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Aesara wearing his mask and cape. |
An unlucky young thief wearing a horror mask broke into a jewellery store after hours, but found all the gold locked up and his exit from the shop blocked.
Mae Ping police in Chiang Mai nabbed Aesara, or Ezra (surname withheld), 21 years old, from Nan province, after he broke into the Yaowarat gold store in a Muang district shopping mall.
Wearing a horror mask and a black cape, reminiscent of the film Scream, of which he is a fan, he prised open a steel rolling door at the front of the second-floor shop with a crowbar and climbed under the gap.
Earlier, CCTV cameras showed him emerging from the mall restroom after hours, fully kitted up as a ghost, and making his way eerily towards the gold store.
He hid in the restroom until the mall closed on the evening of March 17, and changed into his ghost gear before re-emerging to try his hand as a gold thief.
However, things didn’t go as planned when he discovered the owner had locked up the shop’s supply of gold when trade ended that night, so there was nothing for him to steal.
Worse, once he had broken in via the steel door at the front he found he could no longer get out. Bereft of an escape route, he was forced to spend the night rattling about a storage area at the rear of the shop, at one point discarding the mask and cape and donning what looked like a sheet to give himself warmth.
When staff arrived the next morning they noticed the door had been prised open and called police. Officers called out Aesara, who meekly re-appeared without the disguise, though in a two-hour crime reenactment later that day, oddly donned the ghost outfit again as he showed police what he had done.
Explaining why he decided to rob the store, Aesara said he was hard-up and wanted money to continue his education.
He wanted to pursue a bachelor’s degree at a public university in Chiang Mai, he said. He chose this mall because it was close to where he lived, and he wore the ghost mask because he liked horror movies and wanted to conceal his identity. The suspect expressed remorse and apologised to his parents for his impulsive decision to commit the crime.
Pol Col Yanaphol Pattanachai, head of Mae Ping police, said the suspect parked his motorcycle at a gas station in front of the mall before entering around 5pm on March 17.
The exit was blocked because the steel door was too close to the counter. The space was too narrow for him to go back and pry it open. He looked for an escape route at the back of the store but found none, which meant he had to spend the night there until he was caught.
Kratom juice to go with that?
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A young man arrested in the factory full of illegal goods. |
Police in Thon Buri district raided a warehouse where a group of enterprising young people were selling smuggled imported cigarettes and kratom juice mixed with cough medicine to local teens.
Central Investigation Bureau police raided a commercial building on soi Intharaphithak 3 in Bang Yi Rua sub-district where they discovered a large quantity of illegal goods, including 2,800 packs of smuggled cigarettes, 1,930 bottles of cough syrup, 30 bottles of kratom mixed with cough syrup, kratom leaves, and equipment used for boiling kratom.
Three suspects — Chulthap, 23, Kittisak, 22, and Thanathip, 20 (no surnames given) — were nabbed and charged under the Customs Act and Food Acts.
Police say the young people who rented the building were peddling the goods to local youth. The smuggled foreign cigarettes included brands such as Texas 5, Canyon, and Capital. It is unclear how they managed to evade customs duties.
They were also secretly producing kratom mixed with cough syrup, similar to a narcotic. The smuggled cigarettes were sold at prices lower than the market rate, while the kratom was sold for 80-100 baht per bottle. The business made an income of 7,000-8,000 baht per day, with around 40-50 young customers visiting on motorcycles to buy goods daily.
The suspects took measures to avoid detection by authorities, keeping the building closed at all times and only allowing sales through a small door, making it difficult for officials to catch them at it, reports said. Responding to locals’ complaints, police executed a search warrant obtained from the Thon Buri Criminal Court, arresting the suspects and seizing the goods.
Romance for a stolen bike
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Thanatat shows Pannarai’s picture on his phone. |
A conniving woman in Nonthaburi who befriends men on social media only to steal their motorbikes has struck again, with police evidently no closer to finding her.
Pitchakorn Khamtan, 24, filed a complaint with Bang Kruai police after being tricked by Pannarai “Jaa” Eamsaad, 23, who he met through a dating app.
She had borrowed his red Yamaha Grand Filano motorcycle on March 15, claiming she was going for a job interview.
She left with the bike at the Uea Aree apartment units on Nakhon In Road. After that, she disappeared and severed all contact. Attempts to reach her were unsuccessful.
The motorcycle had just been financed, causing problems for the victim. Police said they were on her trail, perhaps unaware that she had struck previously.
On Wednesday, a disabled man who saw the media reports about Mr Pitchakorn’s case came forward to say he had also fallen victim to Ms Pannarai’s scheming ways.
Thanatat (no surname given), 23, who is disabled in both hands, said he met Ms Pannarai via Facebook in early January. On Jan 20, Ms Pannarai, who referred to herself as Jii, tricked him into picking her up from work to go to her room. She stole his motorcycle while he was taking a shower, he said. After that, she disappeared, blocking all means of contact.
When he complained to the media, she contacted him via Facebook, demanding he withdraw his complaint before she would return the motorcycle. He agreed to the deal, and Ms Pannarai later left the motorcycle at a shopping mall in Pak Kret district. Reports said she cheekily asked her victim for 200 baht for a ride home.
After retrieving his motorcycle, Thanatat decided to proceed with legal action anyway. He had filed a complaint with Pak Kret police. As of now, there had been no update on the case’s progress, he said.
Thanatat said he was unhappy to see that Ms Pannarai had stolen from another victim, and urged police to track her down. He believes that if she is not apprehended, still more victims will emerge.