An Australian man linked to a “Hells Angels” chapter has been arrested in Bangkok for smuggling drugs, police said yesterday, as Thai authorities tackle organized crime run by motorcycle gangs in the kingdom.
Immigration officials detained 34-year-old Luke Joshua Cook and his 40-year-old Thai wife Kanyarat Wedphitak at Bangkok’s main airport on Saturday for attempting to smuggle half a ton of crystal meth into Thailand in 2015.
Cook is accused of trying to bring the drugs to land from a boat moored in the Gulf of Thailand. He was spooked by a patrol boat and threw a large amount of the “ice” overboard.
Around 50 kilograms of the drug later washed up on Thailand’s southern coast.
Cook’s arrest comes amid a widening crackdown against the Hells Angels, who have chapters based in Bangkok and Pattaya, a Thai resort notorious for its seedy nightlife and criminal networks.
Police conducted raids on the motorcycle gang’s residences and businesses in Pattaya last week and on Sunday, seizing money, property, vehicles and guns.
“It is a big transnational crime organization which is just escalating its operations in Thailand,” Maj. Gen. Apichat Sirisith told reporters on Tuesday as police revealed Cook’s arrest.
With roots in the U.S., the Hells Angels spread to other countries, establishing chapters around the world.
The Australian Hells Angels are notorious for prostitution, racketeering, drugs, and arms trafficking, and have expanded operations into Southeast Asia as authorities catch up with them on home soil.
Their Pattaya chapter grabbed headlines in early 2015 when an Australian Hells Angel leader was found dead after being kidnapped by masked men.
Australian national Antonio Bagnato, 28, was convicted of the murder of a Wayne Schneider earlier this year and sentenced to death, a verdict rarely carried out in Thailand.
Schneider was once on an Australian “most wanted” list for shooting a bouncer in the knee outside a Sydney nightclub.
Bagnato was also a suspect in a 2014 Sydney murder.
Both moved to Thailand and chose to live in Pattaya.
Cook is believed to have helped the Bagnato escape to Cambodia where he was later arrested, Thai police said.