Police Probe Reported Rich Kid Gang Raid

Police said Tuesday they are in­vestigating an alleged attack by a gang of wealthy young men who raided a house in Phnom Penh’s Chamkar Mon district armed with as­sault rifles, steel pipes and a Taser stun-gun.

Victims and witnesses interview­ed Tuesday likened the violent and coordinated attack Sunday to a scene from a Hong Kong action movie.

At about 4:30 pm Sunday, 20 young men blocked Street 113 in Boeng Kang Kong III commune with their luxury cars—two Audis, a Camry, a Lexus and a Hum­mer—said Buth Taingly, 23, a target of the attack.

Four or five men, some of whom were armed with AK-47 and M-16 rifles, remained by the cars as a group of about seven men, armed with steel pipes, a hand gun and an electric stun gun, chased Buth Taingly, along with Men Sophana, 24, into the house of their friend, Chhaing Sophea, 23, who was sleeping upstairs.

Yel Srieng, 60, Chhaing Sophea’s mother and the owner of the house where the attack took place, claim­ed Tuesday that she begged the young men not to open fire.

“They ran over to my house and yelled ‘thief’ as they went upstairs and beat my son, who was sleeping, and his friends until they were bloody,” she said.

“I had to clean the blood for two hours,” Yel Srieng said, adding that after the attack she took her son and his friends to a hospital where they were treated for cuts and broken bones.

Chhaing Sophea said Tuesday that he was left with a broken left hand and broken toe and was shocked with the stun gun. Men Sophana received 12 stitches on his head, and also broke a finger and his left hand, Chhaing Sophea said.

Buth Taingly said he received 10 stitches on his head and was also shocked with the stun gun.

“They beat us without reason,” Buth Taingly said, adding that the attackers are the well-known sons of successful businessmen and government officials. “I know them,” he added.

Buth Taingly declined to say whether he and his friends had had arguments with the group in the past.

Local police arrived before the at­tack was over, but would not take on the gang, Buth Taingly claimed.

Chamkar Mon district police chief Ouch Sokhon said Tuesday that he had been out of town Sun­day, and could not say whether police had indeed witnessed the melee.

Ouch Sokhon said he forwarded the victims’ complaints and police reports to the municipal minor crime police department for investigation.

Minor crime police deputy chief Thai Vannak said investigations were ongoing and that he knew the names of the suspects, but declined to identify them.

Ministry of Interior spokesman Lieutenant General Khieu Sopheak said he was not aware of the attack.

 

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