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Schapelle Corby is Innocent.
We're not going to Bali anymore
This page concers a certain young woman called Schapelle Corby. From the Gold Coast in Australia.
Schapelle and her family decided to take a short family vacation on the Paradise? island of Bali ... Schapelle had been there lots of times before ... Apparantly the surf is brilliant ... She put her boogie board with her luggage.
Criminals transfer drugs through Australian Airports with the aid of baggage handlers who work in Airports there. A 4+ kilo load went missing and the addicts in jail were going crazy.
(Click Photo for details)
Schapell arrived on a Quantas flight. She was arrested. They found the stash that was intended for the addicts in jail. Schapelle went before the courts convinced that the overwhelming body of evidence would prove her innocence.
The Family and Friends of Schapelle Corby appeal for calm
(click Photo for details)
Schapelle Corby was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment Bali's Kerobokan jail .
 Her appeal may overturn that earlier decision but she may die at the hands of the Indonesian judicial system. The death penalty is still practised in Indonesia
Schapelle currently languishes in a 10 X 10 ft. cell shared with 8 other women on the Island of Bali in Indonesia
Letters of support and gifts can be sent to Schapelle at
(Gift idea's . Toiletrys, Soap, toothpaste, Sanitary Towels, etc)
Schapelle Corby C/- LPM Kerobokan Jl.
Tangkuban Perahu Kerobokan,
Denpasar 80117 Bali, INDONESIA

Schapelle Corby is a 27 year old woman from Queensland, Australia, who was travelling to Bali.
Drug traffickers smuggle drugs out of Indonesia, not into Indonesia. The 4.1kg of cannabis found in Schapelle's bag could have been bought for less than $100 in Bali, but is worth much more in Australia. Therefore, there is no financial motive for Schapelle to smuggle such drugs into Bali.
No evidence or witnesses have been presented who can connect Schapelle with the drug trade.
Australian Federal Police drugs specialists were denied the right to test the drugs to determine their real origin. Such tests could have allowed Australian authorities to find the real villains.
The trial has no jury.
On May 27, 2005, Schapelle was convicted and sentenced to 20 years sharing a 3 meter x 3 meter prison cell with 8 other women.
If her appeal fails (the Indonesian authorities have also launched an appeal, pushing for a tougher sentence), she could be sentenced to a more severe penalty, including `execution by firing squad'.
The airlines and airports have failed to identify any staff members who may have been involved in handling Schapelle's baggage.
There have been numerous incidents where baggage handlers have tampered with bags. They have been accused of using baggage to transport drugs between Australian capital cities. When the alleged criminals at the receiving airport fail to find the bag where the drugs are hidden, it continues onto another connecting flight, putting the bag's owner at great risk. Bags containing drugs are often marked with chalk so that they will be easily spotted by the intended recipient.
Many countries in the far east impose the death penalty on anyone found in possession of commercial quantities of drugs.
Indonesia is the world's largest Muslim country and is Australia's closest neighbour. Bali is a resort
island where Australians and Europeans often go for holidays.


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