19 June 2015
Reportedly, the TCSD officials and soldiers arrested Chayapa at home as authorised by Article 44 without an arrest warrant before taking the defendant to the base of the 11th Infantry Regiment King's Bodyguard.
25 June 2015
Police escorted Chayapa to a military court in Bangkok for a custody. Despite Chayapa’s bail submission with THB 400,000 guarantee, the court rejected the bail.
27 June 2015
During the 3rd custody, another bail request was submitted. The court again rejected the request.
15 December 2015
Deposition Examination
Thai Lawyers for Human Rights' Facebook reported that during the court hearing, Chayapa was taken to the court without a lawyer and family. As Chayapa pleaded guilty, the court cut the prison term in half from 14 years and 60 months to 7 years and 30 months.
In the afternoon, the lawyer submitted a request rejecting the allegedly unlawful court procedure because the court failed to inform the lawyer about the hearing which negatively affected Chayapa’s right to an attorney.
The submitted request by the lawyer mentioned that the court hearing which was carried out without the lawyer’s presence was against Section 173 of the Criminal Procedure Code. According to Section 173, under the offecse with prison punishment, before beginning to take into the consideration, the court shall ask whether the defendant has a lawyer, if there is no lawyer and the defendant wants one, the court shall appoint the lawyer for the defendant.
Furthermore, Chayapa had not received any notification or notified about the court schedule in advance. During the night of 14 December 2015, the official of the Department of Corrections notified Chayapa about the upcoming court schedule at short notice. As Chayapa was imprisoned, there was no time for Chayapa to inform the lawyer or relatives.
Although, on 14 December 2015, the lawyer was actually at the military court to oppose the custody order of another case and to request for an appointment date of the hearing of this case, the lawyer was neither informed nor received a notification about the schedule from the military court in Bangkok. The court officer however informed the lawyer on that day that there had not been any appointment for Chayapa’s case and the lawyer would be notified in advance if there were any appointment of the case.
Nevertheless, the lawyer has not been notified about the schedule by the court but later on heard from the defendant after the officer of the Department of Corrections permitted the defendant to make a phone call to get an assistance from the lawyer, this was after the court already handed down its verdict.
Additionally, the lawyer once submitted a request to have a copy of the complaint on 22 September 2015, but the military court rejected the request by reasoning that the complaint would later on be delivered to the defendant. The lawyer received a copy of the indictment after the second submission requesting to transcribe it on 8 October 2015. Even though the lawyer had already been appointed to and had continuously followed up the case, but the lawyer had never been informed about the hearing date by the court officer.