Bangkok Post

‘Red notice’ issued for Vorayuth

-

Interpol has released a “wanted” listing for Red Bull energy drink scion Vorayuth Yoovidhya who faces charges over a car crash that killed a Bangkok police officer five years ago.

The internatio­nal police network made the “red notice” for Mr Vorayuth viewable to the public on Monday. Law enforcemen­t officials have been able to gain access to the listing since last month.

Interpol says a red notice is a request to police forces around the world “to locate and provisiona­lly arrest an i ndividual, pending extraditio­n”.

Mr Vorayuth, better known by his nickname “Boss”, is wanted in connection with a hit-and-run incident in Bangkok in September 2012, in which a policeman on a motorbike patrol was struck and killed by a driver in a Ferrari. He has avoided meeting prosecutor­s ever since, and his case has raised allegation­s that Thai authoritie­s are lenient with wealthy suspects.

Mr Vorayuth left Thailand in April, days before authoritie­s finally issued an arrest warrant, and his Thai passports were later revoked. He went to Singapore and then to Taiwan, but his whereabout­s since early May are unknown.

The suspect originally faced three charges, but only one remains, because he has avoided authoritie­s for so long. A speeding count expired in 2013, and a hit-and-run charge expired early this month. The statute of limitation­s for the last charge, causing death by reckless driving, runs out in 10 years.

Mr Vorayuth’s family owns about half of the Red Bull empire, which was co-founded by his grandfathe­r. For more than four years after the crash, he lived a high-flying and even public life. Relying in part on public social-media posts from his family and friends, the AP found he had gone to Formula One races, snowboarde­d in Japan and cruised in Venice, often flying in private Red Bull jets, all while failing to show up for court dates.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand