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  1. #1
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    Thailand : Police get tough on Pattaya's criminal migrants

    Police get tough on Pattaya's criminal migrants



    Pattaya - The days when foreign paedophiles and criminals could retire in peace in Pattaya - a Thai beach resort infamous for its prostitution and sleazy nightlife - are numbered, at least according to immigration police.

    On Thursday, Pattaya's Immigration Office will officially launch the country's first Transnational Crime Data Centre, equipped with a staff of 12 and a 6-million-baht (184,615-dollar) computer system dedicated to tracking down nefarious expats.

    "Pattaya may have been a heaven for foreign criminals in the past, but now we have the technology to spoil their paradise," said Police Colonel Athiwit Kamolrat, Chonburi Immigration Police Superintendent.

    The centre, plastered with photos of alleged criminals wanted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Interpol, Bangkok-based embassies and Thai authorities, sits above Pattaya's Immigration Office, a busy place visited by hundreds of expatriates a day.

    Pattaya, a beach resort in Chonburi province about 100 kilometres south-east of Bangkok, has one of the largest expat communities in Thailand, estimated at more than 70,000 more-or-less permanent residents.

    "Every foreigner who lives in Pattaya for a long time needs to come here to renew their visas, and when they do we put their name and address in our computer base," said Police Lieutenant Colonel Prapansak Prasansuk, deputy superintendent of Chonburi immigration.

    The centre also receives calls and emails from more than 700 hotels, guest houses and service apartments in Pattaya whenever a foreigner checks in for more than 24 hours.

    A law requiring that all foreigners who stay in a place for more than a day must be reported to immigration police has been on the books for years, but now it is being enforced.

    "Some guest houses and serviced apartments didn't want to report to us because they were avoiding taxes, but I told them we are not responsible for collecting taxes, just for collecting foreigners," Athiwit said. "In recent months the call-ins have increased 130 per cent."

    Those who fail to report foreigners face fines.

    With the improved surveillance of resident foreigners in Pattaya, immigration police are well positioned to make arrests of any foreigner facing a warrant abroad, as long as the warrants are on their database.

    Since October 2009, Pattaya immigration police have assisted with the arrests of seven human traffickers, primarily dealing with child prostitution rings, and about a dozen foreign criminals facing arrest warrants either abroad or in Thailand.

    Embassy police officers based in Bangkok attribute Pattaya's improved performance primarily to Police Lieutenant General Wuthi Liptapallop, the new head of the Immigration Bureau, who after taking office earlier this year made it his mission to crack down on foreign criminals in the kingdom.

    "It's all linked to Wuthi," said one European diplomat. "It used to be very difficult getting assistance from the Thai police, but now something definitely has happened."

    To what extent and for how long the Pattaya crack down persists remains to be seen. There is a good deal of scepticism, given the ingrained corruption in the city.

    "There are a large number of foreign gangsters operating in Pattaya, and without exception they are all paying off the police," said one British crime reporter who specializes in Pattaya.

    Pattaya's recent history includes a long list of illustrious criminals.
    There was Wolfgang Uelrich, a German national who defrauded tens of thousands of dollars from his countrymen through a bogus animal- welfare charity. He used the charity to invest in bars, restaurants and various businesses in Pattaya, and was eventually extradited to Germany where he was found guilty of fraud.

    Rene Larsen, a convicted Danish drug trafficker, was a resident of Pattaya and proud owner of a palatial residence in the 1990s before he was extradited to Copenhagen.

    Both men were known to have close connections with the Pattaya police force.

    "Corruption in these cases has decreased in Pattaya, because now we have concrete evidence to present against them," Athiwit said.

    "But for the crackdown to work we need to have similar centres in Phuket, Samui, Chiang Mai and other tourist destinations."

    The bigger question for observers is whether the crackdown will continue after Wuthi's term expires.

    "In Thailand, for the long term, one never knows," said one Western diplomat. dpa

    nationmultimedia.com

    see also : https://teakdoor.com/thailand-and-asi...onitoring.html

  2. #2
    euston has flown

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    Stupid question:

    Does this mean that criminal is now a proscribed profession for thai's only, together with those other bastions of thai society, lawyers, politician, police and army officer?

    And does jj in of puket fame count as a foreign, half foreign or thai criminal?

  3. #3
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    On Thursday, Pattaya's Immigration Office will officially launch the country's first Transnational Crime Data Centre, equipped with a staff of 12 and a 6-million-baht (184,615-dollar) computer system dedicated to tracking down nefarious expats.
    its a good idea and i hope it works.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mid
    equipped with a staff of 12 and a 6-million-baht (184,615-dollar) computer system dedicated to tracking down nefarious expats.
    6 million. What does it do, exactly, for that?
    Possibly bought from the same company selling those bomb detectors.

  5. #5
    I am in Jail

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    Quote Originally Posted by genghis61 View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Mid
    equipped with a staff of 12 and a 6-million-baht (184,615-dollar) computer system dedicated to tracking down nefarious expats.
    6 million. What does it do, exactly, for that?
    Possibly bought from the same company selling those bomb detectors.
    Indeed I think to check names in a database every 20,000 baht PC for sale in Tukcom can do the job.

  6. #6
    I am in Jail

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    I don't think that if you are wanted by Interpol you care about visas. You simply overstay in some remote Isaan place where your chances of being checked are null.
    Even here in Pattaya no one ever asked me to show my passport in five years.

  7. #7
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    The World would be so much nicer and more simple if not for the goody good doers.

  8. #8

    R.I.P.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Mid
    with a staff of 12 and a 6-million-baht (184,615-dollar) computer system
    500,000baht a computer, must have the latest super duper graphics card on them for 3d games etc

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by dirtydog View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Mid
    with a staff of 12 and a 6-million-baht (184,615-dollar) computer system
    500,000baht a computer, must have the latest super duper graphics card on them for 3d games etc
    Nah, it's just a scalable AS400 with the latest in biometric software. Just like the 'eye in the sky' that they have at the border casinos.

  10. #10
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    The real problem is in their own backyard, and until that is addressed, nothing will change.

  11. #11
    Nostradamus
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    So all foreign criminals have to do is avoid going to immigration which most of them probably do anyway.

  12. #12
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    Does that mean all those computers, with all the LCD screens work? They keep asking for all these copies of the same old documents ,and photos for what? Stupid me, here I thought these hundred or thousand of PC's where just for show. So if they work, why all the hard copies at Immigration, 5 times a year?

  13. #13
    Thailand Expat terry57's Avatar
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    I'm surprised to read that's there's 70,000 foreigners living in and around Pattaya.

    No wonder the Thais get pissed off and it explains whys there's so many problems down there regarding foreigners.

    Although there's many good guys living there one also see's it as a dumping ground for the shit of other countries.

    If Thailand wasn't so corrupt they would of deported many of them, a new computer system wont make much difference as the scum will just pay more to the corrupt officials.

    Even though I like Thailand its quite pathetic really.

  14. #14
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    Yep a round up and deportation of them all, the good with the bad is the only solution.

  15. #15
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    The Nation Of Dishonesty.

    What will the computer throw up then..... as we know the Thais are S.A.S trained at releving the farang of their cash!!!.

  16. #16
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    ^ True , but they won't be able to hide their own shit either.

  17. #17
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    "Every foreigner who lives in Pattaya for a long time needs to come here to renew their visas,

    They just won't turn up.

  18. #18
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    I wonder if the computers come with an ups.... otherwise.... first decent lightning storm and kaput!

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Smug Farang Bore
    "Every foreigner who lives in Pattaya for a long time needs to come here to renew their visas, They just won't turn up.
    And this is the Beauty of the system, once it has been up and running for 12 Months Immigration can declare that not one name has been flagged and Mayor Ittipol will declare Pattaya 100% free of foreign paedophiles and criminals.

    I cannot see how it will fail myself.

  20. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Clogiron View Post
    Mayor Ittipol will declare Pattaya 100% free of foreign paedophiles and criminals.
    Where is kamnan poh these days ?

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