Answer the questions Kev . . ..
. . . Schapelle’s life is on the line. Copy & paste them, and put your direct replies underneath each one . . ..
Question 1
“Ten Islamic militants convicted over deadly bombings that targeted tourists in Bali have had their jail sentences cut. Six of those were found guilty of the 2002 nightclub bombings that killed 202 people, including 28 Britons and 88 Australians. The other four were convicted in connection with suicide attacks on restaurants in 2005 that left 20 people dead. Families of the victims have expressed anger at the decision which was made to mark Indonesia's Independence Day. It is a local tradition to cut prison terms on holidays - but the father of one of the dead slammed the "blatant disregard" for those caught up in the attacks. The militants were serving between eight and 18 years on a variety of charges. They include helping to plan the bombings, sheltering the main suspects and setting up a website explaining how to kill foreigners.” Sky News, Aug 17 2007
Kev, how do you compare 8 to 18 years for helping to murder 88 Australians, to twenty years for allegedly smuggling 4.2 kg of marijuana?
Question 2
Kev, Immediately before Schapelle’s flight to Bali, she packed her bags at her Father’s house in Tugun, then spent the night at her Mother’s house in Loganlea. In the aftermath of her arrest in Bali, was either house searched by the Australian Federal Police for evidence of drugs, or drug trading? If not, why not?
Question 3
Kev, on page 30 of Gold Coast journalist Tony Wilson’s book (“Schapelle: The Facts, The Evidence, The Truth”), he says at the time of the Corby incident “Staff were not checked or searched as they entered or left Sydney Airport.” Is that correct?
Question 4
Kev, is it true that there have been a number of drug related arrests involving baggage handlers at at Brisbane and Sydney airports?
Question 5
Kev, in May 2005, 7 months after Schapelle and her bags were passing through Sydney airport (on that fateful day), were Qantas baggage handlers found to be smuggling 9.9 kg of cocaine, worth around 15 million dollars, off an international flight from South America? Was it also alleged in a Sydney court that these baggage handlers were paid $300,000 to see that the cocaine was removed before it reached customs?
Question 6
Kev, did Sydney MP John Murphy reveal (in April 2006), that two airport security cameras had been sabotaged on 3 occasions, between early October 2004, and May 2005, covering the time when Schapelle Corby made her trip to Bali?
Question 7
Kev, were these cameras the only security measure in that particular baggage handling area (e.g. relevant to Schapelle’s luggage)?
Question 8
Kev, did John Murphy MP ask official questions about this sabotage in May 2005?
Question 9
Kev, did Federal Justice Minister Chris Ellison finally admit the sabotage allegations were true in April 2006, 10 months later?
Question 10
Kev, why did it take 10 months for John Murphy MP to get a reply from Chris Ellison?
Question 11
Kev, is it correct that John Ellison MP said “If the Government had given me an answer when I first raised this matter and had then been prepared to send a representative and give evidence at Schapelle’s trial, then I believe this poor woman could well have been freed because of the serious doubt this would have raised.”?
And did John Ellison MP also say “Those cameras were right where Schapelle’s boogie board bag would have been before it was loaded on to the flight to Denpasar and there has been a monumental injustice with her case that this information has not come out until now. Schapelle might have been out of jail now because of this security breach, with two cameras sabotaged, should have created grave doubts in the Corby case and the Federal Government should have revealed all this during her trial in Bali in 2005”?
Question 12
Kev, did Balinese custom and police officers at Ngurah Rai Airport immediately handle both the outer plastic bag, and the inner one (containing the marijuna), without gloves?
Would this have been acceptable at any Australian Airport?
Why wouldn’t it have been acceptable at any Australian airport?
Question 13
Kev, did Schapelle and her travelling companions, in the immediate aftermath of the arrest, demand that these bags be checked for fingerprints?
Question 14
Kev, were Schapelle and her travelling companions told that it was already too late, as too many people had handled them?
Question 15
Kev, over the ensuing months, did Schapelle’s legal team make repeated requests for the bags to be fingerprinted?
Question 16
Kev, were any of these repeated requests granted?
Would these requests have been granted within the Australian judicial system?
Question 17
Kev, did Schapelle’s legal team ask for DNA investigation of the marijuana, to see if any traces of Schapelle were within the sealed plastic bags that held it?
Question 18
Kev, was this request granted?
Would this request have been granted within the Australian judicial system?
Question 19
Kev, did Schapelle’s legal team ask for the marijuana to be tested for it’s country of origin?
Question 20
Kev, was this request granted?
Would this request have been granted within the Australian judicial system?
Question 21
Kev, was all the marijuana and the bags containing it burnt by Indonesia before it could undergo any of this testing?
If so, would this burning (before forensic investigation), have occurred within the Australian judicial system?
Question 22
Kev, in the aftermath of this large “Drug bust,” did Balinese police or customs search any of the OTHER bags carried by Schapelle and/or her travelling companions? If not, why not?
Question 23
Kev, after Schapelle’s case had had widespread and high profile media coverage, around November 1st 2004, did Schapelle appeal through her lawyer for the Qantas clerk who had checked her in (in Brisbane), to come forward?
Question 24
Kev, did senior Qantas baggage handler Scott Speed say the airline had a rule disallowing anything being placed in a boogie board bag, apart from the board itself?
Question 25
Kev, does Qantas airlines still have this rule?
Question 26
Kev, would just over 4 kg of marijuana in a boogie board bag create a very obvious pregnant “Bump”?
Question 27
Kev, did Qantas ever investigate how a very obvious pregnant “Bump” on a boogie board bag escaped their security systems? If not, why not?
Question 28
Kev, did two Qantas check-in staff give evidence that they had checked-in Schapelle’s boogie board bag at Brisbane airport, but had not noticed any pregnant “Bump,” or noticed any unusual smell?
Question 29
Kev, was the collective weight of Schapelle’s luggage (upon leaving Brisbane airport), ever compared to the collective weight of her luggage upon arriving in Bali? If not, why not? Do you agree that if the marijuana was planted on Schapelle somewhere in transit, there would have been a 4.2 kg anomaly between the two figures?
Question 30
Kev, did Schapelle’s legal team request these collective weights?
Question 31
Kev, was the request for those collective weights granted? If not, why not?
Question 32
Kev, did Australian criminologist Prof Paul Wilson (from Bond University), testify that Schapelle did not fit the profile of a drug trafficker?
Question 33
Kev, did Schapelle Corby have any previous criminal convictions in Australia?
Question 34
Kev, was Schapelle a frequent visitor to Bali, or is it true that her last visit to the island was four years earlier?
Question 35
Kev, did a Centre Link worker testify to Today/Tonight (Channel 7), that she had seen Schapelle Corby’s medical records, and that they related to drug addiction, and was this same worker later prosecuted for this gross breach of confidentiality (and found guilty)? And did this same Centre Link worker then admit to the Australian Federal Police that she had NEVER seen any medical records relating to Schapelle Corby?
Question 36
Kev, is it true that at the time Schapelle allegedly smuggled 4.2 kg of marijuana into Bali, that amount would have been worth about $32,000 on the Queensland street?
Is it true that amount would have been worth about a tenth of that on Bali’s streets?
Question 37
Kev, did Schapelle’s lawyer do some research, and find that even in an Indonesian case involving the smuggling of 161 kg of marijuana, the guilty party was only given a 10 year sentence (page 178 of Tony Wilson’s book)?
Question 38
Kev, around July 2008, did a spokesman for the Australian Federal Police make an official statement, saying that there had been a full investigation into allegations Michael Corby (Schapelle’s Father), was linked to the drug trade, and that these allegations were completely without substance?
Question 39
Kev, is it true that Michael Corby (Schapelle’s Father), had no criminal convictions?
Question 40
Kev, is there any evidence that any of Schapelle’s Corby’s family have ever been involved in drug dealing, trafficking and/or smuggling?
Is it true that there is an official police statement, clearly exonerating any of Schapelle Corby’s family from that type of activity?
Question 41
Kev, without fingerprint evidence, DNA evidence, country of origin evidence, security camera evidence, check-in staff evidence, weight discrepancy evidence, no evidence whatsoever linking Schapelle Corby to the drug trade, no apparent motive (e.g. the marijuana was worth far less in Bali, than it was in Queensland), plus major evidence of extremely serious security breaches at Sydney and Brisbane airports, and professional criminal profiler evidence that favoured her innocence, what would have been the chances of Schapelle’s conviction in an Australian court?
Friday, January 15, 2010
Answer the questions Kev . . ..
Labels:
AFP,
bali,
corruption,
drug enforcement,
drugs,
guilt,
Indonesia,
innocence,
schapelle corby,
Tony Wilson
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