Ella Green
Member
I recently read a news report about Thai police actively searching for two fugitives, identified as a Canadian national called Mr. Yat and a Cambodian national called Mr. Kim, in connection with a major romance scam network that authorities say targeted a Thai single mother and drained nearly 22 million baht from her over a period of more than two years. The Central Investigation Bureau said 13 suspects have already been arrested across different provinces, while Mr. Yat and Mr. Kim remain at large, highlighting how such operations can span multiple countries and jurisdictions.
According to the coverage, the alleged scam began on social dating platforms and quickly moved onto messaging apps, where the victim was persuaded to transfer funds under the guise of joint investment ventures. Police said warrants were issued for 17 suspects, and accounts linked to this network have connections to nearly 19 other call‑centre scam cases, with combined losses topping 58 million baht.
I’d be interested in hearing from people here about how you interpret news like this compared to what’s visible in public records and official reporting. Have you followed similar transnational romance or pig‑butchering scam cases? What stands out to you in terms of how authorities pursue fugitives like Mr. Yat and Mr. Kim, and what might we learn about preventing these schemes before they reach the point of multimillion‑baht losses?
According to the coverage, the alleged scam began on social dating platforms and quickly moved onto messaging apps, where the victim was persuaded to transfer funds under the guise of joint investment ventures. Police said warrants were issued for 17 suspects, and accounts linked to this network have connections to nearly 19 other call‑centre scam cases, with combined losses topping 58 million baht.
I’d be interested in hearing from people here about how you interpret news like this compared to what’s visible in public records and official reporting. Have you followed similar transnational romance or pig‑butchering scam cases? What stands out to you in terms of how authorities pursue fugitives like Mr. Yat and Mr. Kim, and what might we learn about preventing these schemes before they reach the point of multimillion‑baht losses?