Thai man finds bloodstains in his car after lending it to friend
A Thai man asked police to investigate after finding bloodstains, a military ID card and an obscured registration plate on his car after he lent it to her friend.
The 29 year old owner, Thanaporn Wilaepana, contacted Pak Kret Police to inspect his bronze Honda City sedan, which was parked outside a condominium in the Khlong Klua area of Nonthaburi province.
Police said an initial inspection found damage to the front and rear bumpers, a right rear door that could not be opened and signs of a crash at several points on the exterior.
Inside the vehicle, officers found a military ID card on the floor of the front passenger side. The card belonged to a captain serving in the Royal Thai Army, but the officer’s name was not disclosed to the public.
Bloodstains were also found on the window at the driver’s seat, the back seat window and the left rear door window. Police also reported that the number 9 on the rear registration plate had been covered with a sticker.

Thanaporn told police he had recently lent the car to a 33 year old female friend he had known for a long time. He said the woman called and asked him to pick her up at the entrance to Soi Samakkhi on Tiwanon Road in Nonthaburi on March 9.
He arrived to find the friend with two men she did not know. He then drove all three towards Prachachuen-Nonthaburi Road.
Thanaporn said that when they reached a convenience store on Prachachuen-Nonthaburi Road, the friend asked him to stop so she could meet a couple on a motorcycle.
He told police the friend then borrowed his car and asked him to return home with a man on the motorcycle. The woman who had been on the motorcycle reportedly switched to travel in Thanaporn’s car instead.

Thanaporn said his friend later contacted him at about 4am the next day, March 10, telling him to collect her car from outside a condominium. When he retrieved it, he found the vehicle damaged and bloodstained.
He said she later tried to contact the friend but could not reach her. Thanaporn told police he did not know the soldier named on the ID card or the other people who had been with his friend that day.
Police collected samples of the blood found in the vehicle for further investigation. Officers said they will also review CCTV footage along Prachachuen-Nonthaburi Road to determine how the car was damaged and identify the source of the blood.
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