Red Bull heir has wings
THE Ferrari driver who allegedly slammed into a motorcycle cop, dragged him along the road and then sped away from his mangled body took just hours to find, as investigators followed a trail of brake fluid into the gated estate of one of Thailand’s richest families.
But the prosecution of Red Bull heir Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya has been delayed almost five years. When Yoovidhya, 31, has been called in to face authorities, he hasn’t shown up, claiming through his attorney that he’s sick or out of the country on business.
And while statutes of limitations run out on key charges this year, it’s widely assumed he is hiding, possibly abroad, or quietly living locally, only going out in disguise. He isn’t. Within weeks of the accident, The Associated Press (AP) has found Yoovidhya was back to enjoying his family’s jet-set life, largely associated with the Red Bull brand, an energy drink company cofounded by his grandfather. He flies around the world on Red Bull jets, cheers their Formula One racing team from Red Bull’s VIP seats and keeps a black Porsche Carrera in London with a custom plate: B055 RBR. Boss Red Bull Racing. And he’s not hard to find. Last month, social media clues led AP reporters to Yoovidhya in the sacred city of Luang Prabang, Laos, where he and his family enjoyed a $1 000-a-night (R12 800) resort, visited temples and lounged by the pool.
Critics say inaction in this case epitomises long-standing privilege for the wealthy class in Thailand, a politically tumultuous country that has struggled with rule of law for decades.
Police say Yoovidhya is once again on notice to show up and hear the charges.
He is expected at the prosecutors’ office tomorrow.
Yoovidhya and his siblings grew up in a private, extended family whose fortune expanded from millions to billions. His brother is nicknamed Porsche, his sister Champagne. Yoovidhya received a British education at a $40 000-a-year boarding school.
In rural Thailand, police Sergeant-Major Wichean Glanprasert didn’t have such opportunities, but he was ambitious. The youngest of five, he was the first to leave their coconutand-palm farm for the city, the first to get a government job, to graduate from college. He paid for his parents’ medical care and supported a sister through cancer. He had no children, but planned to put his brother’s kids through college.
Their lives collided predawn on September 3, 2012, when Yoovidhya’s Ferrari roared down Sukhumvit Road, one of Bangkok’s main drags. The bloody accident scene made national headlines for days.
The policeman’s family grieved, but they figured at least there would be justice. Glanprasert was a police officer. Certainly the system would hold his killer responsible.
“At first I thought they’d follow a legal process,” said his brother, Pornanan. Now he’s not so sure. “We will not let this police officer die without justice. Believe me,” said Bangkok police commissioner Comronwit Toopgrajank in the days after the accident.
As the case unfolded, the Yoovidhya family attorney said Vorayuth Yoovidhya left the scene not to flee, but to tell his father. Yoovidhya’s blood alcohol levels were high because he drank once he got home to settle his nerves, said the attorney.
Glanprasert’s family accepted a settlement, about $100 000. In turn, they promised not to press criminal charges.
“Blood money,” says Pornanan, whose share sits in the bank.
Meanwhile, Yoovidhya failed to show up when ordered to face criminal charges of speeding, hit-and-run, and deadly, reckless driving. Police say Yoovidhya disputes the reckless-driving charge, claiming the officer swerved in front of him. The speeding charge expired after a year. The more serious charge of hit-and-run, which police say carries a penalty of up to six months in jail, expires in September.
Complicating matters, Yoovidhya’s attorney has repeatedly filed petitions claiming unfair treatment in the investigation.
Police say it’s up to prosecutors to charge him. Prosecutors say extra investigation is needed, but wouldn’t specify.
Thammasat University law professor Pokpong Srisanit said the situation was “not normal”, but did appear legal.
Meanwhile, the Thai media figures Yoovidhya is laying low.
Last year, the Bangkok Post said that after paying the settlement in 2012, Yoovidhya “has been out of the country or otherwise unable to answer the criminal case against him in the years since”.
A few weeks after the article appeared, a photo of Yoovidhya was posted online. He was on the beach at a seaside resort south of Bangkok.
While Yoovidhya’s case has been on hold since 2012, his carefree lifestyle has not.
More than 120 social media posts show Yoovidhya visiting at least nine countries since Glanprasert’s death. He’s cruised Monaco’s harbour, snowboarded Japan’s powder, and celebrated his birthday at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in London. At the Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Osaka, he posed wearing robes from Hogwarts School’s darkest dorm, Slytherin House. Friends and cousins posting about him have hundreds of thousands of online followers.
His lifestyle – soaking in an Abu Dhabi pool, dining in Nice, France, holding a $10 000 bicycle in Bangkok – is supported by his family’s billions.
Yoovidhya’s grandfather, Chaleo Yoovidhya, was known as a modest, private man who grew up in poverty, the son of a duck seller.
Before Yoovidhya was born, Chaleo partnered his company, TC Pharma, with Austrian entrepreneur Dietrich Mateschitz, investing $500 000 each to carbonate and market a caffeine-powered syrupy energy drink popular in Thailand.
In 1987, Red Bull Energy Drink went international.
Red Bull is now sold in 170 countries. It has its own media company, race cars and jets, and sponsors concerts and extreme athletes. Forbes estimates Yoovidhya’s father Chalerm Yoovidhya’s net worth at $9.7 billion.
Yoovidhya’s legal situation is far from unique.
In 2010, a 16-year-old unlicensed daughter of a former military officer crashed her sedan into a van, killing nine people. The teen, from an affluent family, was given a two-year suspended sentence and had misunderstandings that postponed her community service until last year.
Her case, and others involving what the local press calls “Bangkok’s deadly rich kids”, are handled markedly different than most deadly car crashes, in which Thais are typically arrested, prosecuted and sentenced to jail.
Today in his small apartment, Glanprasert’s brother keeps a few photo albums of him. Pornanan says Thailand runs on a “double standard”.
Last month on Instagram, a friend posted a group shot, guys taking a snowboarding break at Japan’s majestic Annapuri ski resort.
“ran into little bull @bossrbr lets catch up tonite dude” says a friend.
“Snow snow snow,” chimes in another.
“Wof wof,” says bossrbr. – ANA-AP