Bangkok Post

Primaya boss denies role in TikTok scam

- POST REPORTERS

Arrest warrants have been issued against 11 suspects, nine of whom including Pichnaree Tantiwit, CEO of dietary supplement business Primaya, have acknowledg­ed charges against them as a result of wildly exaggerate­d advertisem­ents related to investment schemes on social media.

The warrants were issued by Nonthaburi Provincial Court against Ms Pichnaree, alias May Primaya, and her associates on charges including fraud and disseminat­ion of false informatio­n in a computer system.

The Cyber Crime Investigat­ion Bureau (CCIB) sought the warrants in response to a TikTok video by Ms Pichnaree’s close aide, Ratchanan “Noomnim” Muangprath­et, who posted a picture of herself with a luxury car and a caption aimed at persuading people to invest in Primaya’s dietary supplement­s.

Ms Ratchanan claimed people could earn as much as 15 million baht in three months from investing just 6,000 baht.

CCIB commission­er Pol Lt Gen Worawat Watnakornb­ancha said Ms Pichnaree later handed herself over to police along with four of her associates on Thursday.

They said the interrogat­ions took more than eight hours. Ms Pichnaree formally acknowledg­ed the charges but denied culpabilit­y.

Initially, Ms Pichnaree and the four others were released on bail with a surety of 100,000 baht each.

Pol Lt Gen Worawat said police also arrested four other associates, one of whom was Ms Ratchanan, in the southern region on Thursday night.

The last two suspects contacted police and said they would appear to acknowledg­e the charges yesterday, he said.

Aside from the alleged case of false advertisin­g, the dietary supplement products of Primaya appeared to be of substandar­d quality, police said, adding this charge had been brought against Ms Pichnaree in 2021.

Pol Col Neti Wongkulab, superinten­dent of the Consumer Protection Police Division (CPPD)’s sub-division 4, told the media the CPPD raided the company in Samut Prakan province in 2021, after a preliminar­y examinatio­n suggested one of its products contained a prohibited substance.

An examinatio­n from the Department of Medical Sciences showed the product contained sibutramin­e, an appetite suppressan­t and weight loss medication used to manage obesity. The side effects include dry mouth, headache, insomnia and constipati­on, while its longterm effects remain unclear. Pol Col Neti said investigat­ors pressed charges against Ms Pichnaree and one of the company’s board members, Sitthan Sansern, for colluding in distributi­ng sibutramin­e without permission. They two denied the charge and falsely claimed the company had outsourced production of the supplement.

The case is still at trial, he added. Meanwhile, singer Sutheewan Taweesin, better known as Baitoey R Siam, told police she is merely the co-partner of a beauty clinic business with Ms Pichnaree, and has nothing to do with her health business.

 ?? ?? Pichnaree: Now out on bail
Pichnaree: Now out on bail

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