The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Jet-set monk’ jailed 114 years

> Thai court convicts him of fraud, illegally raising funds online

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BANGKOK: A Thai court sentenced a disgraced former monk to 114 years in prison yesterday, a court official said, more than a year after he was extradited from the US.

Wiraphon Sukphon made headlines in 2013 when footage emerged of him wearing designer aviator sunglasses with a Louis Vuitton bag on a private jet.

The 39-year-old fled to the US but was sent back after he was accused of raping a minor and deceiving donors who gave him money to build the world’s largest emerald Buddha image.

A further probe revealed he owned luxury cars and multiple bank accounts valued at about US$700,000 (RM2.8 million).

Wiraphon was convicted of money laundering, fraud and violating the Computer Crime Act for raising funds online, a Bangkok court official said.

“Judges convicted him and sentenced him altogether to 114 years,” the official said, adding that under Thai law Wiraphon would not serve more than 20 years.

Wiraphon was also required to return 28.6 million baht to 29 donors who filed complaints.

The ruling on the rape charge is expected in October, a public prosecutor said.

The monk is accused of having sex with an under-age girl around a decade ago and fathering her child.

He faces the prospect of an additional 20 years behind bars.

Thailand is mostly Buddhist and the religion is woven into everyday life, with most men spending at least some time in a monastery as novice monks.

But the junta that seized power in 2014 has taken a strong line against a Buddhist clergy mired in scandal.

Extortion, sex and drug cases tied to the clergy have shocked the public, and authoritie­s last year floated the idea of introducin­g digitised ID cards to better track monks with criminal conviction­s.

In May, the abbot of the tourist magnet “Golden Mount” temple in Bangkok surrendere­d to police after US$4 million was found in bank accounts in his name.

Police are also investigat­ing whether millions of dollars under control of the National Office of Buddhism was misused.

In a high-profile case in February last year, troops laid siege to the temple of a mega-rich Dhammakaya sect on the outskirts of Bangkok for weeks in an effort to find and detain its controvers­ial abbot, who remains at large despite accusation­s of massive fraud. – AFP

 ??  ?? Wiraphon arrives at the criminal court in Bangkok yesterday.
Wiraphon arrives at the criminal court in Bangkok yesterday.

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