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Australian woman caught with 1.5kg of ice at Malaysian airport

poledriver

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Australian woman caught with 1.5kg of ice at Malaysian airport

766574-bc32cf3e-8254-11e4-a702-553dc58650c9.jpg

Ice ... The woman was reportedly caught with 1.5kg of methylamphetamine, like the stash pictured here from a separate Queensland Police operation earlier this year. Source: Supplied

AN Australian woman has allegedly been caught with 1.5kg of ice in Malaysia.

The Seven Network reports the mother-of-four was on a flight from Shanghai to Melbourne when she was caught with the methamphetamine on a stopover in Kuala Lumpur.

The woman, aged 51, will reportedly face court on Sunday.

She could face the death penalty if found guilty.

More to come.

http://www.news.com.au/travel/trave...-airport-reports/story-e6frfq80-1227154768497
 
I'm guessing that Australians and Australian news stations are a bit more liberal when it comes to drugs. So they wouldn't want to perpetuate images of victims (I'd say drug mules are victims).
 
I had never noticed it.
But haven´t really read much about Australia then the usual.
New Zealand seems to be more interesting imo.
 
Sydney woman faces death penalty in Malaysia for drug charges



A 51 year-old Sydney mother of four faces the death penalty after allegedly carrying methamphetamine while in transit through Kuala Lumpur's international airport.

The woman was travelling from Shanghai to Melbourne on December 7 when she was searched by police and allegedly found to be carrying 1.5 kilograms of the drug known as "ice".

Under Malaysia's decades-long campaign against drugs, the woman faces death by hanging if found guilty of carrying more than 50 grams of methamphetamine.

Malaysian authorities have not released any details of the woman's arrest by customs officials at the airport.

Authorities in Malaysia can hold a person for up to 14 days without charge.

The Australian high commission in Kuala Lumpur is providing consular assistance to the woman, who is believed not yet to have engaged a lawyer.

Western Australian truck driver Dominic Bird, 34, escaped the hangman's noose in Malaysia in July after a more than two-year legal battle following his arrest on drugs charges at a cafe near his Kuala Lumpur apartment in March 2012.

Malaysia's High Court ruled it would not appeal Mr Bird's earlier acquittal.

The prosecution's case against him fell apart amid allegations of police corruption, prompting calls for a moratorium on the death penalty in Malaysia.

The Sydney woman's arrest comes a week after two Australians were held in China on suspicion of smuggling a commercial quantity of the same drug in China.

Kalynda Davis, 22, has since returned home.

Her travelling companion, Peter Gardner, 25, was born in New Zealand but has lived in Sydney for many years and has dual nationality. He went to Richmond High School in Sydney's north-west, and worked for a local building company.

New Zealand's consul-general has visited Mr Gardner in a detention centre in Guangzhou and said he was being supported by his family and legal representatives.

It is not yet clear why Ms Davis was released while authorities continue to hold Mr Gardner.

More than 440 people have been hanged in Malaysia since 1960.

Two Australians, Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers, were the first Westerners to be executed under the country's then new anti-drugs laws in 1986 after being arrested on the island of Penang with 141.9 grams of heroin.

Michael McAuliffe, another Australian, was hanged in Kuala Lumpur in 1993 after being found with heroin in his back pocket at a Penang airport security check-point.

http://www.smh.com.au/world/sydney-...alaysia-for-drug-charges-20141213-126m4x.html
 
It was a set-up, claims Sydney woman Maria Elvira Pinto, arrested at KL airport

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A Sydney mother of four facing the death penalty in Malaysia claims she is innocent and was innocently carrying a bag that allegedly contained methamphetamines.

Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto, 51, of Liverpool, told lawyers she was asked to carry a soft-bag containing documents from Shanghai for a US army soldier in Afghanistan.

Her Malaysian lawyer, Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, says Mrs Pinto appears to have a strong chance of proving her innocence and that she was "used by unscrupulous people".

Mrs Pinto was remanded in custody at a Kuala Lumpur court on Sunday pending a further court appearance on December 19.

The court was closed to the public.

Mr Shafee told journalists outside the court that Mrs Pinto told him it was her understanding the US soldier wanted the documents taken to Melbourne so he could arrange his retirement.

She said she was told that someone would be waiting at Melbourne airport to receive the bag.

Airport Customs director Chik Omar Chik Lim earlier said Mrs Pinto arrived at Kuala Lumpur airport around 5pm on December 7 from Shanghai and was to have taken a connecting flight to Melbourne.

"While passing through the scanner at the arrival hall we found syabu [methamphetamines] wrapped in plastic and stashed inside a secret compartment in her travel bag," he said.

"She was later handed to police for questioning."

The amount of the drug allegedly seized is worth the equivalent of $93,000 in Malaysia.

Under Malaysia's decades-long campaign against drugs the death sentence by hanging is mandatory if the accused is found guilty of carrying more than 50 grams of methamphetamines.

More than 440 people have been hanged in Malaysia since 1960.

Two Australians, Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers, were the first Westerners to be executed under the country's then new drug-laws in 1986 after being arrested on the island of Penang with 141.9 grams of heroin.

Michael McAuliffe, another Australian, was hanged in Kuala Lumpur in 1993 after being found with heroin in his back pocket at a Penang airport security checkpoint.

West Australian truck driver Dominic Bird, 34, escaped the hangman's noose in Malaysia in July after a more than two-year legal battle after his arrest at a cafe near his Kuala Lumpur apartment in March 2012.

In July, Malaysia's High Court ruled Mr Bird could go free after rejecting an appeal by prosecutors of his earlier acquittal.

The prosecution's case against him fell apart amid allegations of police corruption, prompting calls for a moratorium on the death penalty in Malaysia.

The Sydney woman's arrest comes a week after two Australians were held in China on suspicion of smuggling a commercial quantity of the same drug in China.

Kalynda Davis, 22, has since returned home.

Her travelling companion, Peter Gardner, 25, is a dual citizen born in New Zealand who has lived in Sydney for many years. He went to Richmond High School in Sydney's north-west, and worked for a local building company.

New Zealand's consul-general has visited Mr Gardner in a detention centre in Guangzhou and said he was being supported by his family and legal representatives.

It is not yet clear why Ms Davis was released while authorities continued to hold Mr Gardner.

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/it-was-a-...o-arrested-at-kl-airport-20141214-126un8.html
 
Alleged Sydney drug mule Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto due to face court in Kuala Lumpur

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A SYDNEY woman facing the death penalty in a Malaysian drugs case does not yet realise how grave her situation is, her lawyer says.

Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto, 51, from Liverpool, will appear in court in Kuala Lumpur on Friday where she will likely face charges of carrying 1.5kg of crystal meth into Malaysia, which carries a mandatory death sentence.

EARLIER: Aussie granny faces death penalty

Her lawyers say the suburban mum is a “naive and innocent mule” who has been duped.

Lawyer Tania Scivetti says her client thought she was carrying documents from Shanghai to Melbourne for her boyfriend, a US soldier about to retire from service in Afghanistan.

“When the drugs were found in the bag, she was very surprised,” Ms Scivetti told AAP.

“She’d never seen drugs in her life.”

The mother of four is physically well and has access to her medication for diabetes, the lawyer says, but she doesn’t realise the gravity of her situation.

“She asked me how long is this going to take and I said quite some time, and she was really down,” she said.

“I don’t think it’s really hit her yet, what’s going on.

“As the facts stand it’s a tough, but not impossible, case.”

Airport customs authorities say they found the ice, worth more than $100,000, in a secret compartment stitched into the backpack. Mrs Exposto was only supposed to transit in Kuala Lumpur but mistakenly followed the passengers who got off her flight from Shanghai and had to go back through customs and immigration again.

There, she volunteered her bag for scanning, customs says.

Earlier this year, the same legal team successfully defended Perth truck driver Dominic Bird, who was acquitted of charges of selling 167g of ice to an undercover police officer in Kuala Lumpur in 2012.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...-in-kuala-lumpur/story-fni0xs63-1227160781901
 
Alleged Sydney drug mule Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto could have been swept up in online romance scam

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AN Australian grandmother facing a death sentence on drug trafficking charges in Malaysia could have been caught up in an online romance scam.
Sydney woman Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto was charged with drug trafficking which brings a mandatory penalty of death by hanging.
Lawyers for the 52-year-old have said she has a “more than 50 per cent” chance of escaping death because she “had no knowledge of the drugs”.
The mother-of-four is claiming to be an innocent victim and not a drug courier after being caught with 1.5kg of crystal meth in Kuala Lumpur airport.

AN Australian grandmother facing a death sentence on drug trafficking charges in Malaysia could have been caught up in an online romance scam.
Sydney woman Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto was charged with drug trafficking which brings a mandatory penalty of death by hanging.
Lawyers for the 52-year-old have said she has a “more than 50 per cent” chance of escaping death because she “had no knowledge of the drugs”.
The mother-of-four is claiming to be an innocent victim and not a drug courier after being caught with 1.5kg of crystal meth in Kuala Lumpur airport.

183845-15ad318e-8959-11e4-a68f-3946861404f8.jpg


Exposto, who falls just outside the most likely group of people to be targeted by military romance scams, women aged 35 — 50, is currently being held in Kuala Lumpur as her case is escalated to a higher court, expected to be heard early next year.
Her lawyers are claiming she was duped into carrying the bag containing the drug ice and told attorneys: “I am innocent, I didn’t know that there were drugs in the bag.”
“She didn’t have to put it through the scanner. If you have been through KLIA (Kuala Lumpur International Airport), not everybody is asked to put their bag (forward). Normally customs will select at random or on suspicion,” Her Malaysian lawyer Shafee Abdullah told reporters.

“She wasn’t even asked.
“If she was a person conscious of the contents, she would ... probably put the bag that was without the drugs.” Mrs Exposto was extremely concerned about the charges she faced. “Her remark to me was, ‘but I’m innocent’,” he said.
“Very clearly, she said ‘I’m innocent’, and she exhibited a very good demeanour of a responsible mother.
“And she told me one thing, she said, `I cannot be involved in this because I’ve told my children’. Even when they were growing up, if they ever got involved in drugs, she would personally kill them. She said that.”

Anyone with at least 50 grams of “ice” is considered a trafficker in Malaysia, and subject to the death penalty.

http://www.news.com.au/world/asia/a...ine-romance-scam/story-fnh81fz8-1227164184993
 
Carrying a bag for someone else is very, very ignorant.
Just ridiculous.

But I would NOT say that she deserves her punishment.
As the Ho-Chih-Minh said earlier, I see her as a victim.
The real problem is that we are punishing people for VICTIMLESS "crime".
Nobody should be punished for drugs.
 
Does this woman sound like a drug trafficker? Australian grandmother caught with drugs in Malaysia after she VOLUNTEERED her bags for scanning claims she was duped by an online romance scam... and now she faces the death penalty

An Australian woman faces a possible death sentence for drug trafficking in Malaysia after a prosecutor said Thursday a chemist's report confirmed the substance found in her bag was crystal methamphetamine.
Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto, a 52-year-old grandmother of two, was arrested on December 7 at Kuala Lumpur airport with 1.1 kilograms (2.4 pounds) of the drug, also known as ice, court documents showed.
Malaysia has a mandatory death penalty by hanging for anyone found guilty of carrying more than 50 grams of a drug.
Defence lawyers said she travelled to Shanghai after falling for an online romance scam by a person claiming to be a U.S. serviceman.

article-doc-215aa-6YAkdKAOK-HSK1-260_634x427.jpg


n court on Thursday, prosecutor Hasifulkhair Jamaluddin told the magistrate's court that Exposto had been trafficking methamphetamine based on a chemist's report.
Magistrate Noor Hafizah Salim then ordered the case to be transferred to the high court.
Authorities previously said Exposto was trafficking 1.5 kilograms of methamphetamine.

Exposto, who was wearing a white blouse and black pants, looked nervous when the amended charge was read to her.
No date has been set for the high court hearing but defence lawyers said the trial could begin later this year.
'We are confident that we can show her innocence at the trial,' Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, her counsel, told AFP.

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Cont -

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ces-death-penalty-Malaysia-confirms-drug.html
 
Aussie grandmother who could be hung for drug trafficking 'victim of love scam'

An Australian grandmother who faces a possible death sentence in Malaysia for drug trafficking testified today that she was a victim of an online love scam.

Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto, 54, was arrested on December 7, 2014 at Kuala Lumpur airport with 1.5 kilograms of methamphetamine.

Customs officers discovered the drugs stitched into the compartment of a backpack she was carrying.

Malaysia has a mandatory death penalty, carried out by hanging, for anyone found guilty of carrying more than 50 grams (1.75 ounces) of an illegal drug.

Ms Exposto told the High Court she fell for the online romance scam masterminded by a certain "Captain Daniel Smith", who had identified himself as a US soldier based in Afghanistan.

Defence lawyers said that she was lured into carrying a bag -- which she believed contained only clothing -- by "Smith" who asked her to take it to Melbourne from Shanghai.

She was in transit at Kuala Lumpur airport when she was arrested.

"He (Smith) made me feel loved, he made me feel wanted," Exposto told the court, adding that the alleged US serviceman would send her photos of himself.

"Smith would sing to me a few times a day and send love poems as well," she added.

http%3A%2F%2Fprod.static9.net.au%2F_%2Fmedia%2F2017%2F09%2F06%2F12%2F36%2Fwoman2.jpg


Exposto said Smith had also asked to marry her in September 2013 at a time when her relationship with her husband was getting "a bit sour".

Defence lawyer Muhammad Shafee Abdullah told reporters that Exposto's testimony suggests her close online relationship with Smith.

"There are probably thousands, mostly women, who have been conned into similar situations. Captain Daniel Smith is one of the many scammers," he said.

The trial will continue until Friday.

Two Australians were hanged in Malaysia in 1986 for heroin trafficking -- the first Westerners to be executed in the country.

http://www.9news.com.au/national/20...g-trafficking-in-malaysia-victim-of-love-scam
 
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