Thailand probes Malaysian company for engaging in illegal businesses

Thailand probes Malaysian company for engaging in illegal businesses

The company, which has wide business interests in Thailand, has been under the spotlight in Malaysia over allegations of spearheading a complex pyramid scheme involving thousands of investors and millions of ringgit.

money-laundering
BANGKOK: Thailand has set up a multi-agency committee to intensify its ongoing probe into a Malaysian company allegedly engaged in large-scale illegal businesses, including money laundering, in the kingdom.

The company, which has wide business interests in Thailand, has been under the spotlight in Malaysia over allegations of spearheading a complex pyramid scheme involving thousands of investors and millions of ringgit.

“The investigation is ongoing. We had a meeting with various government agencies in charge of law enforcement, including from the Narcotics Suppression Bureau (NSB),” a high-ranking official told Bernama recently.

Other agencies involved in the investigation include the Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO), Department of Special Investigation (DSI), Revenue Department, Customs Department, Office of Narcotics Control Board (ONCB) and Department of Business Development.

Representatives from the country’s central bank, Bank of Thailand (BoT), are also assisting in the investigation.

According to the source, the committee held a meeting recently where it discussed ways to plot new and aggressive moves in the effort to bring to book the Malaysian company for its alleged illegal activities in Thailand.

“We will come up with a new strategy and methods in our investigation,” he said, adding that each agency will be tasked with specific responsibilities. He declined to elaborate.

The authorities also investigated the company for links with the local drug trade, but found no such evidence.

According to the source, Thai authorities began investigating the company about a year ago, starting with its five subsidiaries, and expanded the probe as the true extent of the company’s alleged involvement in illicit activities began to surface.

The company, which has been operating in Thailand for several years, has been known to be involved in various businesses including hotels and resorts, entertainment, restaurants, money exchange and apartments.

Most of the businesses in which it is involved in are located in southern Thailand, in bustling towns like Hatyai and Danok, and other southern provinces.

Thailand’s intensification of the investigation into the company is a continuation of more than a year of probes beginning with a raid on a company-linked hotel in southern Thailand in January last year, where authorities found cash in various foreign currencies worth 83 million baht (about RM10.3 million).

The raid on the hotel was part of an investigation into the high-profile murder of a 54-year-old Malaysian man in December 2015. The man was shot dead in broad daylight by assailants using an M-16 assault rifle while he was driving his Mercedes Benz with a female companion en route to Hatyai Airport.

The woman suffered severe injuries but survived.

In response to the January 2016 raid, which led to the discovery of a large amount of foreign currencies, Thai police roped in the DSI and several other agencies, including Amlo, in their efforts to trace the money trail.

The source said the multi-agency investigation committee probing the company was also monitoring developments in recent investigations conducted by Malaysian authorities into the company.

“We observed with keen interest the ongoing probe by our Malaysian counterparts,” said the source, who preferred to remain anonymous due to the sensitivity of the information shared.

Authorities in Malaysia have raided the company’s premises and offices as well as froze its accounts containing millions of ringgit in deposits in their ongoing probe.

 

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