Anonymous ID: d5dc04 Oct. 22, 2020, 3:44 p.m. No.11221386   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1448

This fraud using the name Proud Boys from Russia

Making Trump specifically disavow PB even though not a racist group

How’s that go together

Anonymous ID: d5dc04 Oct. 22, 2020, 3:57 p.m. No.11221785   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1829

>>11221119

You guys! There was some Asian guy that had been kidnapped (this is from a couple years ago) and there was a diamond still missing??? Anyone remember? Ugh- think!!!! Blue?

Anonymous ID: d5dc04 Oct. 22, 2020, 3:59 p.m. No.11221829   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11221785

 

The Saudi prince and his wife were away on holiday for three months, and the thief knew this was the time to strike.

Kriangkrai Techamong was running a significant risk. Stealing could be punished with amputation in Saudi Arabia, but Kriangkrai's was no ordinary theft - he had his eye on dozens of precious gems and jewels owned by his employer Prince Faisal, the eldest son of King Fahd of Saudi Arabia.

As a cleaner, Kriangkrai had come to know every corner of Prince Faisal's palace. And he had learned that three of the four safes containing the prince's jewels were regularly left unlocked. It was too good an opportunity to miss: he was struggling with gambling debt he had built up on the site where the palace workers lived, and this was a golden chance to flee the repressive country where he could no longer bear to live.

One evening, he made up an excuse to be inside the palace after dark. He waited until other staff had left, and sneaked into the prince's bedroom. He picked some jewels and stuck them to his body using duct tape. He also stored gems inside cleaning equipment, including vacuum bags.

By the end, he had taken almost 30kg (66lbs) of loot, valued at close to $20m. Among the pilfered items, Saudi officials would later say, were gold watches and several plump rubies.

That night, Kriangkrai hid the valuables all over the palace, in places he knew they would not be discovered. And then, over a month, he moved them and hid them in the middle of a large cargo delivery he was sending home to Thailan

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-49824325