PHUKET
CRIME
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Dog groomer arrested for cat burgling
TIP OF THE ICEBERG: Victims identify their valuables
from the 1,000-plus stolen items recovered by police,
who believe the total haul was much larger.
PHUKET CITY: Phuket City police have arrested a serial
thief charged with breaking into 14 homes in Wichit
and Chalong during a crime spree that began in mid-2007.
Police Superintendent Col Nos Svettalekha and Lt Col
Wijak Tarom identified the suspect as 31-year-old
Noppakhun Chatchawech, a resident of Chalong Village
4.
Noppakhun, who by day worked grooming dogs at a pet
shop in Phuket Villa 3, was presented to media along
with more than 1,000 stolen items recovered by police.
The booty included jewelry, mobile phones and bank
notes in a variety of denominations. Most of the recovered
goods were fake or low-quality items that the suspect
probably had trouble selling off, Lt Col Wijak said.
He told the Gazette that the suspect was very active
over the Songkran holiday, when six break-ins were
reported – all at Jomthong Thani on Kwang Rd and Phuket
Villa 3 off Chao Fa East Rd, both in Wichit.
The big break in the investigation came when the suspect
was caught on a CCTV camera while withdrawing money
from an ATM machine with a stolen card.
The owner of the ATM card, Phuket Villa 3 resident
Rattawipa Chantawat, told police on April 20 that
her home had been burgled while she and her family
were out of town for the Sonkgran holidays.
When she checked her account at Thanachart Bank, she
realized that 104,900 baht had been withdrawn.
K. Rattawipa told police that the ATM card and its
PIN code were left together inside the home while
she was away.
She identified K. Noppakhun, a fellow resident of
Phuket Villa 3, when viewing CCTV footage of him making
an ATM withdrawal.
After being arrested at his home at 1 am the next
day, the suspect confessed to burgling K. Rattawipa’s
home and 14 others since the middle of last year,
police said.
After watching homes to learn their occupants’ routines,
the suspect forced his way in at night using a screwdriver,
Lt Col Wijak said.
Although the the suspect claims to have worked alone,
the number of items recovered has led police to believe
he may have had an accomplice, he added.
After the press conference, homeowners were invited
to identify and reclaim their stolen belongings.
Among them was Phuket Provincial Livestock Office
Chief Sunart Wongchavalit, who lost many valuable
items, including gold Buddha image amulets, during
a break-in in November.
Police continue to investigate and the suspect faces
several charges of vandalism, trespass and burglary-by-night.
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