Thai tycoon faces verdict in black leopard poaching case

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KANCHANABURI, Thailand, March 19, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A Thai tycoon accused of poaching a black leopard at a wildlife sanctuary is due in court Tuesday for the highly anticipated verdict — a case that has fuelled outrage in a country fed up with impunity and corruption.

Construction magnate Premchai Karnasuta, one of Thailand’s wealthiest moguls, was arrested by rangers in a national park in February 2018.

He was detained with three others after rangers stumbled upon their campsite and found guns and animal carcasses, including a Kalij pheasant, a red muntjac — or barking deer — and the skinned remains of a black leopard.

The high-profile ruling is expected less than a week before a general election on March 24, the first polls since the junta seized power in 2014 vowing to expunge graft and uphold the rule of law.

Premchai was charged with a slew of offences related to poaching, though he has denied wrongdoing and was swiftly granted bail.

But the striking images of the skinned leopard went viral, inspiring protests that saw demonstrators don black leopard masks, as well as graffiti of the giant cat across city walls and a Change.org petition calling for an investigation.

Thai media followed every detail of the case, including the authorities’ investigation of human faces found at the scene and a raid on Premchai’s home where police uncovered a stash of ivory tusks and guns.

“(It) struck a chord with everyone who sees a double standard in the country’s law enforcement,” said Human Rights Watch’s Sunai Phasuk.

“While poor people and forest dwellers are often punished for foraging or hunting to feed their families, tycoons and officials can hunt for leisure with little fear of getting punished.”

Arrests and convictions for poaching happen often in Thailand but they are rare when it comes to prominent individuals.

Premchai is the president of the publicly traded Italian-Thai Development, a Bangkok-based company that helped build Thailand’s Suvarnabhumi airport and the city’s skytrain public transit system known as the BTS.

Amid a mounting outcry, junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha said last year that if the courts found Premchai guilty, it would not “matter how big he is”.

Requests for comment from Premchai’s company were refused.