Showing 1 - 8 of 8
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 15/11/2023
» Police investigators found no evidence of bribery in the case of the overloaded truck that caused a roadworks cover to collapse on Sukhumvit Road last week.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 12/11/2023
» The owner of a lorry that caused the collapse of a section of road in Bangkok on Wednesday has insisted its star-shaped sticker was not a sign that a bribe had been paid to traffic police to allow it on the road while dangerously overloaded.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 13/06/2023
» The Royal Thai Police (RTP) Office's inspector-general will likely take 15 days to identify who will face a disciplinary investigation over the truck sticker bribery scandal.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 10/06/2023
» Twelve highway police officers out of 40 implicated in the truck sticker bribe controversy have been charged with extortion and misconduct.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 09/06/2023
» About 40 highway police allegedly involved in a scheme to take kickbacks from illegally overloaded trucks by issuing so-called "bribe stickers" will be transferred to inactive posts, Pol Maj Gen Jaroonkiat Pankaew, the Counter Corruption Division (CCD) commander, said on Thursday.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 07/06/2023
» 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.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 31/05/2023
» Pol Maj Gen Ekkaraj Limsangkat, commander of the Highway Police Division, was on Tuesday transferred to an inactive post at the Operations Centre of the Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) following allegations of kickbacks for overloaded lorries.
News, Wassayos Ngamkham, Published on 30/05/2023
» National police chief Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapas has ordered highway police to investigate claims that drivers of overloaded lorries are not being arrested because they display special bribe-paid stickers.