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Tuesday, May 7, 2024

American Tourist Fogged Street in Thailand With Marijuana Smoke


  • An American tourist blasted a street in Thailand with marijuana smoke, according to Phuket Provincial Police.
  • The man, identified as Angkhan Vorac Chhieng by local police, apologized for causing damage to tourism image. 
  • Thailand first legalized the use of marijuana in June last year.

An American tourist filled up a fog machine with marijuana and blasted a street with smoke at a popular tourist destination in Thailand to promote his marijuana business back home, according to the Phuket Provincial Police.

The police outlined their accusations in a Facebook post on Monday. In the post, police said the man — who they identified as Angkhan Vorac Chhieng — used the fog machine along Bangla Walking Street in Potong Beach at 2:30 a.m. on August 18. The street in Patong — a beach resort town in Phuket — has been known for its nightlife for years, and has more recently become home to many cannabis dispensaries

According to the police’s Facebook post written in Thai, Angkhan admitted that he had acted unknowingly to create content promoting marijuana that was sold abroad, and did not think it would be an inappropriate action. 

According to Chhieng’s Instagram profile, he is the owner of Kush Life, a California-based lifestyle brand centered around marijuana. He also goes by the name Onky Chieng, per his profile. 

In the Instagram post below, a man is shown walking around Patong blasting people with a device filled with marijuana. The device appears to be constructed specifically for marijuana, with an Instagram page describing it as “the kush cannon,” which refers to a type of cannabis.

 

Chhieng, 55, first traveled to Bangkok, the capital of Thailand, on August 15, before traveling to Phuket, according to the police’s Facebook post. The police were alerted to the incident after a video on social media showed Chhieng using a fog machine filled with marijuana, per the post. The police used public surveillance footage to identify Chhieng.

The police later found that Chhieng was staying in a hotel in Bangla Walking Street, where they informed him that “such actions cannot be done in public,” according to the post.

Chhieng said he did not know it was inappropriate and apologized for causing damage to the tourism image of Phuket Province, according to the Police post. He departed Phuket on August 19, the police wrote in the post.

In June last year, Thailand became the first country in Asia to legalize marijuana. Since then, dozens of cannabis dispensaries have set up shop at Bangla Walking Street.

But that doesn’t mean there are now laws surrounding the use of marijuana.

According to The Washington Post, smoking marijuana in public can be charged under Thailand’s public nuisance law and is punishable with a fine of $780 or three months in jail. Thai authorities have recently pushed to tighten regulations on marijuana, per Bloomberg.

The Phuket Provincial Police and Chhieng did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider.





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