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  • 11
    Jul
    2012
    4:57am, EDT

    Thailand pardons US man jailed for royal insult

    Narong Sangnak / EPA, file

    A Thai-born US citizen Joe Gordon, 55, looks on from inside a cell at the criminal court, in Bangkok, Thailand, 08 December 2011.

    By Ploy Bunlueslip, NBC News in Thailand, and msnbc.com staff

    A US citizen sentenced to two-and-half years in prison for defaming Thailand's royal family was pardoned and released from jail late Tuesday, US Embassy officials told NBC News.

    Thai-born Joe Gordon was convicted in December for translating excerpts of a banned biography of Thailand’s King Bhumibol – the latest in a series of severe sentences imposed for defaming the country’s monarchy.


    The 55-year-old, formerly a used car salesman in Colorado, was sentenced to two and a half years for breaking the country’s "lese majeste" laws, which make it illegal to insult the king, queen or crown prince - a highly sensitive issue in a country where 84-year-old king is regarded as semi-divine. 

    American jailed in Thailand for insulting monarchy to be released?

    Successive governments have ignored international calls to reform the laws, which critics argue is abused to discredit activists and politicians opposed to the royalist establishment. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    No reason for the pardon was immediately given. An update on Gordon’s campaign website said: “Free at last, free at last!  Thank God almighty, Joe is free at last! After over 13 months, Joe Gordon's ordeal is over.”

    A U.S. embassy official in Thailand confirmed Gordon’s release to NBC News.

    The BBC reported that Washington has pressed Thai authorities to release him since he was arrested in May 2011. The report said an editor of a political website was given an eight-month suspended sentence in May for failing to remove comments deemed insulting to the monarchy.

    Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com, contributed to this report.

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    82 comments

    The man was born a Thai and moved to the USA and then became a US Citizen... He returned to Thailand for the FREE Health Care offered to ALL Thais, not foreign Citizens... Unfortunately while in the USA, he translated and posted a book in Thai, on the Internet that is banned in Thailand.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, thailand, jail, colorado, featured, monarchy, joe-gordon
  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    7:51am, EST

    Thais divided by anti-free speech crackdown

    Narong Sangnak / EPA

    Thai-born U.S. citizen Joe Gordon, 55, is escorted by Thai prison officials as he arrives at a Bangkok court on Thursday. He was jailed for two-and-a-half years for insulting the country's monarchy.

    By Ploy Bunluesilp, NBC News

    BANGKOK - A Colorado car salesman who was jailed Thursday for insulting Thailand's monarchy has become a pawn in an escalating political battle over freedom of speech in the southeast Asia country.

    The case of Joe Gordon, a 54-year-old U.S. citizen who was born Lerpong Wichaikhammat in Thailand before emigrating to the United States decades ago, has been troubling for Washington. The U.S. sees Thailand as a crucial ally in the region but has been increasingly concerned by restrictions on free expression in the kingdom.


    Gordon was arrested in May during a trip to Thailand for medical treatment. His crime was posting a partial translation of a critical academic biography of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej on the internet while living in Colorado.

    • American jailed for insulting Thai king

    U.S. Consul General in Thailand Elizabeth Pratt said Gordon's two-and-a-half year sentence was severe and he been jailed for exercising his right to freedom of expression.

    "We continue to have full respect to the Thai monarchy and we also want to support the right to freedom of expression which is internationally recognized as a human right," she told reporters at the court.

    Thailand is one of the few countries in the world where a hereditary monarch still has immense powers. Although the country is supposed to be a constitutional monarchy where the king has only symbolic powers, in fact the palace has massive political influence, and a law banning any criticism of the monarch is still in force.

    National debate
    Many Thais feel great respect for the king, but there is increasing concern over whether restrictions on freedom of speech are damaging the monarchy rather than protecting it.

    As a Thai, I admire the king, but as a journalist I am concerned that I cannot discuss the growing national debate about the monarchy. Even in private, many Thais are worried that discussing it could get them jailed.

    Most Thais I spoke to about the sentence were afraid to express their views openly.
     
    "He's not the book author, he only translated and posted on his blog. It's a bit unfair for him," said school officer Suthasinee who declined to give her last name.

    The book Gordon translated is The King Never Smiles, written by U.S. journalist Paul Handley and published by Yale University Press. It is one of the few publications that attempts a critical but academic look at the Thai monarchy.

    "The media can report anything but not the royal family topic, we are all know that," said Kan Yuenyong, an analyst at Siam Intelligence Unit. "If there are ... more of lese majeste cases, it might make people stand up to resist against the royal institution," Kan added.

    Under Thailand's so-called lese majeste laws, those found guilty of defaming the monarchy face three to 15 years behind bars.

    Ever since a 2006 coup that ousted popular Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the use of lese majeste legislation has surged.

    • 'Witch hunt'? Thailand cracks down on king's online critics

    Recently, the authorities have focused on social media, especially Facebook, as it has become the main discussion forum for Thais who oppose the lese majeste law.
     
    The ministry of Information and Communication Technology has set up a hotline for those who want to report "cyber crimes" against the monarchy. The ICT suspended more than 60,000 websites between October and November and urged people to not click "share" or "like" on Facebook posts that criticize the monarchy.
     
    Ironically, it is not even clear whether King Bhumibol supports the crackdown. In his birthday speech in 2005, he said that he should not be above criticism: "Charges against those accused of lese-majeste should be dropped and those held in jail for lese-majeste should be released."
     
    However, it seems that some of his supporters were not listening. And many Thais fear that instead of protecting the palace, the new atmosphere of fear and repression may have the opposite effect.

    52 comments

    What makes anyone think there is such a thing as freedom of speech. Only if they except it. Check Germany and England. If you know what I mean. It'll be in the US soon.

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    Explore related topics: thailand, asia-pacific, joe-gordon, lese-majeste
  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    3:25am, EST

    American jailed for insulting Thai king - while living in Colorado

    Narong Sangnak / EPA

    Joe Gordon, 55, looks on from inside a cell at the criminal court in Bangkok, Thailand, on Thursday.

    By Msnbc.com staff and wire

    BANGKOK - A court in Thailand sentenced a U.S. citizen to two-and-a-half years in prison Thursday for defaming the country's royal family by translating excerpts of a locally banned biography of the king and posting them online.

    The verdict is the latest so-called lese majeste punishment handed down in the Southeast Asian kingdom, which has come under increasing pressure at home and abroad to reform harsh legislation that critics say is an affront to freedom of expression.


    The 55-year-old Thai-born American, Joe Gordon — also known as Lerpong Wichaikhammat — stood calmly with his ankles shackled in an orange prison uniform as the sentence was read out at a Bangkok criminal court.

    "The defendant is found guilty ... The court sentenced him to five years in prison. But he pleaded guilty. That makes the case easier, so the court decided to cut it in half to 2 years and six months," a judge said at the criminal court in Bangkok.

    • Story: Thais divided by anti-free speech crackdown

    The sentence was relatively light compared to other recent cases. In November, 61-year-old Amphon Tangnoppakul was sentenced to 20 years in jail for sending four text messages deemed offensive to the crown.

    Gordon's lawyer, Anon Nampa, said there would be no appeal against the verdict. "One month from now, we'll submit a request for a royal pardon," he added.

    Gordon posted links the to banned biography of King Bhumibol Adulyadej several years ago while living in the U.S. state of Colorado, and his case has raised questions about the applicability of Thai law to acts committed by foreigners outside Thailand.

    Speaking after the verdict, Gordon said, "I am an American citizen, and what happened was in America." 

    'This is just the system'
    He also said he had no expectation of being let off easy. "This is just the system in Thailand," he said. Speaking later in Thai, he added: "In Thailand, they put people in prison even if they don't have proof."

    Gordon had lived in the U.S. for about 30 years. He was detained in late May during a visit to his native country to seek treatment for arthritis and high blood pressure. After being repeatedly denied bail, he pleaded guilty in October in hopes of obtaining a lenient sentence.

    Thailand's lese majeste laws are the harshest in the world. They mandate that people found guilty of defaming the monarchy — including the king, the queen and the heir to the throne — face three to 15 years behind bars. The nation's 2007 Computer Crimes Act also contains provisions that have enabled prosecutors to increase lese majeste sentences.

    • Story: Man sentenced to 20 years for insulting Thai queen

    The U.S. Embassy's consul general, Elizabeth Pratt, told reporters in Bangkok after the ruling that Washington considered Gordon's punishment "severe because he has been sentenced for his right to freedom of expression."

    Opponents of the laws say that while the royal family should be protected from defamation, lese majeste laws have often been abused to punish political rivals. That is especially true since the nation suffered a 2006 military coup.

    Asked if he would stay in Thailand after serving his time, Gordon said: "I would like to stay and see some positive Thailand. I want to see the real, amazing Thailand, not the messy Thailand."

    • Photoblog: Prime minister bows to royalty

    Many had hoped that the administration of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, which has some prominent supporters who have been accused of lese majeste, would reform the laws. The issue remains highly sensitive, however, and Yingluck's government has been as aggressive in pursuing the cases as its predecessors.

    Last weekend, New York-based Human Rights Watch urged authorities to amend the laws, saying the penalties being meted out were "shocking."

    More targets online
    The rise of the Internet in recent years has given Thai authorities many more targets to pursue. Last month, Information Minister Anudith Nakornthap said Facebook users who "share" or "like" content that insults the Thai monarchy are committing a crime. Anudith said Thai authorities asked Facebook to remove 86,000 pages between August and November because of alleged lese majeste content.

    The Bangkok Post reported that the Thai government said Wednesday it had set up a committee to seek out and clamp down on websites that publish content considered insulting or offensive to the monarchy.

    • Story: 'Witch hunt'? Thailand cracks down on king's online critics

    Gordon, a former car salesman, is accused of having translated excerpts from the unauthorized biography "The King Never Smiles," published by Yale University Press, into the Thai language and publishing them in a blog. He also provided links to the translation to other two Web forums, prosecutors say.

    In the banned book, author Paul M. Handley retraces the king's life, alleging that he has been a major stumbling block to the progress of democracy in Thailand as he consolidated royal power over his long reign.

    Bhumibol, the world's longest-reigning monarch, is profoundly revered in Thailand and is widely seen as a stabilizing force. He was feted Monday on his 84th birthday, during which he called on his countrymen to unite in response to the worst floods in more than half a century.

    The king is frail and has stayed at a Bangkok hospital for more than two years.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    709 comments

    It's a shame that the monarchy feels so little for the people that they need to stifle expression. Revered or not, the monarchy is to be pitied for such narrow-mindedness. Oops, guess I better stay away from Thailand, now. I hope they don't believe in extraordinary renditions.

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    Explore related topics: thailand, royals, king, asia-pacific, defamation, joe-gordon, lese-majeste

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