Jet-setting ex-monk extradited from U.S. to face Thai charges
BANGKOK — A former monk known for his jet-setting lifestyle was back in Thailand this week after being extradited from the United States, where he fled to escape charges including statutory rape and fraud.
Wirapol Sukphol, 37, appeared on a YouTube video that showed the orange-robed monk aboard a private jet. He wore aviator sunglasses and had a Louis Vuitton carry-on bag, sparking an outcry over his behaviour.
Soon after the video surfaced in 2013, Wirapol was defrocked amid accusations of several sexual relationships with women, a cardinal sin for monks.
He was also alleged to have had sex with a 14-year-old girl. The statute of limitations has expired in that case, but he still faces fraud, money laundering and other charges.
Wirapol was arrested in California last year. He returned to Bangkok on Wednesday under an extradition agreement with the United States.
Paisit Wongmuang, directorgeneral of Thailand’s Department of Special Investigation, said Wirapol “wanted to come back to Thailand and was ready to enter the justice system.”
Critics say Wirapol is an extreme example of a wider crisis in Thai Buddhism, which has become marginalized by a shortage of monks and an increasingly secular society.
Born in the poor northeastern province of Ubon Ratchathani, Wirapol entered the monkhood as a teenager and gained local renown for claims of supernatural powers.
Gradually, he cultivated wealthy followers to help fund expensive projects in the name of Buddhism, including erecting an 18-metre-high Buddha statue.
Thailand’s Anti-Money Laundering Office has discovered 41 bank accounts linked to Wirapol. Several of the accounts kept about 200 million baht (about $7.5 million Cdn) in constant circulation, raising suspicion of money laundering, the office said.
According to the Department of Special Investigation, Wirapol at one point had accumulated assets of an estimated one billion baht. From 2009 to 2011, Wirapol bought 22 Mercedes-Benz cars worth 95 million baht, the department said.