
Jorakay Adhesive has sent its legal team to take action against "Bird Wanwangwang" over a powder-throwing clip that caused company damage and impact. Meanwhile, cybercrime police indicate it preliminarily violates the Computer Crime Act and plan to file an additional charge. If the Tourism Authority of Thailand sees it harms the country's tourism image, they can also file a complaint with cybercrime police to take action. They also warn social media users not to share "trash content," as sharers face penalties equal to those who post it.
The case involves "Bird Wanwangwang," a well-known influencer, who made a clip using white powder in a "Jorakay Adhesive" bag to throw powder on people during the Songkran festival in Phra Pradaeng District, Samut Prakan Province, on 26 April. This sparked criticism for being inappropriate and dangerous to water festival participants.
The latest update: at 10:00 a.m. on 5 May 2026 at the Technology Crime Suppression Division headquarters in Muang Thong Thani, Nonthaburi Province, the legal team from the company owning the Jorakay Adhesive bags met with Pol. Maj. Gen. Chatchapandakan Klayklung, Deputy Commander of the Technology Crime Suppression Division, Pol. Col. Thanut Kongmun, Deputy Commander of Division 1, Pol. Col. Torsak Panklinphut, Superintendent of Division 4, and Pol. Lt. Col. Jirawat Buringam, Deputy Superintendent of Division 4, along with investigators, to discuss legal actions due to damage to the company's image.
Before meeting with investigators, the legal team said they would discuss all legal aspects involved, especially regarding violations of the Computer Crime Act. If it applies, the company confirms it will proceed legally even though "Bird Wanwangwang" explained it was just content and the company product bag contained only powder. It is "Bird Wanwangwang's" right, but the company reserves the legal right due to evidence in several clips clearly showing the company's logo, causing impact. The company confirms it has a clear policy to protect its image and social responsibility but declined to disclose case details.
Later, Pol. Maj. Gen. Chatchapandakan said after legal discussions that Jorakay had provided information and filed a complaint against "Bird Wanwangwang" under the Computer Crime Act, initially under Section 14 (1) for inputting distorted information into a computer system causing public alarm. Penalties include imprisonment up to five years or a fine up to 100,000 baht. If offending a person or legal entity, such as this company, penalties are imprisonment up to three years, a fine up to 60,000 baht, or both.
The lawyer for "Bird Wanwangwang" has arranged to meet cyber police tomorrow (6 May) at 11:30 a.m. However, police may postpone it to later in the week and possibly file an additional charge that day besides the assault charge filed earlier at Phra Pradaeng Police Station.
Regarding blocking "Bird Wanwangwang's" pages, cyber police have requested the Ministry of Digital Economy to block some, but two platforms remain—X and YouTube—which cannot be blocked yet because they are foreign platforms requiring coordination through the Attorney General and the MLAT system. If "Bird Wanwangwang" chooses to close his own channels or content, it is positive, showing remorse and acknowledging the content is "trash" that should not be accessible to the public.
They also warned people who shared "Bird Wanwangwang's" or others' illegal "trash content" to delete it immediately, as sharing carries penalties equal to posting. Regarding the electric saw company featured in Bird's Songkran clip, police have not been contacted yet to file a complaint but encourage them to come forward. Furthermore, if the Tourism Authority of Thailand believes Bird's content harms Thailand's tourism image, they can file a complaint with cyber police.