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You're right, the tapes had been wiped (given the baggage handler case, one can't help suspecting this was no accident), and also the bag of dope was repeatedly handled by the Customs officials at the scene, instead of being handled carefully and passed to police for fingerprinting. No attempt was made to get fingerprint evidence. Had they followed what would have been normal procedure here, and found Corby's prints on the bag, nobody could have argued with the verdict. If it happened here, the contaminated evidence would not have been acceptable in court.
The biggest difference in the two systems is that in our system, the prosecution has to prove guilt; there the defendant has to prove innocence, and with the evidence being unavailable or tampered with, Corby never had a chance. And as it's marijuana, not heroin, of course there's sympathy here - there but for the grace of God, etc.
I can't help but feel that if she really was so dumb as to stick the bag in the top of her boogie board with no attempt to hide it or split it up into smaller bags, she deserves to be in jail, but it really is hard to believe that anyone in their right mind would do that. I normally don't have much sympathy for people caught smuggling drugs, because there's no shortage of publicity about what happens to you in Asian countries, but under our law there's plenty of reason for doubt in Corby's case, and that's what people find so hard to accept.
I wouldn't be surprised if, when enough time has passed and the fuss dies down, Howard makes a personal appeal for clemency to Yudhyono. It couldn't be done now, because the Indonesians would lose face, but later perhaps, if Howard feels he needs to rack up some brownie points some time.
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