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Hathaithip Rueangkham Arrested in Banglamung Over 62 Disposable Vapes

Evening Raid in Banglamung: Woman Arrested Over 62 Disposable Vapes and Drug Test Flag

What began as a routine operation in Banglamung, Chon Buri, on the evening of August 21 quickly escalated into a case that touches on smuggling, underage sales and drug use. At 6:30 p.m., a raid on a residence on Soi Thung Klom-Tal Man 29, led by Deputy Superintendent Police Lieutenant Colonel Thana Wisetchai alongside Investigation Chief Police Lieutenant Colonel Suphat Sutsong, ended with the arrest of 50-year-old Hathaithip “Thai” Rueangkham.

Police say they recovered 62 disposable e-cigarettes of the COKE TIN brand from the property. The devices were seized as evidence and have become the focal point of an investigation that local news outlets, including The Pattaya News, are following closely.

A Strange Story — and a Stranger-Smelling Defense

During questioning, Hathaithip insisted she wasn’t part of an organised trafficking network. According to her account, the vapes were given to her by a scavenger who reportedly owed her 3,000 baht (about US$92). She claimed the scavenger found the items discarded by Chinese nationals under a motorway bridge and passed them along. Hathaithip admitted she sold the disposable vapes to teenagers for 50 baht (around US$1.50) each, acknowledging that she knew the activity was illegal but saying she needed the extra cash.

Her explanation, however, failed to convince investigators. Officers noted the vapes were in pristine condition and were present in a quantity that suggested commercial import rather than curbside trash redistribution. That, coupled with the brand-uniform appearance of the items, led police to suspect direct illegal importation.

Drug Test and Charges

Compounding the case against her, a drug test returned a positive result for illegal substances. Authorities have therefore added a charge related to the illegal consumption of a Category 1 narcotic to the list of accusations.

Hathaithip now faces charges under Section 246 of the Customs Act B.E. 2560 (2017) for concealing, selling, or possessing smuggled goods, alongside the narcotics-related charge. She was detained following the raid and is currently in custody while investigators continue to build the case.

Picture courtesy of Tee Pattaya News

Not an Isolated Incident — A Second E-Vape Bust in Pathum Thani

The Banglamung raid comes on the heels of another high-profile e-cigarette case. On August 16, police arrested 22-year-old Pornpawit Rotkarnjanarak in a condominium in Pathum Thani. That operation uncovered e-cigarette pods allegedly laced with ketamine, and Pornpawit was also facing an outstanding warrant for defamation.

The Pathum Thani arrest was authorised at a high level — Lieutenant General Siam Boonsom gave the go-ahead, with support from Police Major Generals Noppasil Poonasawat and Samart Promchart. The field operation was led by Police Colonels Cherdsak Rodkhem and Pansa Amornpitak, while Police Lieutenant Colonels Arthit Sreesuayong and Supakit Kongchuen from Yannawa police station directed the investigation.

Why These Raids Matter

Thailand has been tightening enforcement around illegal e-cigarettes for some time. These disposable vape products are not only frequently smuggled into the kingdom but are also being marketed or sold to younger users, raising health and legal concerns. When investigators encounter large quantities of identical, unused devices, it raises red flags for organised importation rather than casual, small-scale possession.

The addition of alleged drug contamination — as seen in the Pathum Thani case with ketamine — elevates the public-safety stakes. Law enforcement agencies are increasingly treating vape-related operations not just as customs or sales violations but as part of broader narcotics and youth-protection efforts.

What Comes Next

Hathaithip remains in custody as prosecutors and customs officials review the evidence. If the case moves forward, it could lead to significant penalties under the Customs Act and drug laws. Meanwhile, the Pathum Thani suspect is also navigating pending charges related to distribution of drug-laced pods and the outstanding defamation warrant.

These two incidents serve as a reminder that illegal vaping products and drug-laced e-liquids are a growing concern in Thailand — attracting both organized networks and opportunistic sellers. For parents, community leaders and consumers, the takeaway is clear: be wary of cheaply priced disposable vapes, especially those of unknown origin, and report suspicious sales to local authorities.

Expect more enforcement actions as Thai police continue to crack down on smuggled e-cigarettes and the potential public-health hazards that sometimes accompany them.

50 Comments

  1. Somchai Prasert August 24, 2025

    This story stinks of a scapegoat. A 50-year-old selling cheap vapes to teens to survive doesn’t fit the picture of an international smuggler, but the police jumped to conclusions.

    • Ploy August 24, 2025

      Maybe she was a small part of a bigger chain and the police are finally tracing the links, not just picking on the poor.

      • grower134 August 24, 2025

        Or maybe the police want headlines and are overcharging to look tough on crime; this is how minor cases get blown up.

        • Somchai Prasert August 24, 2025

          I agree with grower134 that headlines matter, but we shouldn’t ignore organized importation either; the pristine uniformity of the vapes is suspicious.

  2. Nina August 24, 2025

    She said scavengers gave them to her — could someone really find 62 flawless vapes under a bridge? That explanation seems unlikely.

    • TeacherAnna August 24, 2025

      From a practical standpoint, children are at risk and parents should be alarmed, but we also need compassion for people in poverty who resort to small illegal sales.

    • Narong August 24, 2025

      Compassion is fine, but laws exist for a reason. If smuggling networks use vulnerable sellers as fronts, letting this slide harms society.

      • Nina August 24, 2025

        I just want a fair investigation, not sympathy for criminals or automatic convictions for the poor.

  3. grower134 August 24, 2025

    The ketamine-laced pods in Pathum Thani prove this market is dangerous, but are raids like this effective or just performative policing?

    • Larry D August 24, 2025

      Raids look good on TV and often disrupt supply, but they rarely stop demand or the networks that profit from smuggling.

    • grower134 August 24, 2025

      Exactly, Larry — unless enforcement is paired with education and economic options, the problem will shift elsewhere.

  4. Dr. Anan Chaiwat August 24, 2025

    From a public health perspective, illegal disposables pose two threats: youth nicotine addiction and unknown contaminants. That justifies strong action.

    • BangkokObserver August 24, 2025

      Public health is important, but aggressive criminal charges for low-level sellers can deepen social inequality. We need balanced policy.

    • TeacherAnna August 24, 2025

      Balanced policy means regulation, education, and rehabilitation, not only prison. Kids are getting hooked and that should be our priority.

    • Dr. Anan Chaiwat August 24, 2025

      I fully support rehabilitation programs, but we must also cut off supply channels to reduce harm quickly.

  5. Joe August 24, 2025

    She knew it was illegal and still sold to teens for money. That’s on her, simple as that.

  6. Ploy August 24, 2025

    Why focus on sellers when large smugglers and online networks are the real problem? Arresting poor vendors is just window dressing.

    • Chai August 24, 2025

      Because small sellers are the most visible and easiest to catch. It’s politically easier to arrest them than chase transnational rings.

    • Ploy August 24, 2025

      Exactly, and that shows where enforcement priorities lie — optics over dismantling the networks.

  7. Officer Tan August 24, 2025

    Law enforcement can’t ignore large quantities that point to commercial import. Uniform brand packaging is a classic red flag for smuggling.

    • CitizensForKids August 24, 2025

      As parents, we want vapes off the streets, but please ensure the accused get fair treatment and proper legal process.

    • Officer Tan August 24, 2025

      Fair treatment is standard procedure; charges are based on evidence and tests, not just rumors.

  8. BangkokObserver August 24, 2025

    The coordination with higher-level police in the Pathum Thani case shows top brass are prioritising this issue, which may mean more sweeping actions soon.

    • Siri August 24, 2025

      I fear that will lead to mass arrests of low-income people while the real masterminds stay hidden offshore.

    • BangkokObserver August 24, 2025

      That’s a valid concern, but international cooperation and financial investigations can follow arrests to trace larger networks.

  9. Mai August 24, 2025

    Why are cheap vapes so easy to smuggle compared to regulated tobacco products? It seems like a policy loophole.

    • Mek August 24, 2025

      Because disposables are small, cheap, and profitable. They bypass regulations and are easily shipped in bulk from abroad.

    • Mai August 24, 2025

      Policymakers should close that loophole and make import controls stricter, not just punish small-time sellers.

  10. User123 August 24, 2025

    Drug test positive plus smuggling charges complicates her defense. Even if she was a small seller, the narcotics finding hurts her case badly.

    • Pen August 24, 2025

      But drug tests can have false positives and chain-of-custody issues; the defense should examine lab procedures closely.

    • User123 August 24, 2025

      True, Pen, but courts often give weight to initial tests; vigorous legal representation is critical here.

  11. Patch August 24, 2025

    The article makes me worry about kids. Cheap vapes sold for 50 baht can addict a generation if nothing changes.

  12. Larry D August 24, 2025

    There’s also a geopolitical angle: blaming ‘Chinese nationals’ under a bridge sounds xenophobic unless there’s evidence of who supplied the goods.

    • Narong August 24, 2025

      Point taken, but smuggling often involves cross-border supply chains. Naming a nationality without proof is irresponsible.

      • Larry D August 24, 2025

        Exactly, Narong — we need careful reporting to avoid fueling prejudice while still exposing criminal routes.

  13. Somsri August 24, 2025

    I work with youth and see these vapes everywhere. Whether smuggled or sold by mom-and-pop stalls, the harm is real and urgent.

  14. K. Pattaya News August 24, 2025

    Thanks for the discussion; we reported the facts as we received them and will follow court developments closely.

    • Chai August 24, 2025

      Can you ask authorities for more details about the alleged source and the drug test method? Transparency would help public trust.

    • K. Pattaya News August 24, 2025

      We’ll request records and lab info as the case proceeds and publish updates if authorities release them.

  15. Dr. Suthida August 24, 2025

    If vapes are contaminated with ketamine or other drugs, this becomes not just a customs issue but a severe public health emergency.

  16. grower_gal August 24, 2025

    Selling to teenagers should carry harsher penalties in my opinion, because addiction at that age ruins lives faster.

  17. Citizen42 August 24, 2025

    But does criminalizing sellers reduce teen use? Evidence from other countries suggests education and access controls work better.

  18. Manee August 24, 2025

    If the vapes were pristine and identical, customs charges make sense. I doubt a scavenger would find 62 untouched devices.

  19. Sopida August 24, 2025

    Why hasn’t the government offered buyback or disposal programs for illegal vapes? That might remove products without criminalizing individuals.

  20. TeacherBen August 24, 2025

    Schools need funding for anti-vaping programs. Arrests don’t teach kids why these things are dangerous or how to resist peer pressure.

  21. LaborVoice August 24, 2025

    We must also consider economic drivers; when elderly people sell small items to survive, criminal penalties should be proportionate.

  22. Patchwork August 24, 2025

    I suspect corruption in supply chains; someone with connections lets these shipments in, then small sellers get blamed.

  23. Mek August 24, 2025

    Follow the money and the seizures will point to higher-ups. But that requires willpower and time from investigators.

  24. Siri August 24, 2025

    The police might be sincere, but we must watch for selective enforcement that targets vulnerable communities.

  25. PattayaWatcher August 24, 2025

    If the court finds her guilty of smuggling and narcotics use, expect sentencing to be strict; Thailand has been ramping up penalties.

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