Thai Man Broadcasts Baby Daughter's Murder on Facebook Live

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 26 April 2017 10:08 IST

A Thai man filmed himself killing his 11-month-old daughter in two video clips posted on Facebook before committing suicide, police said on Tuesday.

People could access the videos of the child's murder on her father's Facebook page for roughly 24 hours, until they were taken down around 5pm in Bangkok (3:30pm IST) on Tuesday, or about a day after being uploaded.

Advertisement

"This is an appalling incident and our hearts go out to the family of the victim," a Singapore-based Facebook spokesman said in an email to Reuters. "There is absolutely no place for content of this kind on Facebook and it has now been removed."

Murders, suicides and sexual assault have plagued Facebook despite making up a small percentage of videos. On Tuesday a Swedish court jailed three men for the rape of a woman that was broadcast live on Facebook.

Advertisement

Last week, Facebook said it was reviewing how it monitored violent footage and other objectionable material after a posting of the fatal shooting of a man in Cleveland, Ohio was visible for two hours before being taken down.

Facebook Launches Review of How It Handles Violent Videos After Cleveland Killing

The harrowing footage from Thailand showed Wuttisan Wongtalay tying a rope to his daughter Natalie's neck before dropping the child, dressed in a bright pink dress, from the rooftop of a deserted building in the seaside town of Phuket.

Advertisement

Wuttisan's suicide was not broadcast but his lifeless body was found beside his daughter, said Jullaus Suvannin, the police officer in charge of the case.

"He was having paranoia about his wife leaving him and not loving him," Jullaus told Reuters.

Advertisement

Wuttisan's wife, Jiranuch Triratana, told Reuters she had lived with him for over a year. At first the relationship had gone well, she said, but then he grew violent and sometimes hit her 5-year-old son from a previous husband.

She feared that something was wrong on Tuesday when she found he had left home with Natalie, whose nickname was Beta. She set out to look for them.

"I was afraid he would hurt our daughter even though he loved her," she told Reuters by phone from the funeral.

Video removed
Thailand's Ministry of Digital Economy said it contacted Facebook on Tuesday afternoon about removing the videos, after receiving a police request.

"We contacted Facebook today and Facebook removed the videos," ministry spokesman Somsak Khaosuwan told Reuters, adding that the government would take no action against the company.

"We will not be able to press charges against Facebook, because Facebook is the service provider and they acted according to their protocol when we sent our request. They cooperated very well."

After the company faced a backlash for showing the video of the Cleveland killing, Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook would do all it could to prevent such content in the future.

Thai netizens voiced outrage about the clips of the child's killing, which were uploaded on Monday, the first at 4.50pm (3:20pm IST) and the second at 4.57pm (3:27pm IST).

"This is the most evil clip I've seen in my life," said one user, Avada Teeraponkoon. "I couldn't stand it for more than one second."

"How can he watch his own child stop breathing?" said another, Rujirek Polglang. "He should have just died alone."

The killing was the first in Thailand known to be broadcast on the social networking site, said deputy police spokesman Kissana Phathanacharoen.

"It could be influenced by behaviour from abroad, most recently in Cleveland," Kissana told Reuters.

The first video had drawn 112,000 views by mid-afternoon on Tuesday, while the second video showed 258,000 views.

Facebook response
Facebook, the world's largest social network, has not said how long its review of internal operations might take. The California company declined to answer questions about the latest incident or make employees available for interviews.

The company relies largely on reports from its 1.9 billion users to find objectionable material. Flagged items are forwarded to thousands of Facebook workers who judge whether they should be taken down.

Facebook has said it is working on software to automatically flag videos that are objectionable. But a person who has worked on the issues at Facebook said that major Silicon Valley companies were still working on the much easier problem of blocking previously identified child pornography videos. Identifying violence in a newly uploaded video would be very difficult, this person said.

Advertisers have not identified the violent videos as a major concern. Facebook is still a safe place for companies to build brands, said Barry Lowenthal, president of the Media Kitchen, a New York-based media buyer.

"It's pretty amazing that they were able to figure it out and get it down in such a short period of time with 2 billion users," he said.

© Thomson Reuters 2017

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Lava Bold N2 5G Launched in India With 6,000mAh Battery, 6.75-Inch Display
  2.  Xiaomi 18, 18 Pro and 18 Pro Max Specifications Leaked Ahead of Debut
  3. Marvel's Wolverine Gets Gameplay Trailer at State of Play, Pre-Orders Go Live
  4. Vivo X500 Pro Max Display and Battery Details Revealed in New Leak
  5. Motorola Edge 2026 With 6.3-Inch Display Goes Official
  6. RTX Spark-Powered Laptops Could Cost a Lot More Than Regular AI PCs
  7. Honor X7e With a 7,500mAh Battery Debuts Globally at This Price
  8. Lumio Launches 55-Inch Variants of Vision 9 (2026), Vision 7 (2026) in India
  1. Apple Confirms macOS 27 Will End Support for Intel Macs Ahead of WWDC 2026
  2. Instagram Begins Warning Users Affected by Meta AI Hack That Enabled Account Takeovers
  3. UK's FCA Warns Premier League Clubs Over Unauthorised Crypto Sponsor Risks
  4. Vivo X500 Pro Max Display and Battery Details Surface Online in Early Leak; Largest Model Said to Feature 6.85-Inch Screen
  5. Google Introduces Fake Call Detection for Android Phones to Curb Call Spoofing Attacks
  6. Google Rolls Out Gemini Thinking Levels Across Platforms With 'Extended' Thinking Mode for All Users
  7. Samsung Galaxy A27 Reportedly Bags US FCC Certification Ahead of Anticipated Launch
  8. NYDFS, European Banking Authority Join Forces to Oversee, Monitor Stablecoin Activities
  9. Meta Reportedly Testing ‘Series’ Feature to Organise Instagram, Facebook Reels Into Episodic Collections
  10. Xiaomi 18 Tipped to Sport 6.4-Inch Display; Pro Models Said to Feature Dual 200-Megapixel Rear Cameras
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.