Read The Last Executioner Online

Authors: Chavoret Jaruboon,Nicola Pierce

Tags: #prison, #Thailand, #bangkok, #Death Row, #Death Penalty, #rape, #True Crime, #Corruption, #Biography, #sexual assault

The Last Executioner (16 page)

Just as I stepped onto the last stair, I noticed some footprints on the wall to my right, in cell 37. There was a small door on the ceiling which electricians used to reach the wires in the attics. The lock on this door was broken so it was obvious that the prisoners had used this door to get into the loft. The head of the team gave a silent signal, sending two armed officers to quietly check all the cells on the second floor. They returned giving us the all clear. The leader muttered into his walkie talkie, asking for a ladder to be brought up. Just seconds later, one of the electricians appeared, smiling nervously, with a bamboo ladder which was placed against the wall by the attic door. He fled the tense room and I was waved aside out of harm’s way.

The same two guys who had checked the cells were sent again to walk the corridor between the cells. This time they fired their weapons into the ceiling as they walked up and down. It was like something from an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie. Within seconds of the shooting I distinctly heard footsteps moving rapidly over our heads. Suddenly there was a crash as one of the inmates fell through the ceiling into the corridor. The floor of the attic was made of wood that was old and rotting. It had just given way. I had initially thought that he had been shot. While I had turned to see him land on the ground the rest of the team had charged up the ladder and there was a terrible commotion as the guns just kept shooting. The noise was deafening.

The one who fell raised his hands in the air and begged the officers not to shoot him. He was trembling all over and when I looked in his eyes I saw the fear that is in the eyes of every prisoner on death row when they realise that their time is up. The SWAT guy handcuffed him and asked him how many were still upstairs. Seven was the reply. Just then there was silence above and the head of the SWAT team shouted, ‘Cleared’. It was over. I knew that this meant there were seven dead men in the attic but I just couldn’t bring myself to climb the ladder to see for myself.

This might sound strange coming from an executioner but it goes to show that I had no interest in blood and gore for its own sake. Like most people I shied away from climbing that ladder just to gawk at seven dead men. Instead I moved gingerly around the cells, offices and workshop, checking out the damage done.

A lot of furniture had been destroyed, especially in the fire in the factory/workshop. There was also a small flood in the factory. There were plastics bags full of shit and piss in the alley of the cell building, since the toilets had run out of water the previous night. They had also served as obstacles to officers entering. Needless to say the place stank worse than usual. The offices had been almost destroyed, with the furniture removed, papers strewn everywhere and documents set on fire. The vegetable plot was a mess, the whole area looked like a war zone, but at least the situation was under control again.

Soon after, representatives from the Italian and American embassies arrived to check on their nationals. However, no foreign prisoners had been harmed and they only stayed for about an hour. They would have taken worried phone calls from the families in their respective countries and would have had to personally check it out. Certainly there was no point in trying to ring Bang Kwang as most of the phones had been pulled out of their sockets and we were just too busy to be answering phones anyway. The extra forces started to pull out at about 2.30pm. The SWATs and Commandoes were the first to leave. I shook the hands of the guys I had been dealing with and they wished me luck with the restoration job. They didn’t envy my job one little bit.

That evening, at about 5pm the Director-General held a press conference.

‘Everything is now under control. The SWAT and Commando teams advanced into Wings 4, 5 and 6. The leaders in Wing 6 attempt to resist. They had armed themselves from the prison workshop. They also tried to set the building on fire. Therefore we had to use force and, as a result, seven inmates died. We believe that 50 inmates were responsible for starting this riot and they are currently being kept in solitary confinement. A full investigation is being undertaken and a penalty will be meted out to these inmates according to their contribution to the protest. We estimate that the damage to the prison is in the region of 7 million baht.’

A journalist asked what was happening to these inmates in the meantime and he replied; ‘Well, we are feeding them and making sure they have plenty of water. They were all very hungry. The inmates who look after the cooking for the prison are housed in Wing 4 and once that wing decided to get involved in the protest they didn’t do any more cooking.’

Another journalist asked about the rumour that a lot of prisoners had hung themselves when the armed forces moved in. The Director-General replied that he hadn’t seen any evidence of this yet.

‘As far as I’m concerned we had to use force. Therefore any resisting prisoners were going to be shot. This use of force had the approval of a committee which consisted of the Director of the Metropolitan Prison Guard Force, the Deputy Minister of Interior and the Director-General of the Royal Thai Police, and myself, of course.’

Afterwards a couple of members of the SWAT team gave an interview and said that three inmates were found hanging in the attic of Wing 6. They had died from their own hands since the armed forces would never kill someone in this way.

***

Normal visiting resumed within a week. The prison made that a priority because we understand how important visits are for the relatives, as well as the inmates. The inmates and officers worked together to fix the broken machinery and furniture and all in all it took about a month to complete the repairs. We used money generated from within the prison, like the shop, and also applied for some money from the government. The biggest interior decorating consequence was that the tables in the canteen were set into cement and covered with stones—there would be no more pyramids built with their help ever again.

The 50 prisoners deemed responsible had to wear leg irons and they were left in solitary confinement for three months. They were lucky, it could have been worse—at the very least landing back in court before a strict judge. The Superintendent decided to show them mercy and spared them any further punishment. Section 317 of the Correction Act entitled the Superintendent to let a prisoner go relatively unpunished if the prisoner commits certain types of offences—like vandalising prison property, a minor physical assault or carrying cash. He explained that if they went to court they could be downgraded, which would mean they wouldn’t have a hope in hell for the next Royal Pardon. So you see we do have a heart! That evening I was disappointed to see some of the police officers slap a few of the inmates about the head. The prison staff would never indulge in that kind of behaviour, especially when dealing with prisoners who are chained and subdued. There is just no need for it.

It was the officers in charge of each wing who frisked the rest of the inmates after they surrendered. As there was more than a few thousand this took a while.

There were plenty of weapons to confiscate, though we were assured by more than one guy that the weapons were mostly about protecting themselves from other inmates—the men weren’t as unified as they had appeared to the media and us. The usual suspects took advantage of the chaos to continue and expand the usual power struggles. Some men just need to always be fighting.

The prisoners began to feed the officers information as to who was involved in the riot and who did what. Quite a few of these inmates, now happy to redeem themselves and return to our good books, offered to help with an initial clean-up that evening. They followed our orders and directions without a whimper. I think we were all as tired as each other. I certainly could have done with a few days off but we were too short staffed and the Superintendent really wanted things to return to complete normality. My kids thought they were never going to see me again. They hadn’t seen me in two days and I got a great reception when I finally returned home for a few hours sleep before my next shift.

Three months might seem like a long time to leave the men in solitary confinement but we had to be seen to take their disobedience seriously. Although several of them told me that they preferred solitary confinement to living in the wings—each man has his own toilet in his cell and it would have been a relief to have some time to be alone. They could also relax as they were safe from gang fights and bad-tempered bullies. However, they couldn’t get too lonely as they could still hold conversations with their immediate neighbours. When the 50 returned to their wings there were no hard feelings between them and the staff, and life just continued on as normal. Thankfully, that was the last riot in the prison.

Not surprisingly, Bang Kwang and Klong Prem cancelled their Visiting Day, which was a great pity for all those inmates who benefited from the day and never caused any trouble. Tew was not too happy either as it meant the end to her working away from the home. The kids and I had been at her to give up the food stall and she compromised by telling us that she would when the prison didn’t need her anymore. It had been a bit of extra money for us but I much preferred knowing that she was at home for the kids.

Chapter 13

Executions were always worse when the condemned was a woman.

Samai Pan-in was charged with drug offences and sentenced to the death penalty on 5 June 1998. She had built up quite a criminal record, with 12 previous charges and her final arrest was the last straw for the authorities. Her death took place on 30 June 1994 when she was picked up by officers from the Narcotics Control Board. Six people were arrested that day after police had been watching a house in the Bangken district of Bangkok that was known to be central to a local drug smuggling operation. Prasert Piyaranga bought heroin from Somporn and delivered it to Somjai Thong-O, the woman of the house in Bangkok.

On the day of her arrest, Somjai’s daughter rang Pan-in to tell her that Somjai wanted to see her. However, when Pan-in reached the woman’s house she wasn’t there. A neighbour told her that she was visiting her daughter so Pan-in hitched a ride to the daughter’s house. The doors and windows were closed and Somjai walked around it to see whether mother or daughter was about. As she approached the front of the house a man stopped her to ask who she was looking for. When she told him that she was looking for Somjai he revealed himself to be a plain clothes police officer and showed her his badge. He proceeded to search her and found 130,000 baht in her bag, in 1,000 baht banknotes. The officer asked her why she was carrying so much money and she told him that Somjai was going to borrow the money to buy a flat, as her house had recently burnt down.

Several more officers appeared and she was escorted into the house and up the stairs to where Somjai and her family, Malee, Den and Aroonsak were pouring heroin into plastic tubes. The police had told them to pose specially for photographs. They had already confessed everything to the police. 14-year-old Den, a neighbourhood boy who was hired to help pour the heroin into tubes and sometimes distribute it, had disclosed his helping out and he confirmed Pan-in’s involvement. He was sent to a young offender’s correction centre. His father had already been arrested for drug smuggling a few years before but because he couldn’t handle life in Bang Kwang he committed suicide by hanging himself in 1991. His sister Malee was sentenced to 50 years in prison and his other sister Aroonsak was sentenced to life imprisonment along with his mother Somjai. What a family! Pan-in denied all charges and was denied bail. She was sent to the Central Women’s Correctional Institution in Lard Yao to await her trial.

Further investigation uncovered how the gang bought heroin from a drug lord in the north of Thailand. They usually procured between 15 to 20 bags at a time and then the heroin was poured into tubes, which took some time but was something that a child could help with. Pan-in would then bring the tubes to dealers in the Klongtoey slum community. She had been doing this for so long that she was well-known and had her own special name, ‘Lady Mafia of Block 4’. Officers had been watching the 53-year-old for sometime now. She was skinny and just over five feet tall, with short dark hair, and constantly maintained innocence of any drug-dealing. She stubbornly fought her case through three different courts until 5 June 1998 when the Supreme (Dika) Court found her guilty and handed out the death penalty. She had 60 days to submit her petition for amnesty, which was subsequently rejected over a year later on 26 October 1999.

It was rejected because of her 12 previous arrests, which proved to the courts that she had no respect for the law, and also because her testimony was found to be based on lies. Therefore, on 23 November 1999, Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai informed the Interior Ministry to direct Sawat Songsampan, Director-General of the Department of Corrections, to carry out the death sentence as Pan-in’s petition had been rejected. The following morning at about 10.30am the execution team and I were told that we would be executing a female. There were also two other executions lined up that day. Tapoyho was charged with illegal immigration and with carrying out a violent murder. Prayuth Polpan was sentenced for being an accomplice to a murder, attempting another murder and for being in possession of an illegal fire-arm.

These two were already seated side by side when Pan-in arrived at Bang Kwang in a police van around 3pm. Six female officers from the female prison escorted the trembling woman to her seat. She didn’t fully understand what was happening. She glanced around at the other convicts and at our own prison staff. A small crowd had gathered because of her sex and notoriety. After a few minutes she breathlessly asked the nearest female officer why she had been brought here. The officer looked genuinely upset.

‘We were ordered to bring you and your papers to Bang Kwang but we weren’t told why. But we have just been informed a few minutes ago that you are to be executed here today.’

Pan-in burst into tears. The convict Prayuth who was sitting next to her was touched by her tears.

‘Don’t cry’, he said, ‘Tapoyho and me are going to be executed too. We did wrong and now it’s pay back time. What did you do?’

Through her sobs she gasped, ‘White powder. But I really didn’t think I was going to be executed.’ She continued to weep into her hands.

One of our officers intervened.

‘Sister, the other officers and I have to do our job. I am deeply sorry for you but there’s nothing that can help you now. Please stop crying and try to gather yourself together.’

She tried to catch her breath and asked the officer if she could have a word with her daughter. He shook his head sadly, ‘I’m sorry but you are forbidden to use the telephone at this point. Though, when they have taken your fingerprints you will be provided with a pen and paper. That’s the best we can do.’

She pleaded that it would just take a few minutes but he explained that it was out of his hands, that only the Superintendent or a superior officer from the DOC could authorise her to use the phone.

At 4.30pm an officer arrived from the Criminal Record Department along with three female officers. Pan-in begged them to call her daughter as they took her photograph and fingerprints. Nobody met her eye or headed for the phone. Then she was taken away to change from her skirt into trousers. On her return she wrote her letter. She was an uneducated woman who had led a tough life and her blunt letter lacked warmth and sentiment;

‘Kids, stay away from drugs. Take me as an example of what not to do. All the money I made from drugs I spent on the trial. It’s not worth it. I must say goodbye now.’

One of the female officers helped her to compose it and she wrote slowly while constantly dabbing her eyes with a tissue.

The execution order was read to the three convicts. Only Pan-in showed any emotion, the other two stared at the ground, utterly resigned. No one ate their last meal. They just sipped their water quietly. Pan-in appeared cried out at this stage and she asked for a glass of alcohol. The escorts smiled kindly and said no. He offered her a cup of coffee instead. She shrugged.

‘No this, no that! You know, you guys could show a little mercy to me for the last time.’

Eventually she accepted the coffee and even a cigarette. A little while later she ate an orange that one of the female officers gave her.

Then it was time for the last rites. Two female officers lifted Pan-in up by both her arms and brought her to the abbot. The officers looked worse off than their charge. They were visibly sweating and their hands had a slight tremor. They had obviously never escorted anyone to the execution room before. Pan-in was to be the first that evening and the two guards looked in confusion at each other. Pan-in was the only person who was oblivious to their discomfort. As they made to bring her over one of the Bang Kwang guys lightly touched one of them on the arm and asked if he could take over. The women smiled in thanks and relief, and quickly stepped aside. Two men took their place.

To ease the usual tension, one of the escorts joked with Pan-in and asked her would she permit him to be her last boyfriend? She giggled and asked how he could love such an old woman as herself who was also a prisoner. She linked her arm with his and stretched up to plant a kiss on his cheek. The officers and witnesses who followed behind applauded her actions and new-found composure. She beamed at their appreciation.

At the gazebo she was blindfolded and placed on a chair unshackled. Female prisoners are never shackled. At 5.40pm she was tied to the cross without a struggle or a sound out of her. She had adjusted herself to her fate and was ready. When Rangsan Muangjareon let down the red flag I shot seven bullets in to her. She was dead at 5.45pm. I counted and picked the seven shells up from the floor and shouted ‘clear’ to the others to let them know that they could bring in the two men. At 6.13pm 13 shots killed Prayuth by my hand while Topoyho was shot simultaneously by the second gun. The other executioner that day was my unfortunate colleague Prayuth Sanan, the officer who is currently awaiting trial on death row.

Pan-in was divorced with one son and two daughters. She and her children lived with her sister. Her son was unemployed while her daughters were students. Everyone thought she made her money from selling second-hand clothes in the flea markets. I was told her sad story over the dinner that the team shared after the executions. Gomol Yimpenyai from the Criminal Record Department of the Royal Thai Police explained how she was involved in international drug smuggling, something that she had steadfastly refused to admit. As I have already said drug-crime is taken very seriously in Thailand, more so after 12 previous arrests. Perhaps Pan-in could have supported her family selling clothes in the markets, but she chose another route and became only the third, and last ever woman to be executed by gun in Thailand. She risked everything for her kids and consequently deprived them of something essential they needed the most—her.

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