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It seems pretty obvious doesn't it that if you are found with drugs in your case when you enter a country they were yours ?
Unfortunately there are some very, very clever drug smugglers who have successfully conned people into unwittingly bringing drugs into the country. In the cases that have surfaced the "marks" were found to clearly not at fault in any way.
There is also a case coming up in America where a couple of drug smugglers manged to get copies of car keys from Ford and stashed bags of dope in students cars. It's very clever and far safer for the smugglers.
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By the way I do not think in a month of Sundays that Schapelle Corboy was set up.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/26/free-vacation-drug-mule_n_4166263.html
http://www.vancouverdesi.com/news/n...-s-border-may-be-unwitting-drug-mules/397289/
http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/news/ci_23751049/college-student-who-was-unwitting-drug-mule-sues
I never knew this (from 2008)...
The defence was a costly sham for Australia
THE real tragedy of the Schapelle Corby saga is that misguided people have risked Australia's good relations with Indonesia by pushing claims about a conspiracy involving baggage handlers - claims they knew were false. We now know there was never any substance to stories of an inside job involving baggage handlers, because Corby's dumped Australian lawyer, Robin Tampoe, has admitted he made it up. Australian authorities wasted a lot of time co-operating with this charade, including sending a convicted criminal from prison in Australia to Bali to give evidence.
Confirmation that the baggage handler defence was a lie does not establish who, if anyone, in the Corby family knew about the marijuana before it was found. But it does establish with certainty that the Corby family is prepared to play with the truth in a bid to mislead authorities and garner sympathy from the public. Indonesian customs staff had every reason to believe someone was up to no good when they intercepted the package of drugs Ms Corby admitted were concealed in luggage that belonged to her. After making that admission, Ms Corby appears to have badly miscalculated by publicly questioning the competence of her accusers and the host country. She wasted her efforts trying to win support in the court of public opinion at home rather than with the legal system in Bali, where it really mattered.
Indonesian judges were obviously correct to reject the baggage handler fantasy, unlike the many Australian tourists who, for a period, refused to travel without encasing their luggage in plastic film. Indonesian authorities have every reason to be displeased at the way their judiciary was portrayed as incapable of doing its job.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/archive/news/corby-truth-is-out/story-e6frg72o-1111116714603