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Serious if you need to run road, where to go and how?

cocobobo

Alfrescian
Loyal
asking for a friend.... here are some thoughts...

safest way to escape is one where you need 0 accomplice. But that is near impossible. An accomplice is a weakness.

OK. First task,get out of SG. Clear customs. Our immigration is weird. You go out via air, sea or foot, you kanna fingerprint.
You go out via car, no fingerprint.... yet. So if you want to leave no trace and have lobang for stolen/fake passport, this is the way. But the risk is still big with stolen/fake passport. The journey might end before it even starts.

If there is no warrant of arrest yet, you could still leave, but then you're just leaving a trail for them to follow. Places like Malaysia, Thailand, Indo, Vietnam..where you think its easier to blend in.... it seems easy to lie low, but actually its not. You stay at tourist places, the police already have eyes there. I have met people who are employed there just to look out for fugitives. You stay away from tourist places, the communities there are closer knit than you think. Even Mas couldn't hide for long. Let alone a chinkee.

Back to the escape. I think the fishing trip route is also out. The PCG boats have scanners that alert them if you stray too close to the borders. By the time you jump into the sea hoping for an indo boat pick-up, you're on the radar already, day or night. And the logistics are a nightmare. Too many people.

So that leaves us with a slightly more complicted way than the fake passport. The most likely way is 1 accomplice and a big continental car. Carve out a special hiding compartment, remove spare tyre, pump in just enough fuel, remove additional weight, spread your weight around, put strong suspension, and you should be ok. Accomplice also won't be so nervous as he won't be subject to boot checks. Just make sure gauge is rigged to show 3/4.

There you go.... off to Malaysia. Change to bus, all the way to bukit kayu hitam where you can cross into thailand without passport.

that's as far as you can go.... settle in for a while, avoid popular places, pay in cash, while you seek new contacts for new fake ID. And the guys who can help you, are actually part of law enforcement.

*excerpt from my upcoming book
 

red amoeba

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Wherever u go go somewhere without extradition treaty.

My choice will be to go to Myanmar Thai border. U can lie low there for years.
 

rambo22

Alfrescian
Loyal
u whatsapp or email Mas Selamat

his fee is the cheapest

service fastest

1 leg also can escape

200% our coast guard will unable to spot him one

1559869254393.png
 

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
asking for a friend.... here are some thoughts...

safest way to escape is one where you need 0 accomplice. But that is near impossible. An accomplice is a weakness.

OK. First task,get out of SG. Clear customs. Our immigration is weird. You go out via air, sea or foot, you kanna fingerprint.
You go out via car, no fingerprint.... yet. So if you want to leave no trace and have lobang for stolen/fake passport, this is the way. But the risk is still big with stolen/fake passport. The journey might end before it even starts.

If there is no warrant of arrest yet, you could still leave, but then you're just leaving a trail for them to follow. Places like Malaysia, Thailand, Indo, Vietnam..where you think its easier to blend in.... it seems easy to lie low, but actually its not. You stay at tourist places, the police already have eyes there. I have met people who are employed there just to look out for fugitives. You stay away from tourist places, the communities there are closer knit than you think. Even Mas couldn't hide for long. Let alone a chinkee.

Back to the escape. I think the fishing trip route is also out. The PCG boats have scanners that alert them if you stray too close to the borders. By the time you jump into the sea hoping for an indo boat pick-up, you're on the radar already, day or night. And the logistics are a nightmare. Too many people.

So that leaves us with a slightly more complicted way than the fake passport. The most likely way is 1 accomplice and a big continental car. Carve out a special hiding compartment, remove spare tyre, pump in just enough fuel, remove additional weight, spread your weight around, put strong suspension, and you should be ok. Accomplice also won't be so nervous as he won't be subject to boot checks. Just make sure gauge is rigged to show 3/4.

There you go.... off to Malaysia. Change to bus, all the way to bukit kayu hitam where you can cross into thailand without passport.

that's as far as you can go.... settle in for a while, avoid popular places, pay in cash, while you seek new contacts for new fake ID. And the guys who can help you, are actually part of law enforcement.

*excerpt from my upcoming book
KNN plan so much also no use it's all luck KNN just find a lucky day to walk across KNN
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Go cruise trip 3 days to nowhere then jump off ship.

Wait for dolphine or any kind hearted big fish to help u sail round the world on their back...
 

cocobobo

Alfrescian
Loyal
Go cruise trip 3 days to nowhere then jump off ship.

Wait for dolphine or any kind hearted big fish to help u sail round the world on their back...

by law, cruise ships must track its passengers. If you dont come back to ship, they will know, authorities are alerted, and your headstart is not big.
 

Narong Wongwan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Unless you are wanted for a high profile case.
Else the SPF are too lazy to track you.
Sure you’ll always be on wanted list and the paperwork will always be there but they lose interest very fast. Interpol won’t even be notified.

If it’s a high profile case and they are already seeking you then by road is still the best. See how many got away via the causeway.
Even if you got a fake passport. The road route is still tops.
If you got big bucks then sea air land also can like private yacht or private jet but not everyone is Jho Low.
 

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
Unless you are wanted for a high profile case.
Else the SPF are too lazy to track you.
Sure you’ll always be on wanted list and the paperwork will always be there but they lose interest very fast. Interpol won’t even be notified.

If it’s a high profile case and they are already seeking you then by road is still the best. See how many got away via the causeway.
Even if you got a fake passport. The road route is still tops.
If you got big bucks then sea air land also can like private yacht or private jet but not everyone is Jho Low.
KNN if got big bucks can even sit rocket go outer space hideout KNN
 

Scrooball (clone)

Alfrescian
Loyal
1559959354390.jpeg

Ex-NTUC leader Phey Yew Kok turns himself in after 35 years on the run
PM Lee says Singapore has zero tolerance for corruption, even when it's embarassing for the government
Teh Shi Ning
JUN 25, 2015 05:50 AM
Singapore

MORE than three decades after he first jumped bail and fled Singapore, former trade union leader and People's Action Party member of parliament Phey Yew Kok appeared in court on Wednesday to face the corruption charges first served on him in 1979.

The Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) said Phey, now 81, had turned himself in at the Singapore Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, on Monday and was escorted back to Singapore by CPIB officers on Tuesday.

He was first charged in December 1979 with four counts of criminal breach of trust involving S$82,520 and two other charges, under the Trade Unions Act, of unlawfully using S$17,745 of union funds to buy shares in a private supermarket, Forward Supermarket, in 1978.

Phey was then released on bail of S$100,000 but did not have his passport impounded. A warrant of arrest was issued against him after he failed to turn up in court on Jan 7, 1980. His two bailors lost S$95,000 of their bail bonds.

In a Facebook post on the matter, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong yesterday wrote: "We have maintained a clean and non-corrupt system in Singapore for half a century because we have zero tolerance for corruption. When we discover wrongdoing, we do not hesitate to act. We will not allow any cover up, even when it is awkward or embarrassing for the government."

At the time of his charges, Phey was in his second term as PAP's MP for Boon Teck. He was also chairman of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and general secretary of three trade unions - the Singapore Industrial Labour Organisation, the Pioneer Industries Employees Union and the Singapore Air Transport-workers' Union.

After he jumped bail, Phey was sacked from these posts, and stripped of leadership posts at other organisations such as the Singapore Labour Foundation, the advisory council of the Skills Development Fund and the Singapore Amateur Boxing Association. He also lost his seat in Parliament.

In the years that followed, in response to parliamentary questions about the hunt for Phey, the government said that investigations found that he had fled to Kuala Lumpur by train on Dec 31, 1979, and headed on to Bangkok. CPIB officers went to Bangkok to locate the fugitive, even though Singapore did not have an extradition treaty with Thailand, but could not find him.

Phey has also been raised by opposition parties at election rally speeches over the years as an example of a disgraced PAP politician - including at the Hougang by-election in 2012.

In response to media queries on Wednesday, PM Lee said: "He has been charged in court, and the law will have to take its course. This will bring closure to a long outstanding case involving a person who was holding public office as an MP and a senior union leader."

The Straits Times reported that the prosecution has applied for Phey to be remanded at Changi Prison for investigations and that more charges will be tendered against him. A pre-trial conference has been scheduled for July 23.

CPIB also said on Wednesday that Phey will be required to assist in further investigations in relation to other offences he may have committed.
In a brief media statement yesterday, NTUC also noted the development, saying: "We must now let the law take its course."
PHEY YEW KOK
CORRUPTION
 

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
View attachment 59319
Ex-NTUC leader Phey Yew Kok turns himself in after 35 years on the run
PM Lee says Singapore has zero tolerance for corruption, even when it's embarassing for the government
Teh Shi Ning
JUN 25, 2015 05:50 AM
Singapore

MORE than three decades after he first jumped bail and fled Singapore, former trade union leader and People's Action Party member of parliament Phey Yew Kok appeared in court on Wednesday to face the corruption charges first served on him in 1979.

The Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) said Phey, now 81, had turned himself in at the Singapore Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, on Monday and was escorted back to Singapore by CPIB officers on Tuesday.

He was first charged in December 1979 with four counts of criminal breach of trust involving S$82,520 and two other charges, under the Trade Unions Act, of unlawfully using S$17,745 of union funds to buy shares in a private supermarket, Forward Supermarket, in 1978.

Phey was then released on bail of S$100,000 but did not have his passport impounded. A warrant of arrest was issued against him after he failed to turn up in court on Jan 7, 1980. His two bailors lost S$95,000 of their bail bonds.

In a Facebook post on the matter, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong yesterday wrote: "We have maintained a clean and non-corrupt system in Singapore for half a century because we have zero tolerance for corruption. When we discover wrongdoing, we do not hesitate to act. We will not allow any cover up, even when it is awkward or embarrassing for the government."

At the time of his charges, Phey was in his second term as PAP's MP for Boon Teck. He was also chairman of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and general secretary of three trade unions - the Singapore Industrial Labour Organisation, the Pioneer Industries Employees Union and the Singapore Air Transport-workers' Union.

After he jumped bail, Phey was sacked from these posts, and stripped of leadership posts at other organisations such as the Singapore Labour Foundation, the advisory council of the Skills Development Fund and the Singapore Amateur Boxing Association. He also lost his seat in Parliament.

In the years that followed, in response to parliamentary questions about the hunt for Phey, the government said that investigations found that he had fled to Kuala Lumpur by train on Dec 31, 1979, and headed on to Bangkok. CPIB officers went to Bangkok to locate the fugitive, even though Singapore did not have an extradition treaty with Thailand, but could not find him.

Phey has also been raised by opposition parties at election rally speeches over the years as an example of a disgraced PAP politician - including at the Hougang by-election in 2012.

In response to media queries on Wednesday, PM Lee said: "He has been charged in court, and the law will have to take its course. This will bring closure to a long outstanding case involving a person who was holding public office as an MP and a senior union leader."

The Straits Times reported that the prosecution has applied for Phey to be remanded at Changi Prison for investigations and that more charges will be tendered against him. A pre-trial conference has been scheduled for July 23.

CPIB also said on Wednesday that Phey will be required to assist in further investigations in relation to other offences he may have committed.
In a brief media statement yesterday, NTUC also noted the development, saying: "We must now let the law take its course."
PHEY YEW KOK
CORRUPTION
KNN he look like hk ptu 2019 panda kor KNN
fd13250c-8c23-45fa-af90-b99b06fbb831_1024.jpg
 
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