Woman's Car Pawn Vanishes in One Day as GPS Tracker Leads to Chop Shop in Lam Luk Ka
A woman's car vanished within a day of pawning it to a Facebook lender, with GPS tracking leading police to an illegal chop shop in Pathum Thani where only her belongings remained.
On May 15, 2025, Suphaporn Hunkalung, a 39-year-old company employee from Panasnikhom District, Chachoengsao Province, filed a report to warn the public and seek updates on her criminal case after being defrauded by a scam group following a car pawn transaction.
Suphaporn revealed that she needed money and contacted a Facebook page called "Easy Money Leasing" to pawn her black Mitsubishi Pajero, license plate number ชย 7648 (Chachoengsao). She agreed to a 100,000-baht pawn price and arranged to deliver the vehicle and sign a loan agreement with a man named Preecha (last name unknown) at a dormitory in Muang Chachoengsao District on May 10.
Suphaporn stated that just one day after handing over the vehicle, she tracked its location using the GPS system and discovered it had been driven from Chachoengsao to a gas station in Samut Prakan, then to Khlong 8 in Lam Luk Ka Subdistrict, Lam Luk Ka District, Pathum Thani—a repair garage that appeared to be an illegal parts dismantling operation.
When she arrived at the GPS location, Suphaporn found only her belongings scattered inside, but the car was gone.
Suphaporn reported that the GPS signal then disappeared, and she could no longer reach Preecha or the Facebook page, as they had closed the account and blocked her phone number immediately. She rushed to the location where the GPS signal had stopped.
Suphaporn stated that she coordinated with Lam Luk Ka Police to inspect the garage, where they found her personal items that had been stored in the vehicle, but no trace of the car. When questioned, the land owner claimed he had sublet the property to someone without a formal contract and did not know who the tenant was.
Suphaporn appealed to Muang Chachoengsao and Lam Luk Ka Police to urgently coordinate investigations to track down the criminal group and press charges, believing this is part of a larger operation causing hardship to many people.