Thai developer jailed 12 years for falsely citing royals in land deal nearly 10 years ago

A Thai property developer was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Tuesday under the kingdom’s royal insult law, the latest conviction linked to a scandal that saw the Crown Prince’s ex-wife fall from grace.
Thailand’s lese majeste law is one of the world’s harshest – carrying up to 15 years in prison per offence – and has increasingly been exercised by the ultra-royalist generals who seized power in a 2014 coup.
Boontham Boonthepprathan, 65, was sentenced for allegedly citing links to the monarchy to ease a land deal nearly ten years ago.
The judge said his sentence was reduced because of his “useful testimony”.
According to the court he also claimed a close connection to Pongpat Chayapun, a senior police officer at the centre of a major corruption probe in 2014 that engulfed many relatives of the Crown Prince’s former wife Srirasmi.
Pongpat, Srirasmi’s uncle, was accused of running a sprawling criminal syndicate involved in illegal gambling dens, oil smuggling and extortion rackets.