Prosectors vow to arrest Red Bull heir after court no-show for alleged hit-and-run that killed policeman

Vorayuth has complained through his lawyers of unfair treatment - Thai Daily News
Vorayuth has complained through his lawyers of unfair treatment - Thai Daily News

Thai prosecutors vowed Thursday to seek the first arrest warrant for the heir to the Red Bull fortune after he dodged the latest summons to hear charges over a 2012 hit-and-run in his Ferrari that left a policeman dead.

The threat comes after years of public anger over the lack of progress in a case that critics say highlights the impunity enjoyed by Thailand's wealthy and well-connected.

Vorayuth Yoovidhya, whose nickname is “Boss”, was 27 when he allegedly smashed his Ferrari into a police officer in the early hours of the morning, dragging the body for several hundred metres before fleeing the scene of the crash.

Shown here in London earlier this month, the heir refused to say whether he'd return to Bangkok to meet prosecutors - Credit: AP Photo/Matt Dunham
Shown here in London earlier this month, the heir refused to say whether he'd return to Bangkok to meet prosecutors Credit: AP Photo/Matt Dunham

The scion, whose father is Thailand's fourth-richest billionaire, has never showed up for a formal indictment, allowing some of the charges against him to expire.

After Vorayuth missed the latest summons Thursday, prosecutors promised to request an arrest warrant, which has never been issued for the princeling.

“If the suspect doesn't show up by 4pm today, tomorrow we will send a letter to Thonglor police station to ask the court for an arrest warrant immediately,” Prayut Bejraguna, a spokesman for the the Attorney-General's office, told reporters.

Prosecutors said they would also explore extraditing Vorayuth, who has paraded his flashy lifestyle on social media over the years with frequent trips overseas.

His lawyer has previously said Vorayuth was on business in the UK and unable to return to Bangkok.

“If our [extradition] request fails we can ask UK police to renew the case while we support them with details,” said Amnat Chotchai, the head of the Attorney-General's foreign division.

A trail of debris from the accident led police to the Bangkok mansion of Vorayuth's super-rich clan, who own half of the Red Bull energy drink empire.

The case has become a byword for impunity enjoyed by the country's rich - Credit: AFP PHOTO / STR
The case has become a byword for impunity enjoyed by the country's rich Credit: AFP PHOTO / STR

Thonglor police station, which covers Bangkok's most exclusive district, initially accepted the family's claim that the housekeeper was driving the car.

But the story fell apart and Vorayuth was eventually hit with a string of charges - including causing death by reckless driving, which carries a maximum 10 year jail term.

That charge will not expire until 2027.

Vorayuth's grandfather Chaleo Yoovidhya co-founded the Red Bull brand with Austrian Dietrich Mateschitz in the 1980s.

Chaleo died in March 2012 aged 89, leaving his eleven surviving relatives with a collective wealth of $22 billion, according to Bloomberg.

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