Singaporean businessman nabbed before flight at Bangkok airport over suspected tax evasion


David Liu was about to board a flight to Singapore on June 2, 2025 when he was arrested in the Thai capital. - Photo: CIBTHAILAND/Facebook

SINGAPORE: A Singaporean businessman who was about to fly back home was arrested at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport over suspected tax evasion to the tune of more than 5.2 million baht (S$205,000), Thai police said on Wednesday (June 4).

He was identified by the Thai police’s Economic Crime Suppression Division (ECD) as David Liu, 71, a former director of media analytics company Isentia Monitoring Services (Thailand).

Liu was about to board a flight to Singapore on June 2 when he was arrested in the Thai capital, said ECD commander Thatphum Charuprat.

He was arrested for allegedly trying to evade by fraud or deceit value-added tax payable by Isentia.

Investigations had found that the Singaporean was an authorised director of the media company from July to October 2015.

According to an annual report by Isentia, Liu was appointed as the Asia chief executive of the Sydney-headquartered media intelligence company on June 1, 2015.

He left Isentia in 2019, according to a post on LinkedIn, where he is now listed as CEO of a data intelligence firm.

He admitted to previously being the director of Isentia, but denied wrongdoing, the Bangkok Post reported, citing ECD commander Thatphum Charuprat at a media briefing.

Thailand’s Revenue Department had filed a complaint against Isentia after discovering an incorrect tax filing of zero tax returns despite the company being found to have generated revenue.

But no company representative responded after a police summons was issued, said the police.

The suspected damages against the state in lost revenue was nearly 5.24 million baht, said the ECD.

An arrest warrant was subsequently issued by the Phra Khanong Criminal Court. Liu was tracked by the police and arrested at Suvarnabhumi Airport before he boarded his flight.

If convicted, he faces a fine of up to 200,000 baht and a seven-year prison term.

The Straits Times has contacted Isentia for comment. - The Straits Times/ANN

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

First China ore shipment rewards Guinea coup leader’s push for Simandou alliance
Malaysia to hold special Asean Foreign Ministers' meeting soon, says PM Anwar
Pakistan to allow Binance to explore 'tokenisation' of up to $2 billion of assets
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Friday (Dec 12, 2025)
Hong Kong leader says fire probe expected to conclude within nine months
TerraUSD creator Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years over US$40bil crypto collapse
Jail for Malaysian man linked to Singapore crime syndicate that controlled 70 bank accounts; over RM2.6mil involved
Nowhere to pray as logs choke flood-hit Indonesian mosque
EXPLAINER - Thailand's snap election: How will it play out?
Yet another run-in: China Coast Guard expels Philippine vessels from waters near Xianbin Jiao

Others Also Read