Business
Thailand Files Historic Lawsuit Against Tech Giants and Banks Over 230M Baht Scam Losses
Abstract
- Thailand’s Consumers Council has filed a civil lawsuit against parent companies of four major technology platforms and nine commercial banks, seeking over 230 million baht in compensation for online investment scam victims. The case targets Meta, LINE, Apple, and Google for allegedly failing to prevent fraudulent advertisers and applications within their ecosystems.
- The lawsuit outlines a scam operation that moved victims from deceptive Facebook ads through LINE groups to fraudulent investment apps, ultimately draining funds via bank mule accounts. A Civil Court hearing is scheduled for August 2026, with the council aiming to establish new legal precedent for platform accountability in Thailand.
BANGKOK — In a landmark legal move, the Thailand Consumers Council has filed a civil lawsuit against the parent companies of four major global technology platforms and nine commercial banks, seeking over 230 million baht in compensation for victims of sophisticated online investment scams. The case, filed on June 8, 2026, marks the first time Thai authorities have pursued liability directly against the overseas parent entities controlling platforms like Meta’s Facebook, LINE, Apple’s App Store, and Google’s Play Store.
The lawsuit targets a “full-cycle” scam operation where fraudsters allegedly exploited the ecosystems of these platforms and banks to defraud at least 10 consumers. The scheme reportedly began with deceptive advertisements on Facebook, often impersonating public figures, to lure victims into LINE messaging groups. From there, scammers persuaded victims to install fraudulent investment applications via the App Store and Play Store before funneling millions of baht into mule accounts held by front companies through the banking system.
“The council argues that the platforms had a duty to verify advertisers and users, as well as a duty of care to ensure digital safety, but failed to prevent repeated abuse of their systems,” said Saree Ongsomwang, secretary-general of the Office of the Thailand Consumers Council. She compared the situation to a shopping mall that allows fraudsters to operate inside without accepting responsibility for the resulting harm.
The legal action includes nine commercial banks accused of failing to detect unusual transaction patterns or suspend suspicious transfers despite their legal obligations to monitor financial risks. Among the initial group of claimants, one individual reportedly lost 165 million baht in a stock investment scam, while another lost over 3 million baht.
The Civil Court has scheduled its first case management hearing for August 3, 2026. The council hopes this lawsuit will set a new precedent for consumer protection in Thailand, forcing global digital platforms to strengthen safety standards and accept accountability for the damages suffered by Thai users who have increasingly lost faith in state agencies’ ability to provide remedies.
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