Cruise ship cocaine bust: Tourist facing life in Australian jail

poledriver

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Cruise ship cocaine bust: Tourist facing life in Australian jail

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A 29-YEAR-OLD tourist who has confessed to importing 23kg of cocaine into Australia on a cruise ship was doing “an easy job for easy money”, a court has heard.
The French-Canadian woman, whose name was suppressed by order of the Sydney District Court on Friday, wept during a sentencing hearing, saying: “I fear for my life”.
She says she was working in a bar in Canada and got into debt after borrowing $20,000 “to start a new life”.

When the debt was called in, she was told she could take a suitcase, which was full of drugs, through Customs in Sydney because a woman of her age was unlikely to be stopped and searched.
She told the court that the night before the ship docked in Sydney, a man had taken the key to her cabin and put something in her empty suitcase.

Wearing a black pants suit and a white collared shirt with her long dark hair drawn back into a ponytail, the woman held up a hand briefly to greet family members as she entered the courtroom for her sentencing hearing.
The woman, for whom French is her first language, had pleaded guilty in December to the importation of a commercial quantity of a border-controlled drug.

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Crown prosecutor Slade Howell asked the woman: “You were told your role would be easy and you shouldn’t worry?” to which she replied “Yes”.
Mr Howell read from a character reference written by the woman’s sister who said “at the bottom line she was convinced of an easy job with easy money and I know she regrets every step of that journey”.
But the woman denied her sister had been talking about smuggling drugs into Australia. Instead, she told the court the words had been referring to her former job working at the Resto-bar in Canada.

The woman was arrested with two others accused of importing cocaine in August last year after police boarded the cruise ship in Sydney and discovered the cocaine in suitcases.
The woman agreed that she had flown from Canada to Dover in England to board the ship and that she had neither paid for the flight nor the cruise.
She met six men and one woman on board and had shared a cabin with the woman for a six-week cruise “halfway around the world” to Australia.

The woman said she had committed the crime because “I kind of knew they would threaten me and my family. I had no choice”.
“They came and told me I had to do this. I had to take the trip and I had to bring a bag.”
She had decided not to name the people who had put her up to it “because I am mostly fearful . I fear for my life”.

The cruise ended when officers boarding the ship and allegedly discovered the drugs in plastic bags in suitcases.
The woman denied she touched or looked into the bag after it was filled with drugs the night before docking in Sydney.
In a suitcase in the woman’s cabin they found a “pure amount of 23.864kg” of cocaine.

Asked by her defence lawyer Tony Kimmins what she would get in exchange for carrying the bag of cocaine through Customs, she said her debt “would be erased”.
The woman faces a maximum penalty of life in jail.
Judge Kate Traill said she would reserve her decision and that the name of the woman and her co-accused would be suppressed for several months.

http://www.news.com.au/travel/trave...l/news-story/929dc904ce25c5a492a8b3b7a31ba24d
 
I highly doubt she will get 'life' in an Australian jail. Maybe 20 years, or less.
 
Isn't life in Australia more like life in the UK when it comes to prison terms? Life meaning 25 years (as opposed to the crazy long "life" sentences that are our bread and butter in the US)?
 
Yes it seems so, that's what wiki says. But when they say -
The woman faces a maximum penalty of life in jail.

I highly doubt she will be given a life sentence (of 25 years). I think it depends on many factors, judge, evidence, priors, probably many other factors, but I am guessing she will get less than 20 years, possibly much less.

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Life imprisonment in Australia is handed down for serious offences including treason, murder, and commercial drug trafficking by the State and Territory Supreme Courts in Australia.

Life imprisonment is mandatory for murder in South Australia, the Northern Territory and Queensland. Life imprisonment is also a mandatory punishment in Queensland for aircraft hijacking and in New South Wales for the murder of a police officer or other public official.

In New South Wales, the average prison term for murder is 25 years, despite the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) stating the maximum sentence to be for the remainder of the offender's 'natural life'. Five people have now received natural life (life without parole) sentences for murder in 2009, 2010, 2013, when a police officer was shot dead, and in 2016 for the murder of Stephanie Scott.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_imprisonment_in_Australia
 
It's ironic that the faces of these two women were blurred out and their names withheld given that their pictures (and names) were all over all over instagram and other websites right after the bust went down. From the looks of their instagram pics, it looked like they were having a pretty good time and weren't worried in the least about any consequences. While it probably doesn't make the least bit of difference legally, they are far from sympathetic defendants.
 
i dunno, i feel sorry for drug mules, especially those that are forced to do stupid shit oike this to pay off drug debts.
i dont know anything about the pictures that have been on social media or whatever, but to me it just seems typical of the sorts of nasty people that tend to be involved in trafficking cocaine. it's about as exploitative as you can get, to have someone else risk their life to do your dirty work for you - and time and time again it seems to be people that are in serious debt to dodgy people that get caught doing stuff like this.

i mean, i don't hold 'having a good time' against people that are accused of criminal activities. it doesn't necessarily mean you're not worried about legal ramifications of carrying drugs across borders.
if i were to engage in international drug running, i'd probably make it look like i was having a fun holiday to my friends, family and social media contacts as well.

the case reminds me of the Australian girl that is awaiting trial for similar alleged offences, but she was really unfortunate to get busted in Columbia, and has to contend with the horrible conditions in their prisons.

personally i feel sorry for all drug mules. they're just pawns in a really fucked-up game.
 
Thats crazy that she tried to sneak in that much for such a small amount of cash

Especially when you consider the insane price of cocaine in Australia. It was almost certainly destined to be cut down to 30% or so and sold for $400/gram. If you have 24kg of pure to start out with, well, Just do the math...
 
^ Yeah, check this out, probably not too uncommon in Aus -

Man Advertises Cocaine for Sale

By his own admission, Jamie MacDowell made a “stupid” decision recently.

The Scottish tourist posted an online ad in a local Gold Coast classified which read:

“Got some good coke in Surfers. $300 a g.”

Just hours later, who else but an undercover police officer sent him the following text message:

“Hey, looking for Cola on the GC.”

The pair arranged to meet at Cash Converters on the southern end of the Coast to complete the deal.

Unbeknownst to the officer, MacDowell’s “coke” was actually granulated ibuprofen.

Police nevertheless arrested and charged MacDowall with supplying a prohibited drug.

He pleaded guilty in Southport District Court, where Judge Katherine McGinness was taken aback by the foolishness of the man before her.

“How you did not think you would be caught is unbelievable,” Her Honour remarked.

“Didn’t you make a stupid decision?”, she asked. “Yes, very stupid”, MacDowell replied.

The hapless dealer’s criminal defence barrister explained that his client was “desperate for money to pay for rent and food” as he was “between jobs”, which is why he concocted the doomed plan.

Even though the substance was not an illegal drug, the fact MacDowell represented it as so meant he was still guilty of drug supply under Queensland law.

He was ultimately slapped with an $800 fine but escaped a criminal conviction.

He is expected to return to Scotland in the near future.

Selling fake drugs in NSW

In NSW, a person who misrepresents a substance as a prohibited drug, poison, plant or psychoactive substance is similarly guilty of supplying that substance.

In that regard, section 40(1) of the Drug Misuse and Trafficking Act 1985 (NSW) provides that:

“A substance (not being a prohibited drug) which, for the purpose of its being supplied, is represented (whether verbally, in writing or by conduct) as being a prohibited drug… shall… be deemed to be a prohibited drug…”

Subsections (1A), 2 and 3 apply to poisons, prohibited plants and psychoactive substances respectively.

A fine but no conviction?

Courts in Queensland are permitted to impose fines for criminal offences without also having to record convictions.

The situation in NSW is different. Here, any person who is given a fine for a criminal offence will also have a conviction recorded against their name.

The only way for a guilty person to escape a conviction in NSW is to receive a ‘section 10’ – which means guilty but no conviction recorded.

A section 10 can come with a good behaviour bond of up to two years, but cannot be accompanied by a fine.

Don’t post online!

Mr MacDowall’s case is certainly not the first time the internet has been instrumental in helping police detect drug offenders.

Also on the Gold Coast, a man who posed for a sexy bathroom selfie with a stash of marijuana and posted it online in 2015 found himself quickly arrested for possessing a prohibited drug.

And a Lismore man who recently took a video of his $700k marijuana crop and posted it on Facebook, also found police on his doorstep executing a search warrant and placing him under arrest.

https://sydneydruglawyers.com.au/blog/man-advertises-cocaine-for-sale/
 
Do they search every cruise ship or did they get a tip off about this lady?

Also, 6 week cruise around the world sounds nice. I wonder how much something like that costs?
 
I want to feel sorry for them or at least the sister you supposedly didn't know anything but if your that stupid you probably shouldn't be walking the streets. If what she is saying is true she is willing to put her sisters freedom at risk for doing job where she should get paid way more than paying off a $20,000 debt. Realistically even if she had horrible credit I'm sure she could at least get multiple loans to pay most of the $20,000 off. She is also a bartender, the picture is blurred but she looks like an attractive one. I was a bartender in college and made great money, I would of had that loan paid off fast. This is just a dumbass chick
 
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