
Losses top $153m
By Dan Goodin in San Francisco • Get more from this author
Posted in Crime, 8th March 2010 23:34 GMT
Free whitepaper – Taking control of your data demons: Dealing with unstructured content
A criminal court in Thailand has approved the extradition to the US of a Malaysian man suspected of participating in credit card thefts of more than $152m, according to a local news report.
Gooi Kokseng, 44, was arrested on January 30 after being accused of causing more than 5 billion baht, or $152.9m, in damage by accessing credit card information in the US and Southeast Asia, according to The Bangkok Post. He was charged with violating computer crime and credit card business laws.
The order was approved at the request of the foreign affairs section of the Office of the Attorney General, which sought extradition under a treaty signed between the Thailand and the US. Kokseng will be remanded in Thailand for 30 days before being transferred to the US.
Kokseng allegedly confessed to police that he was wanted in the US in connection with a series of identity thefts. He later reversed his statement in court, claiming he had never been to the US. ®
Free whitepaper – Taking control of your data demons: Dealing with unstructured content
Source: The Register
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
stick something nice in here
stick something nice in here here is some footer stuffasdfasdsadf sdaf sadf sadsad fdsa fsadf sadfadsf
stick something nice in here