Tuesday, May 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Ridiculously Drunk': Canadian Sorry For Spraying Paint On Ancient Thai Wall

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2018 12:24 AM
    A Canadian who was arrested in northern Thailand for spraying paint on an ancient wall says she's sorry for what she did and terrified about what comes next.
     
     
    Brittney Schneider, 22, was in Chiang Mai last Thursday when she said she and some others got "ridiculously drunk." They started to walk back to their hostel, but came across a bottle of spray paint and picked it up.
     
     
    "I came to as I finished writing the B and I stopped because I knew it was bad," she said Tuesday in an email interview with The Canadian Press. "But it was already too late."
     
     
    Security camera footage shows Schneider, who is from Grande Prairie, Alta., and Furlong Lee, 23, spraying paint on the walls of the Tha Pae Gate in the city of Chiang Mai. 
     
     
    They have been charged with vandalizing registered ancient artifacts, which carries a penalty of up to 10 years in prison and a fine of one million baht ($40,000).
     
     
    Police said Lee, who is from Liverpool, England, admitted that he wrote "Scouser Lee" on the wall, while Schneider wrote the letter "B" underneath it.
     
     
    The 13th-century Tha Pae Gate is part of an ancient wall that forms a square around Chiang Mai's inner city.
     
     
    After they sprayed the wall, they walked back to the hostel and went to sleep, Schneider said.
     
     
    "The next morning we woke up and were sitting beside the pool and I just remembered what we did and looked over to one of the guys from the night before and said, 'OMG, we spray-painted a wall last night. I’m so scared we’re going to get in trouble.'"
     
     
    She said she had gone upstairs to her room to call a friend when a hostel employee knocked on her door and said there was an issue downstairs.
     
     
    "My heart dropped. I knew," said Schneider. "I walked downstairs, opened the door and there were like seven police officers standing there.
     
     
    "They showed me a video and asked if it was me in the video spray-painting the wall. I said, 'Yes, it was me.'"
     
     
    Schneider said they were arrested and taken to the police station where they spent the night before court.
     
     
    "The judge said we could face up to 10 years in prison and/or a fine of $40,000," she said. "We had the chance to get bail that day, but it was too late at home so I couldn’t get the bail. I spent three nights in prison and got bailed out yesterday."
     
     
    Schneider said her mother and aunt have arrived in Chiang Mai and, while she's thankful they're there, she said she's not OK mentally.
     
     
    "I’m terrified for my life. I’m so sorry for what I did, beyond sorry," she said.
     
     
    "I’m just so overwhelmed and just want to go home."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air Canada Jet Damaged While On LaGuardia Taxiway By Another Jet

    Airport officials in New York say an Air Canada flight that had just landed at the city's LaGuardia Airport late Monday afternoon was damaged as it sat on the taxiway by another passing plane.

    Air Canada Jet Damaged While On LaGuardia Taxiway By Another Jet

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Proposes Ottawa Get Into The Crude-By-Rail Business

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Proposes Ottawa Get Into The Crude-By-Rail Business
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is proposing Ottawa get into the crude-by-rail business — at least temporarily — so that producers in her province can get a better price for their oil.

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Proposes Ottawa Get Into The Crude-By-Rail Business

    Electoral Reform Ballots In Mail, Elections BC Monitors Rotating Postal Strikes

    Ballots for British Columbia's electoral reform referendum are in the mail as postal workers across Canada launch a series of rotating strikes.

    Electoral Reform Ballots In Mail, Elections BC Monitors Rotating Postal Strikes

    Crown Says Man Should Be Convicted Of Girl's Murder Based On Alleged Confession

    Crown Says Man Should Be Convicted Of Girl's Murder Based On Alleged Confession
    A man charged with murdering a 12-year-girl in British Columbia over 40 years ago should be found guilty after confessing to undercover police that he abducted, sexually assaulted and killed her, a Crown attorney says.

    Crown Says Man Should Be Convicted Of Girl's Murder Based On Alleged Confession

    Vancouver Mayoral Candidate Ken Sim Admits Defeat, Congratulates Winner Kennedy Stewart

     The runner-up in the race for Vancouver mayor has admitted defeat, two days after he lost by almost 1,000 votes.

    Vancouver Mayoral Candidate Ken Sim Admits Defeat, Congratulates Winner Kennedy Stewart

    Police Cleared In Death Of Carjacking Suspect At Ferry Terminal In Nanaimo: Watchdog

    SURREY, B.C. — Police officers acted appropriately in dealing with a carjacking suspect as they attempted to arrest him at a ferry terminal in Nanaimo before he was fatally shot, British Columbia's police watchdog said in a report released Monday.

    Police Cleared In Death Of Carjacking Suspect At Ferry Terminal In Nanaimo: Watchdog