Texarkana Gazette

After Taiwan stop, a fugitive Red Bull heir’s path a mystery

- By Jerry Harmer, Johnson Lai and Martha Mendoza

BANGKOK—As a hitand-run charge effectivel­y expires, the whereabout­s of an heir to the Red Bull energy-drink empire accused of killing a Bangkok police officer five years ago remain unknown. The fugitive, whose family is worth billions, has apparently found a way to disappear.

The Associated Press recently confirmed Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya’s last known location: Taiwan. Two sources with knowledge of the investigat­ion said he flew there from Singapore, where he had fled shortly before he was supposed to make an April court appearance in Bangkok.

The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters about the case, said Vorayuth stayed at the luxurious Mandarin Oriental in Taipei before leaving the island May 3. Since then, the trail has gone cold.

The statute of limitation­s on the hit-andrun charge Vorayuth faces expires Sunday, though it effectivel­y ended at 5 p.m. Friday, said Prayuth Petchkhun, a deputy spokesman for the attorney general’s office. “After that, even if you found the suspect, you wouldn’t be able to bring him to the court until Monday,” he said.

The expired charge might have been easier to prove than what would be the sole remaining count against him: causing death by reckless driving.

For more than four years, Vorayuth missed court appearance­s while living a high-flying and even public life. Relying in part on public social-media posts from his family and friends, the AP found that Vorayuth had gone to Formula One races, snowboarde­d in Japan and cruised Venice, all while failing to show up for court dates. No warrant was issued for his arrest until this April, after the AP report.

“We have informed the police of our decision to file charges against him several months ago and this is police’s responsibi­lity to bring the suspect in,” Prayuth said.

In May, Thai authoritie­s revoked Vorayuth’s passport and said it would ask Interpol to send an internatio­nal alert. The agency’s “red notice,” however, was issued only this week— and it has yet to be posted on Interpol’s public website. An Interpol spokespers­on, who asked not to be named according to agency policy, said it keeps red notices off the public site only if “the requesting country has asked that it not be publicized.”

Vorayuth easily could have another passport and could be in any of many places—even his home city. The AP revealed this month that Vorayuth’s family, worth an estimated $9.7 billion, has been using offshore companies to cloak purchases of jets and luxury properties.

“In a country like Thailand, money talks,” said Ken Gamble, of IFW Global, a cyber-intelligen­ce firm used by government­s and police agencies. “Fugitives can often outsmart the authoritie­s if they know what they’re doing and they have contacts on the ground. Someone of his caliber, he’ll have some pretty good advisers.”

Vorayuth is accused of slamming his Ferrari into motorcycle police Sgt. Maj. Wichean Glanpraser­t in 2012, dragging the officer’s body down a main Bangkok street before racing home.

In hiding from the authoritie­s, Vorayuth is doing more than just evading capture: He is laying a path to legal impunity through Thailand’s statute of limitation­s. A speeding charge expired four years ago.

With the hit-and-run count gone as well, the last charge is causing death by reckless driving. For that, Vorayuth has offered a defense: He has consistent­ly told authoritie­s it was the policeman who drove recklessly, not him.

Internatio­nal attention brought to the case renewed cries of impunity and corruption in Thailand. Yet two days after the AP’s first reports in March, Vorayuth again failed to show up for his Bangkok court appointmen­t, this time because, his lawyer said, he was on a mission in the United Kingdom. Indeed, a week later AP did meet up with Vorayuth outside his family’s luxury home in London, but he wouldn’t say anything.

Prosecutor­s again pledged to take action, and set yet another court date: April 27. Vorayuth left the country days before that appointmen­t, this time flying by private jet to Singapore. He changed his Facebook identity that month from “Boss Yoovidhya” to “Bee Toh.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? n In this April 5 file photo, Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya, whose grandfathe­r co-founded energy drink company Red Bull, walks to get in a car as he leaves a house in London.
Associated Press n In this April 5 file photo, Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya, whose grandfathe­r co-founded energy drink company Red Bull, walks to get in a car as he leaves a house in London.

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