The sweep of the powerful and ultra-rich Wat Dhammakaya temple on Bangkok's outskirts comes after Thailand's junta chief invoked special powers to put its sprawling 1,000-acre compound under military control.
But it became the latest failed attempt to arrest Phra Dhammachayo, the septuagenarian monk who founded the breakaway Buddhist order in 1970, after police said they were unable to find him but would resume their search the following day.
Police issued a warrant for his arrest last year on charges of money laundering and accepting embezzled funds worth 1.2 billion baht (USD 33 million) from the jailed owner of a cooperative bank.
Previous attempts to raid the temple have been thwarted after thousands of devotees showed up to defend the elderly abbot.
Desperate to avoid clashes with monks and other disciples, the Thai junta endorsed a sudden order today that gave authorities special powers to block ff the area.
After hours of negotiation with monks, some officers managed to enter one gate and cut the lock off on another -- a breakthrough compared to previous stand-offs.
But after scouring "15-20 per cent" of the sprawling compound investigators retreated empty handed.
"We still have to keep searching in our all targeted areas, only then can can we say whether he is in there or not," Woranun Srilam, deputy spokesman of Thailand's equivalent of the FBI, told reporters.
"I don't know his whereabouts -- I haven't seen him in about nine months," said Phra Sanitwong Wutthiwangso.
Temple staff have previously said the ex-abbot is innocent but too ill to be questioned by police.
Historically, Thailand's secular authorities have been reluctant to intervene in the affairs of the clergy in the Buddhist-majority country.
But hostility towards the Dhammakaya sect has mounted in recent years, with critics from the mainstream Buddhist establishment accusing the temple of promoting a pay-your-way to nirvana philosophy.
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