If she wasn't a young female we wouldn't know about her. The whole situation is influenced by the bias australian media.spin spin sugar said:i guess its just so easy to sympathise/empathise with her as a younge female. i can't really explain why.
god damn, we agree on something. :uhhuh:iamsickofyear12 said:So many people believe she is innocent for absolutely no reason.
I agree, I feel sorry for her too,I can't help it...spin spin sugar said:i guess its just so easy to sympathise/empathise with her as a younge female. i can't really explain why.
but i feel really really sorry for her now, 20 years, that is fucked. i would be surprised if she doesn't kill herself if that sentence is the final word
She shouldn't be transferred to Australia. It is unfair to all other Australians who have had to serve time in Indonesia. It's also to a degree saying she is innocent, and undermining the Indonesian justice system. I don't think they will allow it.Smokey_22 said:It shows emotion has no influence in a courtroom.
She'll probably be transferred to Australia after a few years, and be out after 10.
i meant, being a young female myself.iamsickofyear12 said:If she wasn't a young female we wouldn't know about her. The whole situation is influenced by the bias australian media.
no they said they wont trade her or abotu 11-12 years and then shell spend about 5 -10 in australia...so shes not really getting less of a sentenceSmokey_22 said:It shows emotion has no influence in a courtroom.
She'll probably be transferred to Australia after a few years, and be out after 10.
they couldn't use that in the court room, if i'm not mistaken. although it is pretty strong evidence for corby.spell check said:and considering they have evidence of corrupt customs officials, and that they just busted a racket that had been operating ON THE SAME DAY that her flight took off just lends weight to the argument that someone planted the drugs in her bag which were meant to be collected in sydney
uh, is he suggesting that the death penalty should apply to all crimes or something? it's fair to make a distinction between supporting the death penalty for bombers who indiscriminately killed however many hundred people, and opposing the death penalty for bringing 4 kg of a relatively harmless substance into a countryWhen Bali bombers Amrozi, Muhklas and Imam Samudra were sentenced to death by the same court that is trying Corby, this was widely celebrated here, with some Australians offering to pull the trigger or burn them alive, and our Government indicating that execution was appropriate. In light of this, how can our Government now claim that death is a barbaric punishment, as popular opinion has it, if it is imposed on Corby or, as is more likely, the Bali nine?
In Australian law with regards to proving she had possession, yes, they would have to show knowledge of the drugs being there or awareness of the probability of the drugs being there. This knowledge can be inferred, based on evidence provided by the customs official of her nervousness, the fact it was her luggage, etc. However we do have deeming provisions in NSW drug law statutes that state that you are assumed to have intended to supply/sell drugs if you are found in possession of them over a certain quantity (which she would have been -- 4.1 kg).spell check said:the prosecution would still have to show she at least knew or should have known that the drugs were there
can you really can infer her awareness that drugs were in her bag from "the fact it was her luggage"MoonlightSonata said:In Australian law with regards to proving she had possession, yes, they would have to show knowledge of the drugs being there or awareness of the probability of the drugs being there. This knowledge can be inferred, based on evidence provided by the customs official of her nervousness, the fact it was her luggage, etc. However we do have deeming provisions in NSW drug law statutes that state that you are assumed to have intended to supply/sell drugs if you are found in possession of them over a certain quantity (which she would have been -- 4.1 kg).
Perhaps not soley on that fact - there was evidence that she was acting nervous or shifty and went white or some such behaviour as well. But using common sense, shouldn't the fact that the drugs were in her bag put up a small presumption that whatever was in the bag did belong to her? For instance, if you found a necklace in her luggage you would assume it was hers. You would not think someone had planted the necklace there. Logically the fact that the drugs were in her bag tends to suggest that it was hers, albeit not a definitive inference.spell check said:can you really can infer her awareness that drugs were in her bag from "the fact it was her luggage"
Yes I noticed that also, I'm not sure whether the judges picked that upspell check said:the customs official seems to have mistaken "yes it is my bag" to mean "yes they are my drugs"
the judges seem to have leant the same way as the customs official. in the judgement one mentioned schappelle saying 'yes it is mine' or 'yes its marijuana'MoonlightSonata said:Perhaps not soley on that fact - there was evidence that she was acting nervous or shifty and went white or some such behaviour as well. But using common sense, shouldn't the fact that the drugs were in her bag put up a small presumption that whatever was in the bag did belong to her? For instance, if you found a necklace in her luggage you would assume it was hers. You would not think someone had planted the necklace there. Logically the fact that the drugs were in her bag tends to suggest that it was hers, albeit not a definitive inference.
Yes I noticed that also, I'm not sure whether the judges picked that up