Ever seen someone vanish with your stuff and think, How on earth did that happen so smoothly? Well, that’s the story from Udon Thani, where a man walked off with 51 lottery tickets using a forged mobile-banking transfer slip. Let’s unravel this wild twist.
How the Scam Unfolded Fast and Slick
Picture a busy stall at a fresh-food market. The guy strolls in, slides on a black-and-yellow jacket, and picks tickets like he owns the place. The vendor, Boonmee Bootpho, rings up 40 tickets, then another 10, and throws in an extra one for free. He claims to pay via a mobile banking app scans the QR code, flashes a transfer slip… and boom, pockets 5,100 baht worth of tickets. But guess what? No money landed in her account. That’s when the horror and confusion kicked in. She filed a theft report, backed by CCTV footage, and police are now chasing this Houdini with digital tricks.
Vendor Hopes for Resolution, Not Just Retribution
Here’s the heartfelt part: Boonmee and her daughter didn’t go into rage mode right away. Instead, they reached out hoping the guy just missed pressing send. They offered to drop the case if he returned the tickets or paid in full. It’s a mix of tough and compassionate like saying, “You messed up, but let’s fix this before calling the cops.”
A Familiar Trick Not Just Bad Luck, Smart Crime
Sadly, this isn’t the first rodeo. In Pattaya, an Indian man tried the same move at a nightclub faking a 90,000-baht payment to get away without settling the bill. Police didn’t buy his “first time” excuse, and now they’re digging through his past to see if this is a repeat act.
Scam at a Glance
Element | Details |
---|---|
Method | Fake mobile-banking transfer slip |
Victim | Lottery vendor in Udon Thani |
Loss | 51 tickets (~5,100 baht) |
Vendor’s response | Filed police report, offered suspect a chance to return or pay |
Similar Case | Indian man faked a 90,000-baht transfer at a Pattaya nightclub |
Conclusion
Here’s what sticks: this scam wasn’t accidental it was sharp, calculated, and still low on the shame spectrum. Boonmee’s calm but firm response shows dignity in the face of digital deceit. If you’re a small-ticket vendor reading this: double-check that payment hits before letting someone walk away. This sort of “quick swipe” scam isn’t about luck it’s about being alert.