‘She’s a f..king whore! She’s slept with millions of men’ said British controller of several online news businesses.
THE NIGHT WISH FILES PART III
THE INCRIMINATING VOICE MESSAGES
(Cover Photo British bar managers running sex bars for Flowers take time off)
Briton Bryan Flowers, the controller of several online newspapers and a foreign controlled sex-tourism operation in Thailand viciously attacked a 16-year-old girl, who was taken into care after being put to work in one of his sex bars.
Following a raid by anti-trafficking police on one of over 30 bars he controls in the sex resort of Pattaya he called the young girl a ‘f.cking whore’ who had slept with ‘millions of men’. ‘She wanted to sh@g men,” he said.
But the attack backfired, when a Canadian investor called Adam Howell, who had put US$450,000 into Flowers business ‘The Night Wish Group’ pulled out after, he claimed, he had been cheated out of his savings after into investing in Flowers’ organised crime group.
And he took with him seven years worth of digital files from a si called company, which was allowed to operate by paying off police.
Filess show how Flowers dodged, criminal laws, labour laws, tax laws, and immigration laws, and laundered money, while living of the earning of young Thai women in the sex trade. He also dodged prostitution laws although that is obviously common in Thailand, where the government aware of the vast income takes a ‘See no evil’ approach.
Voice messages show how he made contact with ‘dirty cops’ and ‘dirty judges’ to defeat a case of sex=trafficking.
And Flowers had been doing it since he withdrew from a business course at Worcester University when he was in his early 20s.
Flowers, 43, from Chapelfields, Coventry, an electrician by profession, is the contoller of the Night Wish Group, which is funded by a consortium of foreigners. As a company it was liquidated in 2017 but since then had been run as a ‘league of gentlemen’, who met in Facebook Groups.
Currently his Thai wife, Punnipa Flowers, 36, an English bar manager Will Bilton, 31, from Barrow-in-Furness, and two Thai members of staff of the Flirt Bar in Pattaya are on trial charges which include human trafficking, and trafficking a person under the age of 16 into prostitution.
The raid on the Flirt bar was reported in the Thai and British media, but no mention was made of the 16-year-old, who had been picked up away from the premises. And after the arrest of his wife no news of that was reported either.
After growing his sex empire to 25 ‘short-time’ bars, or brothels, Flowers created several online newspapers, the Pattaya News, Phuket Gazette, and Bangkok News.
In a YouTube video he said: “I wanted something to hide behind. I wanted a weapon. because if someone high up, or someone wanted to create a problem I’m protected.”
And in an internal Facebook post to his investors he said the Thai language issue of his Pattaya News gave him more power and influence and that he was now ‘protected from the news’ and had ‘extra power’ in his police team.
His News Director is an American, Adam Judd, who for five years managed another of his bars ‘Sexy in the City’ situated with the others in a discount and downmarket sex area of Pattaya known as ‘Soi 6’ (lane six).
Flowers, who is known both as the ‘Soi Six Mafia Boss’ or by Brits as the ‘Poundland Mafia Boss’, also attacked Anti-Human Trafficking police claiming they forced the 16-year-old to say she was forced to have sex with tourists.
And he launched a campaign against an American NGO ‘The Exodus Road’, whose workers discovered the 16-year-old from the Thai Province of Lopburi, in the Flirt Bar in Soi 6 and reported it not to police in Pattaya, but to Anti-Trafficking Police.
He contacted the media in Colorado Springs, the headquarters of The Exodus Road, telling editors he was an investigative journalist and needed to tell them that agents of Exodus Road were sleeping with prostitutes in Pattaya and setting up bar owners.
Howell said he had made complaints of fraud to Pattaya police and had been congratulated for his bravery. But he soon realised they were not going to do anything and were passing back information to Flowers.
He downloaded files from the Night Wish Group, and on advice from a friend, sent them to a retired British journalist Andrew Drummond, a former correspondent Thai based correspondent.
Howell, 43, from Saanichton, British Columbia, said: “I knew there was something wrong from the beginning when there was a reception in bar to welcome me to the group and I was put into a room with three naked ladies. I declined the offer.”
Howell joined in 2017 when the Bitcoin he launched, Dopecoin, rocketed in value from US40,000 to US$20 million.
“I met Flowers in Pattaya. He took me to meetings of entrepreneurs, who all applauded him, and I fell for his manner as a successful businessman. He had promised my investment would be safe, and I would be paid a monthly dividend of 320,000 Thai baht, approx US$10,000 which would rise as the company expanded. I could take a couple of years off and chill.
“With my cash his bar leases increased from 12 to 25.”
But, said Howell, he was quickly cheated out of 100,000 Euros by Flower’s Australian deputy called Adam Schultz, and his colleague Robin Dey, both from Melbourne, Victoria, in a Bitcoin scam called MDX.
Then, due to Covid, Flowers stopped paying dividends and never restarted them for Howell afterwards after Flowers put out internet scam warnings on another Bitcoin scam Schulz and Dey were launching.
He had also discovered Schulz and Dey were behind the New Dawn Fund, a previous Bitcoin scam which had been stopped by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission.
The Night Wish Files reveal how Bryan Flowers knew about the coming raid on the Flirt Bar in April 2023 and he was able to tell the media that no underaged women was found on the premises. In a memorandum to investors he told them he would have to pay more due to the legal proceedings.
He discussed meeting judges, who would help get his wife and Bilton out of jail and resolve the case.

Burt there were problems in the deal making and it was getting very expensive.
Flowers claimed PayPal had stolen 6 million baht from him. This was when he had put his Thai women on webcams during the Covid shutdown. Paypal refused to allow payments for tips to go through on the basis of immoral earnings. Police were now threatening him with money laundering.
But eventually he gets his wife and staff out on bail after paying 11,5 million Thai baht (£261,650). But the case has to be allowed to run its course so justice could be seen to have been done.

And finally he asked his investors from Britain, Australia, Sweden, Canada, and the United States, to thank his team, from saving them from the disasters of Covid, Paypal, Facebook, which blocked his adverts, and human trafficking.
The court case continues.
Flowers also told Howell that he had fixed his ‘money laundering problem’ with his lawyers. On paper he did not own anything. They would not take his and his wife’s matching white Mercedes’. Their other houses were held by the bank,
Meanwhile he had to tie up a few loose ends, Apparently his cashier had ‘snitched’ on him to Anti-Human Trafficking police.
” She gave them our names and Facebooks. Vags (Night Wish General Manager) ran off to Greece. She’s given them all our sales for the bar. Told them we had sex upstairs.
Flowers said for the time being he was being sweet to the cashier, but would later have her jailed.

Flowers also described how he had been advised by Thai officials in Pattaya to keep a lower profile, and distance himself from his business. They did not want to see ‘ass or bikini’ photos on Facebook. He should act more like the Thai mafia.

He had been told to take his wife’s names off the bars and licences. But while he joined the Thai National Polo and Equestrian Club and made trips to police headquarters and city hall to give gifts to the city leaders, He ignored their advice.
Photos of his sex workers can be found all over YouTube, Facebook, and Telegram under different webpages. He even still advertises for new ‘cashiers’ on Facebook so called ‘Thai employment agency’ pages.

He put all his bars in the names of Thai nominees and ensured in their accounts they did not exceed a Thai annual tax threshold of 1.8 million baht (about £41,000) when some were making almost that each week.
He employed Brits as managers against Thai labour laws and even provided them with ‘Education Visas’ through his ‘Rage Fight Academy’ – a Thai Kick Boxing School (which he does not own on paper)- and sold them to other Brits in Pattaya for five times the government price.
(But the school would vouch that they were actually doing kickboing training).
He used undeclared money from investors to buy up a series of companies.
And all the cash from the ‘bar fines’ – fees for taking the women for sex, went through his wife’s bank accounts.
He was not putting himself, as he claimed, in the limelight and protecting others’ He was protecing himself.
He also showed a long history of paying bribes to police and in an interview with a Bangkok blogger advised how to pay off officials.
He even boasted about getting people out of jail – on Facebook. Offering a get out of jail service starting with a deposit of 300,000 Thai baht, about US$6,800.
Though he did add that if the balance was not available ‘the prisoner cannot go back – “I hope people understand what this means.”
In a YouTube video he confessed to paying 800,000 baht to get a Norwegian friend and investor out of prison in Bangkok, where he faced 21 years for drugs offences. But his reasons were not entirely altruistic. He made a profit.
Bryan Flowers has repeatedly refused to comment on the allegations prefering instead to attack this site and also bombard my social media with porn, sent by agents from the Punjab hired from the website fiverr.com.
However, in a private blog, he states that the raid on his bar should never have gone ahead:
‘No girl was found in the raid, and the police shouldn’t have gone through with it. In court the police admitted they never had gone into Flirt bar or investigated the bar before or verify (sic) any of the evidence they were presented by The Exodus Road, and they believed The Exodus Road charity.’
He claimed Exodus Road used a ‘killer and drug dealer’ to fly to Pattaya. That man “paid the cashier 100,000 baht to bring in an underage girl with borrowed ID a few times’, a 16-year-old tall girl that has worked in many bars before Flirt with someone else’s ID, and the underage girl said in court the police forced her to say she was trafficked, even though her boyfriend dropped her off daily and she worked in several gogos after the case.”
Bryan Flowers may have endeared himself to police and officials at city hall. But he is unlikely to endear himself to the Thai public. He was the author of a website called ‘Jizzflicker.com’. This was a pornographic account, real or imaginary, of his life as a sex tourist in Thailand. He calls on readers to pity the sex workers because they come from “a place where fathers come home drunk at night, beat their wives, and fondle their daughters- and where brothers share their sisters around their friends.