A once-aspiring K-pop star who is wanted in Thailand for fraud was, in the end, apparently done in by her singing: She was unmasked and arrested after she failed to sing Indonesia’s national anthem.
Natthamon Khongchak, 31, a YouTube content creator known by her nickname “Nutty”, was arrested in Indonesia on Oct 18 and extradited with her mother, Thaniya, to Thailand on Oct 25, according to media reports in Indonesia.
Investigators in Indonesia said she tried to pass herself off as Indonesian in Dumai city in Riau province on Sumatra island.
But immigration agents there noticed her Thai accent and asked her to sing Indonesia’s national anthem, according to a report in the South China Morning Post. When she could not, she and her mother were arrested for illegal entry.
Natthamon, her mother and her secretary, Nichapat Rattanukrom, had been on the run since July 2023.
They fled Thailand, headed to Kuala Lumpur, and then boarded a boat that took them to Indonesia.
Natthamon, who also uses the aliases Leah and Suchata, was accused of swindling thousands of her online followers out of two billion baht (RM258mil) in a foreign exchange trading scam.
Natthamon drew more than 800,000 subscribers to her YouTube channel, Nutty’s Diary.
She had aspired to be a K-pop celebrity, reaching as far as making a brief debut in South Korea under the label Dream Cinema in 2015.
Capitalising on her popularity and image, she presented herself in 2022 as an investment guru, promising high returns to more than 6,000 people, many of whom later reported they did not receive any payout at all.
She invited her followers to deposit money in her account, promising returns of 25% for three-month contracts, 30% for six months and 35% for 12 months.
She pledged to pay them returns every month.
Natthamon boasted about owning 14 cars and having 22 nannies.
Colonel Wissanu Chimtrakul, deputy director-general of Thailand’s Special Investigation Department, said some 16 million baht (RM2.06mil) of Natthamon’s assets have been seized, and that investigators are looking for more assets that can still be confiscated. — The Straits Times/ANN