Bangkok Post

6 more officers embroiled in lorry ‘sticker’ scandal

- WASSAyoS ngAmkhAm

The investigat­ion into “sticker bribes” for illegally overloaded lorries has incriminat­ed another six officers from the Highway Police Division (HPD), according to Pol Maj Gen Jaroonkiat Pankaew, the Counter Corruption Division (CCD) commander.

Speaking in his capacity as the acting HPD commander, he said those officers would be ordered to perform temporary duty at the HPD this week. The division will proceed with legal action if any are found to have engaged in the scheme, he added.

He also said the investigat­ion team would collect more informatio­n and widen its dragnet.

Pol Maj Gen Jaroonkiat said he had ordered 50 stations of the HPD to investigat­e the sticker bribery issue over the past two years.

He also promised to look into rumours of another bribery scheme reportedly involving the wife of the deputy commander of the Nakhon Pathom Provincial Police Division.

In the meantime, Move Forward Party (MFP) MP-elect Wiroj Lakkhanaad­isorn, who brought the sticker bribes issue to light on his social media accounts last week, said he and the Land Transport Federation of Thailand (LTFT) chairman would submit evidence on the matter to Pol Maj Gen Jaroonkiat and the police inspectorg­eneral tomorrow.

He expressed confidence that legal action would be taken against some officers, and that he was confident the probe would be conducted transparen­tly.

Meanwhile, some LTFT members sent an open letter to the MFP expressing their disappoint­ment at the federation.

The letter claimed the agency had withheld vital informatio­n while the MFP had not checked its facts thoroughly enough.

The letter said some of the bribery stickers were not being used anymore, while others owned by LTFT members had been removed from the evidence submitted to the MFP.

“The LTFT is not sincere in solving this problem,” the letter stated.

“It is using the MFP to attack rival transporta­tion associatio­ns to pressure the government,” it continued.

“When LTFT Chairman [Apichart Prairungru­ang] insisted none of the LTFT’s 400,000 members engaged in such a practice, we wonder how the chairman can be so certain about this?”

The authors claim the LTFT is playing a game designed to harm rival associatio­ns as a price war rages in the logistics market.

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