Spurred by Thai junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha's calls to end the grim trade within 10 days, police have launched an operation against smugglers in Songkhla, a province neighbouring Malaysia criss-crossed by trafficking trails.
Observers say the belated move against gangs long known to have operated with the help of corrupt officials has put smugglers on the backfoot.
As a result scores of desperate Bangladeshi and Myanmar Rohingyas have been abandoned as their gangmasters go underground.
Of the migrants discovered 74 were Rohingyas from Myanmar and 58 were Bangladeshis while the background of 67 more was yet to be determined, he added.
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Authorities have been at pains to show Thailand is serious about tackling people-smuggling after years of accusations that they turn a blind eye to - and are even complicit in - the trade.
Four secret jungle camps have now been found in Songkhla since last weekend, alongside 33 bodies in various states of decay, Puthichart said, with many pulled from shallow graves.
Many die at sea. But of those that make it, large numbers end up in remote camps across southern Thailand where investigators believe traffickers demand up to USD 3,000 from relatives and friends for their release.
Others are sold on to Malaysia, according to activists working to expose the trade.
The exodus of Rohingya - described by the UN as one of the world's most persecuted minorities - has followed deadly communal unrest which broke out in western Myanmar's Rakhine state in 2012.
Last year the US relegated the kingdom to the bottom of its list of countries failing to tackle modern-day slavery.
The next State Department report on human trafficking is expected imminently and Thailand has lobbied Washington against its inclusion in the lowest tier.
National police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri told AFP 36 arrest warrants have been issued during the latest crackdown.