CanOz
Home runs feel good, but base hits pay bills!
- Joined
- 11 July 2006
- Posts
- 11,543
- Reactions
- 519
Well i'd have to ground her and probably dock her pocket money for a couple of weeks at least!!CanOz said:Just listen to you lot! What if that was your daughter, would you at least want to ensure she got a fair trial?
If she's guilty then fine, but can you be sure? What credibility does an Indonesian court have?
Innocent until proven guilty by a credible court i say!
I wouldnt teach my daughter to sell drugsCanOz said:Just listen to you lot! What if that was your daughter, would you at least want to ensure she got a fair trial?
If she's guilty then fine, but can you be sure? What credibility does an Indonesian court have?
Innocent until proven guilty by a credible court i say!
I think its more like Guilty till proven innocentInnocent until proven guilty by a credible court i say!
CanOz said:Just listen to you lot! What if that was your daughter, would you at least want to ensure she got a fair trial?
If she's guilty then fine, but can you be sure? What credibility does an Indonesian court have?
Innocent until proven guilty by a credible court i say!
insider said:She repeatedly banged the top of head with the palm of her hand... this means she made choices and decisions that she now regrets... selling drugs was her decision... If she was innocent she would've most likely put her hands on her cheeks in disbelief...
nomore4s said:Plenty of credibility in Indonesia I would imagine.
If the situation had been reversed and she was caught coming into Aust in the same circumstances I'm pretty sure she would have been convicted. She was caught red handed and admitted the bag was hers before it was searched, wouldn't think that too many people would get off in Aust in those circumstances no matter what excuse you came up with unless you were able to prove it, which she was unable to do.
robert toms said:Why do you cast doubts on the reliability of the Indonesian justice system....saya tidak mengerti !
OK. The smiling assasin was innocent.CanOz said:Just listen to you lot! What if that was your daughter, would you at least want to ensure she got a fair trial?
If she's guilty then fine, but can you be sure? What credibility does an Indonesian court have?
Innocent until proven guilty by a credible court i say!
My daughter wouldn't be stupid enough to smuggle drugs in the first place.CanOz said:Just listen to you lot! What if that was your daughter, would you at least want to ensure she got a fair trial?
If she's guilty then fine, but can you be sure? What credibility does an Indonesian court have?
Innocent until proven guilty by a credible court i say!
If they were that involved in drugs and they were that big, then where were they putting all the money?Knobby22 said:Read the facts! They are freely available.
Her brother was in drugs, her sister was in drugs, her Dad was in drugs.
The drugs were specially packed to look like a boogie board which would have taken hours.
The drugs most probably came from Queensland. Australia offered to test the drugs to find out their point of origin but her sister refused. .
Last week, 06Feb07, SMH had:- http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Ru...-Nine-challenge/2007/02/06/1170524085650.htmlScott Anthony Rush (born December 3, 1985 [1]) is a former Australian labourer from Chelmer, Queensland, a western suburb of Brisbane, arrested on April 17, 2005 at Ngurah Rai Airport in Bali, Indonesia with heroin weighing 1.3 kg taped to his legs under his clothing. It was Rush's first trip to Bali. Rush was 19 at the time of his arrest. He is currently studying the Indonesian language.
On February 13, 2006, Rush, who appeared in court for sentencing wearing a wooden crucifix around his neck, was sentenced to life imprisonment[2] Rush appealed this sentence, and on September 6, 2006, his sentence was upgraded to the death penalty.
PS - Never appeal your sentence in Indonesia - seems to make the judge angry.Rush seeks to join Bali Nine challenge
February 6, 2007 - 4:44PM
Lawyers for Bali Nine drug mule Scott Rush have asked that his legal challenge against Indonesia's death penalty be joined with a similar appeal by the two ringleaders of the failed heroin smuggling ring.
Rush, 21, and ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, have lodged separate challenges with Indonesia's Constitutional Court, arguing the country's constitution enshrines their right to life. They are challenging the constitutional validity of the narcotics law under which they were sentenced..... etc
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