Thailand to seize assets worth US$37mil from ex-cop ‘Joe Ferrari’

Thailand to seize assets worth US$37mil from ex-cop ‘Joe Ferrari’

The former police chief was found to be 'unusually wealthy' for a government official.

Thitisan Utthanaphon (centre), known as ‘Joe Ferrari’, was jailed for life for torturing a suspect to death. (AP pic)
BANGKOK:
A Thai former district police chief jailed for torturing a suspect to death will have undeclared assets worth US$37 million seized after being found to be “unusually wealthy”, authorities said today.

Thitisan Utthanaphon – nicknamed “Joe Ferrari” for his taste in flashy cars – was jailed for life in June following a case that shone a rare light on police brutality and corruption in the kingdom.

“His income which came from serving as a government official does not match with the assets he has,” Niwatchai Gasemmongkol, spokesman for the office of the national anti-corruption commission told reporters.

The committee had agreed that he was “unusually wealthy” and that his assets worth 1.35 billion baht (around US$37 million) should be seized by the state, he added.

Revelations about Thitisan’s rich lifestyle and a string of celebrity relationships made headlines after his arrest.

Investigators said he owned a luxury mansion in Bangkok and a fleet of 42 top-end cars – including a US$1.5 million Lamborghini Aventador – all on a police superintendent’s salary of around US$1,300 a month.

The death of 24-year-old Jirapong Thanapat was initially hushed up and recorded as an amphetamine overdose until a lawyer revealed the cause of death in a Facebook post.

Leaked viral footage showed Thitisan and six other officers wrapping seven plastic bags around his head while questioning him and trying to extort US$60,000, leading to his death.

The former district chief in Nakhon Sawan province surrendered himself to police, who raided his Bangkok mansion.

In a press conference after his surrender, Thitisan said Jirapong’s death was an accident.

Thitisan was sentenced to death, but the court reduced his punishment to life imprisonment because he had attempted to revive the suspect, and paid for the funeral expenses for the family.

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