Australian gets 20 years for smuggling drugs into Indonesia
Posted: Fri May 27, 2005 4:46 am
Australian gets 20 years for smuggling drugs into Indonesia
Friday, May 27, 2005 - Associated Press
Jakarta — An Indonesian court on Friday convicted an Australian beauty school student of smuggling rx on Bali island and sentenced her to 20 years in prison, drawing cries of outrage from relatives at a trial that attracted massive attention in Australia.
Schapelle Corby, 27, who insists she is innocent and that the drugs were planted in her luggage, wept as the verdict was announced and mouthed “Just relax” to her parents. Her mother Rosleigh Rose yelled out “liar, liar” while other relatives yelled “We are going to get you home. We love you.”
“Judges are of the opinion that the accused imported rx,” Judge Wayan Suastrawan said. “She was arrested red-handed at the airport.”
After judges issued the sentence, Ms. Corby was allowed to hug her weeping parents before being led away by police to jail. Outside the courtroom, Ms. Corby's sister Mercedes said the family would appeal the verdict.
“This is not fair,” she yelled. “We will get Schapelle home.”
The court was packed with dozens of Australian journalists, Corby supporters and her relatives, including her mother and father.
Ms. Corby was convicted of smuggling 4.1 kilograms of rx into Bali's airport last year in her surfboard bag. Ms. Corby could have faced a maximum penalty of death, and prosecutors had requested a life sentence.
Ms. Corby's lawyers allege that the drugs were planted by airport baggage handlers in Australia as part of a drug smuggling operation and that they ended up in Bali by mistake.
Ahead of the court hearing, her lawyer said Ms. Corby was “terrified.”
“She's probably the worst I've ever seen her,” Ms. Corby's lawyer Robin Tampoe told Australian television's Nine Network.
“She tries to put on a brave face but there was a lot of crying, she's pretty well terrified about the worst case scenario, what might happen today, so it's very hard to console her in that sort of situation.”
Ms. Corby's plight attracted massive media attention in Australia, where opinion polls show that many people are convinced she is innocent.
The guilty verdict and lengthy sentence were likely to trigger anger in Australia and could complicate relations between the two Asian neighbours.
Ms. Corby's parents as well as several Australian tourists visited the jail Thursday to show their support and joined her on Friday to hear the verdict.
“She doesn't seem like the kind of person who would do something like that. Why would anyone risk their life for $4,000 or $5,000?” said Ron Reilly, a tourist from the Australian town of Freemantle standing outside the courtroom. “I am convinced she is innocent. The more friendly faces she sees today will give her a boost.”
The Australian government asked prosecutors not to hand down the death sentence and said it wants to negotiate a deal with Jakarta to allow her to serve any prison sentence back home.
Jakarta says it does not want to sign an agreement that would apply only for Ms. Corby because that would set a precedent that it fears other countries might take advantage of.
Ms. Corby draws little sympathy in Indonesia, where the government is under pressure to crack down on illegal drug use. She is one of dozens of foreigners jailed in the country each year on drug charges.
Friday, May 27, 2005 - Associated Press
Jakarta — An Indonesian court on Friday convicted an Australian beauty school student of smuggling rx on Bali island and sentenced her to 20 years in prison, drawing cries of outrage from relatives at a trial that attracted massive attention in Australia.
Schapelle Corby, 27, who insists she is innocent and that the drugs were planted in her luggage, wept as the verdict was announced and mouthed “Just relax” to her parents. Her mother Rosleigh Rose yelled out “liar, liar” while other relatives yelled “We are going to get you home. We love you.”
“Judges are of the opinion that the accused imported rx,” Judge Wayan Suastrawan said. “She was arrested red-handed at the airport.”
After judges issued the sentence, Ms. Corby was allowed to hug her weeping parents before being led away by police to jail. Outside the courtroom, Ms. Corby's sister Mercedes said the family would appeal the verdict.
“This is not fair,” she yelled. “We will get Schapelle home.”
The court was packed with dozens of Australian journalists, Corby supporters and her relatives, including her mother and father.
Ms. Corby was convicted of smuggling 4.1 kilograms of rx into Bali's airport last year in her surfboard bag. Ms. Corby could have faced a maximum penalty of death, and prosecutors had requested a life sentence.
Ms. Corby's lawyers allege that the drugs were planted by airport baggage handlers in Australia as part of a drug smuggling operation and that they ended up in Bali by mistake.
Ahead of the court hearing, her lawyer said Ms. Corby was “terrified.”
“She's probably the worst I've ever seen her,” Ms. Corby's lawyer Robin Tampoe told Australian television's Nine Network.
“She tries to put on a brave face but there was a lot of crying, she's pretty well terrified about the worst case scenario, what might happen today, so it's very hard to console her in that sort of situation.”
Ms. Corby's plight attracted massive media attention in Australia, where opinion polls show that many people are convinced she is innocent.
The guilty verdict and lengthy sentence were likely to trigger anger in Australia and could complicate relations between the two Asian neighbours.
Ms. Corby's parents as well as several Australian tourists visited the jail Thursday to show their support and joined her on Friday to hear the verdict.
“She doesn't seem like the kind of person who would do something like that. Why would anyone risk their life for $4,000 or $5,000?” said Ron Reilly, a tourist from the Australian town of Freemantle standing outside the courtroom. “I am convinced she is innocent. The more friendly faces she sees today will give her a boost.”
The Australian government asked prosecutors not to hand down the death sentence and said it wants to negotiate a deal with Jakarta to allow her to serve any prison sentence back home.
Jakarta says it does not want to sign an agreement that would apply only for Ms. Corby because that would set a precedent that it fears other countries might take advantage of.
Ms. Corby draws little sympathy in Indonesia, where the government is under pressure to crack down on illegal drug use. She is one of dozens of foreigners jailed in the country each year on drug charges.