Bangkok Post

Cops bid to revive 2 Premchai charges

- POST REPORTERS

Police submitted a letter of objection to public prosecutor­s yesterday regarding the indictment against constructi­on tycoon Premchai Karnasuta, who has been charged in a suspected poaching incident at a protected wildlife sanctuary.

Deputy police chief Srivara Ransibrahm­anakul led a team of investigat­ors to submit the letter to the Office of the Attorney-General (OAG).

Police proposed earlier that Mr Premchai should be indicted on 11 counts. The Office of Public Prosecutio­n Region 7 last Wednesday dropped five of them, leaving six in place including the charge of colluding to enter a wildlife sanctuary without permission.

In the letter of objection, police insisted the indictment against Mr Premchai and three others should include the charges of colluding to enter a wildlife sanctuary without permission, colluding to smuggle wildlife-poaching equipment into a wildlife sanctuary without permission, and colluding in attempting to hunt wildlife in a wildlife sanctuary without permission.

The officers said they have accepted the prosecutor’s decision to drop the charge of colluding to commit cruelty to wild animals, and the charge of colluding to possess weapons and ammunition.

Pol Gen Srivara said yesterday police wanted the prosecutor­s to reconsider the charges that had been dropped, particular­ly that of colluding to enter a wildlife sanctuary without permission, after they studied the regulation­s regarding entry to national parks by the National Park, Wildlife and Plant Conservati­on Department (NPWPCD).

Pol Gen Srivara said previously that although no penalty is stated in the NPWPCD’s regulation, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmen­t has already filed a civil suit against Mr Premchai and three other suspects for this offence.

Tharam Chaleechan, deputy spokesman of the OAG, said the attorney-general would make a decision before the final detention period of the suspects in April.

The president of Italian-Thai Developmen­t Plc and his accomplice­s were arrested on Feb 4 after reportedly shooting and eating a rare black leopard.

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