The Phnom Penh Post

Thai Red Bull heir snubs hit-and-run case again

- Sally Mairs

THE heir to the Red Bull billions yesterday again snubbed Thai prosecutor­s over a five-year-old hit-and-run incident that killed a policeman, the latest delay to a case that has become a byword for impunity enjoyed by the country’s rich.

Worayuth Yoovidhya, whose nickname is “Boss”, was 27 when he allegedly smashed his Ferrari into a police officer in 2012 and sped away, dragging the body along a Bangkok road for about 100 metres. A trail of debris from the accident led officers to the mansion of his super-rich clan, who own half of the Red Bull energy drink empire.

The local police station, which covers Bangkok’s most exclusive district, initially accepted the family’s claim that the housekeepe­r was driving the car. But the story fell apart and Worayuth was eventually hit with a string of charges – including causing death by reckless driving, which carries a maximum 10 year jail term.

He has repeatedly failed to show up for formal indictment and has never been re-arrested, allowing some of the charges to expire and delaying legal action.

Yet the allegation­s have not deterred him from appearing on Bangkok’s high society party circuit or freely dip in and out of the country.

Yesterday, a spokesman for Thailand’s attorney-general saidWorayu­th’s lawyer had requested to postpone the latest summons, claiming his client was on a business trip in Britain. “We cannot indict him because the suspect is not present,” said spokesman Prayut Bejiraguna, adding that the appointmen­t was reschedule­d for April 27.

As with many high-profile cases involving Bangkok’s elite, public anger over the lack of progress has bubbled up periodical­ly, briefly piquing into pressure on police before again slipping off the radar.

This week the Thai media was awash with photos of the Red Bull princeling, including shots of Worayuth posing with a black Porsche bearing the vanity plate “B055 RBR” (Red Bull Racing).

“Being rich is still the best defence of all,” read a recent op-ed in the Bangkok Post that skewered Thailand’s justice system for being warped by cash and influence.

“Society might criticise the attorneyge­neral for using laws in different ways towards poor and rich people,” Chuwit Kamolvisit, a former massage-parlour tycoon turned anti-graft crusader, told prosecutor­s at a press conference. “The speeding charge is not complicate­d, so why has it taken five years?”

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