Briton faces jail for spraying 'Scouser Lee' on Thai gate Published duration 19 October 2018

image copyright Viral Press image caption The graffiti was scrawled on the Tha Phae Gate in the city of Chiang Mai

A British tourist accused of spray painting his name on a historic landmark in Thailand could face 10 years in prison.

Local police said Lee Furlong, 23, from Liverpool, has admitted defacing Tha Phae Gate in the city of Chiang Mai.

Video appears to show a man spraying "Scouser Lee" on the gate, part of which dates back to the 13th Century.

Supt Teerasak Sriprasert said Mr Furlong would be charged with "vandalising an archaeological site".

A Canadian woman, Brittney Schneider, has also been arrested and charged with vandalism for allegedly adding her first initial to graffiti on the gate.

"They will face no more than 10 years' jail [and/or] a fine of no more than a million baht (about £23,555)," Supt Sriprasert said.

"They admitted to the crime, saying they did it because of the thrill and they were also a little bit drunk."

image copyright Viral Press image caption Brittney Schneider and Lee Furlong were taken back to the scene by police

A Foreign and Commonwealth Office spokesperson said its staff were "providing assistance to a British man following his arrest in Thailand" and "are in touch with the local authorities".

Thai media reported CCTV from a nearby cafe shows four people approaching the gate at about 04:00 on Thursday. Two of them approach the wall and one begins to spray it.

Mr Furlong reportedly told detectives he and his group were drunk and walking back to their guesthouse when he picked up a discarded spray can and used it before his companion.

After being indentified the following day, he and Ms Schneider were arrested at their guesthouse and taken on a re-enactment to the Northern gate, one of five historical gates in the city, according to Thai PBS.

The other two people shown in the video were not arrested.

Chiang Mai is Thailand's fourth-largest city and tourists can visit the historic walled parts of the city.

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