mew to move in with his family so he could take better care of her, though news reports say he initially kept her pregnancy a secret from his parents.

The ultrasound picture 
Keen to be a responsible partner and a good dad to his unborn child, Nattapong met all her needs, including food and transport to work, he said.

During this time, Mew began asking him for money periodically, claiming she had financial problems and needed to pay off debts. She also asked for money for “prenatal care”.

He was happy to help and offered to take her to hospital for a check-up. But on the day of her appointment, Mew always had an excuse not to go.

Later, in February, valuables including cash, two mobile phones and an iPad started to go missing from Natthapong’s home, but owing to his trust in her, he suspected nothing.

A turning point came last month, however, when she claimed to have gone to see a doctor and presented ultrasound images showing she was pregnant with a healthy baby girl.

His friends, however, were suspicious about her persistent refusal to attend prenatal check-ups and asked to inspect the ultrasound images.

They discovered the images, dating from 2019, actually belonged to someone else and were taken from the internet.

Mysteriously, Mew forged the date on the images but not the name of the hospital or even the name of the real owner, claiming the name was that of her doctor.

The hospital Mew claimed to have visited for the check-up did not match either.

Natthapong once again believed her until his friends sent him the original image of the actual owner for comparison.

Confronted with the facts, Mew initially refused to admit she had lied. Eventually, his mother learned about the situation and spoke to Mew.

She suggested they go to see a doctor together to confirm the test results. However, when they arrived at the hospital, Mew claimed she had taken medication to induce a miscarriage.

Later, Mew bowed before the growing evidence against her, agreeing to have a blood test at a nearby hospital, which revealed she had not been pregnant.

Natthapong, realising he had been conned, decided to leave her, and took her back to her home in Samut Prakan.

After they split, Mew’s close friends revealed she had withdrawn cash from his account without his consent, and also sent him evidence suggesting she had stolen the missing valuables as well.

Mew, he said, had asked him to register for a gambling website and used his account to transfer money into it.

On March 29, he travelled to Mew’s family home to discuss what happened. He was contacted by a creditor of hers who had lent her tens of thousands of baht about three years ago.

Mew invited Natthapong in to talk, but after their conversation, asked the creditor in. He claims the creditor assaulted him. Both Natthapong and the creditor have since filed complaints with police.

Natthapong contacted Parames Chaipatcharakulpong, founder of the “Dr Kaew Can Help” page and chairman of the advisory committee for prosecutors in Nonthaburi to help spread news of her exploits.

He said he loved Mew and dedicated everything to her, only to be betrayed. Now all he felt was resentment. “We are not focused on the money, but do not want others to fall into the same trap,” he said.

Mew, he said, denies the allegations except for making up the pregnancy. He has filed a complaint with Min Buri police, who are investigating.

Just a friendly escort
Prakob
A Chaiyaphum man beat a drinking friend to death after he took his wife, with whom he had just argued, to see her former lover.

Nong Bua Rawe police nabbed Prakob (no surname given), 55, after he grabbed a plank of wood and beat to death his friend, Noi (no surname given), 63, as he slept on a hammock outside his house.

Noi put up no resistance and in fact may not have known what happened.

Prakob, who admitted killing him, said he was seized by a fit of jealousy, but added nonchalantly: “If you strike a snake, you must break its back.”

Yupin (no surname given), 43, said she argued with her husband before the incident. Fatefully, she went to Noi’s place and asked him to take her to her ex-husband’s place, where she often sought shelter after her rows with Prakob.

Scene of the slaying
Prakob followed them, realised he had taken his wife to see her former lover (who was away at work at the time, as it happens), and decided to seek revenge.

When he encountered Noi, escort duty done, lying on a hammock outside his place, he grabbed a wooden plank and a bamboo stick from nearby and struck the victim repeatedly until he was dead.

Prakob said he had never had a problem with Noi before, and in fact the two used to drink together.

Yupin, his wife, was present at the time of the attack, and pleaded with him to stop.

However, rather than trying to thwart the attack herself she ran off to seek help from neighbours. By the time they arrived, Noi was already dead from half a dozen blows to the head.

Prakob rode his motorcycle back home about 1km away to await the arrival of police.

Despite the callous remark about wanting to break the snake’s back, he expressed his apologies to the victim’s relatives. Police charged him with premeditated murder.

Preparing to receive Noi’s body for his funeral, Boonmee, 85, the victim’s mother, said her son was fond of a drink but liked to help others.

Village pest destroys a life
 Apichai is behind bars
An Udon Thani druggie fatally attacked a neighbour with a machete in a fight over the fate of his dog.

Clutching a bloodied machete, Apichai (no surname given), 36, walked into Nam Som police station to declare he had killed Uaychai (no surname given), 50, and wanted to turn himself in.

Apichai took them to the scene after police initially expressed doubts about whether he had really done as claimed. Officers found Uaychai’s body lying on a public road in Ban Yuak subdistrict. He had been attacked with a machete.

The suspect said he encountered the victim on the road, approached him, and they started to argue.

Uaychai, he alleged, had shot his dog the week before, but the victim refused to admit it and challenged Apichai to a fight. In a fit of rage, Apichai grabbed his machete and struck the victim’s neck twice. Uaychai's motorcycle was found nearby.

The village headman, a distant relative of the victim’s, said Apichai mistakenly believed the victim had shot his dog dead with a gun. In fact, he used a slingshot, and the dog was still alive.

Apichai drank heavily and took drugs, leading to delusions, he said.

On the day of the incident, the victim had gone to a health centre. He was riding his motorcycle home when he came upon the suspect holding a machete by the roadside.

Uaychai stopped his motorcycle and fled into a rice field, but the suspect chased him. After the attack, Apichai flagged down a passing vehicle and walked to the station.

Police charged him with premeditated murder and carrying a weapon in public without just cause.

Reporters visited his home, a two-storey rental about 150m away from the scene of the crime, where they found the suspect’s three dogs guarding the house. The suspect’s mother, who lives with her son, had fled.

The village headman, unnamed in news reports, said the victim was a good-natured person who helped with village work and supported the community.

The suspect, by contrast, was unstable and aggressive. His wife and children had fled elsewhere, leaving him alone with his mother. He was often seen walking around with a machete, disturbing locals at shops.

The headman said he had planned to take the suspect for rehab but the attack happened before he could arrange it
.