Background
An ambitious army officer of Thai-Burmese ancestry, Phao married the daughter of General Phin Choonhavan.
An ambitious army officer of Thai-Burmese ancestry, Phao married the daughter of General Phin Choonhavan.
He eventually fled the country and died in exile. He took part in the 1947 Coup d"état that ended the last of Pridi Phanomyong"s attempts to create democracy in post-World World War II Thailand, restoring disgraced Field Marshal Plaek Pibulsonggram to power. Phao was promoted to the position of director of the police in 1951, by which time he had become one of the country"s all-powerful triumvirate.
Their crimes were many:
In March 1949, four MPs from Isaan and an associate, all one-time disciples of the exiled Pridi, were arrested on charges of treason.
They were shot dead by their police escort while supposedly being transferred from one jail to another. They were murdered (allegedly by strangulation in a police station) and their bodies burned in a forest in Kanchanaburi Province.
A successful newspaper publisher, Ari Liwara, refused to sell out to Phao and was killed in March 1953. In 1954 Phon Malithong, Member of Parliament for Samut Sakhon who provided evidence of corruption against Phao in Parliament, was in found tied to a concrete pier in the Chao Phraya River, having first been strangled.
Phao was extremely wealthy.
He demanded protection money from businessmen, rigged the gold exchange, and blackmailed corporations into giving him huge shareholdings. He also profited greatly from the opium trade. Police units transferred opium from the poppy fields of the Golden Triangle to Bangkok, ready to be exported.
Trucks, planes, and boats which had been supplied to the police by the Central Intelligence Agency, were instead used to move opium, which the police carefully guarded.
Phao lost power when Phibun was overthrown by Sarit Thanarat in 1957. He fled to Switzerland, where he died at the age of 50.
Made deputy director of the police, Phao quickly staged a show trial of the alleged "assassins" of King Ananda Mahidol (Rama VIII), in which three members of the palace staff were found guilty despite any evidence and were eventually executed even though they had earlier been found innocent.