• From sinister to minister: politician's drug trafficking jail time reve

    From Mchael J Simmons@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 9 05:55:12 2019
    Shit hitting the fan now. This liar, in the Thai Cabinet, served four
    years jail in Australia. Just proves what a rotten and corrupt society Thailand is.

    https://priv.sh/Iyia6R6

    When the newly appointed minister fronted the cameras in July, he
    explained away questions about a criminal past in Sydney, saying he was
    simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    It was 1993 and he had just landed in the Harbour City. He had been at
    his friend’s Bondi hotel room for only a few minutes when police
    swarmed, and, he says, he knew nothing about the drugs they were dealing.

    A newly appointed senior Thai government minister who has played down
    the extent of his criminal past spent four years in a Sydney jail in the
    1990s after pleading guilty to conspiracy to import 3kg of heroin.

    It was only a few months later, in his version, that he was set free.

    However, the Herald and The Age can reveal that a newly appointed senior
    member of Thailand’s ruling party spent four years in a Sydney jail in
    the 1990s for his role in trafficking 3.2 kilograms of heroin into
    Australia. He was deported on his release from Parklea prison.

    Thammanat Prompao, a key ally of top generals and an enforcer in the
    coalition cabinet, was a young soldier known as Manat Bophlom when he
    pleaded guilty in the NSW District Court to conspiracy to import a
    commercial quantity of heroin with a street value of up to $4.1 million.

    When reports of a previous conviction surfaced in the Thai media in
    July, days before he was sworn in as a minister, Thammanat downplayed
    its significance, saying he was found guilty of a “minor offence”.

    Thammanat Prompao spent four years in a Sydney jail in the 1990s after
    pleading guilty to conspiring to import more than three kilograms of
    heroin.
    Thammanat Prompao spent four years in a Sydney jail in the 1990s after
    pleading guilty to conspiring to import more than three kilograms of
    heroin. CREDIT:BANGKOK POST

    He acknowledged that he had been arrested in April 1993 but said he
    spent a limited time in custody before resuming a normal life in Sydney
    selling sanitary products.

    “I didn’t import, produce or deal heroin,” he told the media. “While on vacation in Sydney, I was properly cleared by immigration. But I was unfortunate to have been in the same place at the same time as some drug offenders.” In a statement at the weekend, Thammanat stood by his
    version of events.

    However, court documents show Second Lieutenant Manat, as he was then
    known, was a central figure in the drug trafficking operation.

    The court file reveals Manat met key Thai underworld figures and his
    Australian co-accused in Bangkok before the deal, was involved in
    arranging the visa and buying Qantas tickets for the female drug
    courier, was recorded saying he was present when she packed the drugs
    into her luggage, and later helped transport that bag across town to the
    buyers in Bondi.

    While in Parramatta jail awaiting sentencing, Manat told police he had
    worked as a bodyguard for the then crown prince of Thailand, had been an
    army spy under the identity “Yuthaphum Bophlom”, and ran a side business while serving as an assistant to a top general. In exchange for leniency
    in his sentence, he also gave up details about Thai drug operations,
    saying former soldiers named Wera, Manop and Pisarn were intimately
    involved, according to the court file.

    In late 1992, he and his half-brother and business partner, Sorasat
    Tiemtad, discussed sending people to Australia as Sorasat wanted to set
    up a “young coconut” importing business, he told investigators. In
    January 1993, Sorasat asked Manat to help arrange a visa for a woman
    known as Pa to visit Australia. The two went to the Kings Coffee Shop
    outside the old Australian Embassy in Bangkok, where they met Pa and a
    man named Pisarn and lodged the application. The next day, Sorasat
    handed Pa an airline ticket – paid for by Manat.

    In February, two of Manat’s associates joined Sorasat at a Bangkok
    restaurant where a criminal figure known as Wera introduced two “farang”
    or foreigners, one “tall and good-looking” who “looked like Rambo” and the other “fat with a beard” missing some teeth, the court file shows.
    The two Australians, Sam Calabrese and Mario Constantino, met Sorasat
    several times in the following weeks.

    “Although [Sorasat] Tiemtad did not tell me directly that it was heroin,
    I suspected that what he was trying to send to Australia was illegal,”
    Manat told police. Later he added: “I knew that Wera was a smuggler who
    also dealt in drugs.”

    Thai cabinet minister Thammanat Prompao at the July press conference
    concerning his Sydney drug conviction.
    Thai cabinet minister Thammanat Prompao at the July press conference
    concerning his Sydney drug conviction.CREDIT:PALANG PRACHARAT PARTY

    Sorasat flew to Sydney first, and on April 8 checked into room 1011 of
    the Palage Hotel Bondi. The courier Pa would fly out of Bangkok two days
    later and Manat was later recorded telling Sorasat he was with her the
    night before her flight.

    “That night we didn’t let her out of sight, she stayed in our sight all
    the time from 7pm til 5.30am,” Manat said, according to a translation of surveillance material collected by the Australian Federal Police’s
    Operation Drover.

    “She said Manat took her to the house and she had a shower. Something
    was put into her bag,” Sorasat said. Manat replied: “I was there when
    she did it.”

    When Sorasat and Constantino went to collect Pa from Sydney Airport, she
    was nowhere to be found. Her failure to appear set off a flurry of calls between Sorasat and Thailand. Manat was angry, and later told Sorasat,
    “You couldn’t do the job as I wanted.”

    Sorasat sought to assuage Calabrese’s concerns, joining him on a visit
    to Bondi Beach and catching up in Coogee in between looking for Pa.

    The heroin was left in room 713 of the Parkroyal Hotel in Darling
    Harbour, shown here from the early 1990s.
    The heroin was left in room 713 of the Parkroyal Hotel in Darling
    Harbour, shown here from the early 1990s. CREDIT:ANDREW MEARES

    She turned up at the Gazebo Hotel in Kings Cross, having left the heroin
    in room 713 of the Parkroyal Hotel in Darling Harbour. This gave the AFP
    time to substitute the drugs and plant listening devices.

    Sorasat tracked down Pa at the Gazebo. She gave him the key to room 713
    and a box of matches with the Parkroyal’s address.

    Another key player, Manop, who was preparing to fly to Sydney with
    Manat, baulked after Pa didn’t show up as planned. Manat went ahead alone.

    When he walked through the arrival hall at 8.18pm on April 14, AFP
    officers were watching - and listening. The police statement of facts in
    the file records that Manat and Sorasat left the Palage Hotel, taking a
    case via taxi to the Parkroyal.

    Sorasat checked into room 609, and handed Manat the key to room 713 to
    fetch the package hidden under the bed. Sorasat placed the brown package
    into a black suitcase, and they took it back to the Palage in Bondi,
    stopping at a hot dog stand in Campbell Parade before making a series of
    phone calls and dining at the Tuk Tuk restaurant.

    “It’s not good to keep the stuff with us for long,” Manat told Sorasat back in the room, waiting for the Australians.

    Constantino arrived first, making a gesture of prayer and laughing when
    he saw the bag. After Calabrese arrived, the four spoke about flights
    and women.

    Shortly after midnight, just hours after Manat had arrived in Australia
    to finalise the deal, officers from Operation Drover, who had been
    trailing the group for nearly a week, stormed the room.

    The four were charged with conspiracy to import heroin and refused bail.

    Sorasat pleaded guilty first and by November Manat had been committed to
    stand trial when a judge indicated he faced nine years’ jail. After
    that, he began co-operating with police and pleaded guilty. In one
    police interview he promised, “I’m going to tell the whole story about Wera,” including that Wera has people killed. Police asserted that Manat
    told them couriers smuggled drugs into Australia by swallowing condoms
    of heroin.

    Manat and Sorasat were sentenced to six years’ jail with a non-parole
    period of four years. Manat’s deep connections in Thailand were
    underlined when he produced character references from a judge and a
    police lieutenant-colonel who each said he “always has good behaviours
    [sic], honesty and is reliable”.

    After Constantino received a 2½-year minimum sentence, Manat and Sorasat appealed the severity of their sentence. The Court of Criminal Appeal
    rejected it unanimously, noting the evidence “casts considerable light
    upon the role of the applicants in relation to the importation [of
    heroin], and upon their relationship with what might be described as the
    head supplier in Thailand.

    “The evidence of the applicants was that the negotiations in Thailand,
    and in particular the discussion about price and quantity of heroin,
    were all conducted by Calabrese.” Calabrese's charges were later dismissed.

    Manat and Sorasat were released on April 14, 1997, and immediately deported.

    Back home, Manat slipped into army fatigues under the name Patchara
    Prompao, and the next year was promoted. He later became Thammanat
    Prompao, and has been quoted saying changing his name helps clear away
    bad karma. Controversy and further allegations followed as he rose
    through the ranks in business and politics.

    Another serious allegation was levelled against him in 1998, when he was charged over the rape and murder of a gay academic at an office he
    owned. After another three years in custody, Thammanat was acquitted of
    those charges. One of his subordinates was convicted. Reports from 1998
    refer to the then supreme commander of the Thai armed forces saying the
    army had been lax in allowing him to return to the fold given the
    serious nature of the charges.

    After his acquittal, he was aligned with powerful military figures and
    has been described in the Thai media as a mafia-style figure – a
    reputation he has tried to downplay.

    "The word 'mafia' in my view is not as dark as many think," Thammanat
    told the Bangkok Post. "Mafia means someone who has connections with
    many people and who keeps his word."

    His assets and family have grown, too; a parliamentary declaration of
    assets in August named two wives and seven children, wealth of about $42 million, a fleet of cars including a Bentley, Rolls-Royce, Tesla and
    Mercedes along with 12 Hermes and 13 Chanel handbags, luxury watches and Buddhist amulets. The 54-year-old’s second wife, 24-year-old beauty
    pageant winner Thanaporn, accompanied him on the campaign trail.

    Thammanat Prompao and his second wife, 24-year-old beauty pageant winner Thanaporn, and on the campaign trail.
    Thammanat Prompao and his second wife, 24-year-old beauty pageant winner Thanaporn, and on the campaign trail.CREDIT:FACEBOOK

    His appointment as deputy agriculture minister belies his importance to
    the pro-army party ruling Thailand in a tenuous post-election coalition.
    It is a powerful and politically sensitive department, and as an ally of current and former army chiefs Thammanat wields influence; in recent
    weeks he has been deployed to keep minor parties in line.

    In a 20-minute press conference and a sit-down interview in July, the
    minister defended himself against accusations spanning more than 25
    years. He put the arrest in Sydney down to bad luck.

    Asked last week to respond to details in the court file, Thammanat's
    office issued a statement calling the case an "unfortunate event" that
    "went through the proper course of the Australian judicial system where
    all parties were held accountable fairly and justly".

    "The facts regarding this matter were also given through numerous
    interviews and was publicised through various media channels in Thailand
    as well as abroad in the past. Our statement still remains unchanged as
    we have always been truthful to the public."

    His co-offender Sorasat was interviewed in July and backed Thammanat’s version of events.

    In July, Thammanat told reporters: “I lived a normal life in Australia,
    in Sydney, for a full four years. You can ask the court in Sydney
    whether what I’m saying is true or not.”

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  • From John B.@21:1/5 to notsure@nowhere.com on Mon Sep 9 05:14:32 2019
    On Mon, 9 Sep 2019 05:55:12 +1000, Mchael J Simmons
    <notsure@nowhere.com> wrote:

    Shit hitting the fan now. This liar, in the Thai Cabinet, served four
    years jail in Australia. Just proves what a rotten and corrupt society >Thailand is.


    But why so excited?

    Has anything changed?

    I came to Thailand 47 years ago and I can assure you that things
    today are little different than they were when I first came here. A
    bit better if anything.

    As I tell others. It is here, it hasn't changed.

    https://priv.sh/Iyia6R6

    When the newly appointed minister fronted the cameras in July, he
    explained away questions about a criminal past in Sydney, saying he was >simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    It was 1993 and he had just landed in the Harbour City. He had been at
    his friends Bondi hotel room for only a few minutes when police
    swarmed, and, he says, he knew nothing about the drugs they were dealing.

    A newly appointed senior Thai government minister who has played down

    A great deal deleted
    --
    cheers,

    John B.

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