- published: 23 May 2013
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Schapelle Leigh Corby (born 10 July 1977) is an Australian woman who was convicted of smuggling drugs into Indonesia. She spent nine years imprisoned on the Indonesian island of Bali in Kerobokan Prison. Since her arrest Corby has publicly maintained that the drugs were planted in her bodyboard bag and that she did not know about them. Her trial and conviction were a major focus of attention for the Australian media.
Corby was convicted on 27 May 2005 for the importation of 4.2 kg (9.3 lb) of cannabis into Bali. She was sentenced to 20 years by the Denpasar District Court and imprisoned in Kerobokan Prison. On appeal her conviction and sentence were confirmed with finality by the Indonesian Supreme Court. In March 2010, Corby petitioned the President of Indonesia, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono for clemency on the grounds of mental illness. In May 2012, she was granted a five-year sentence reduction. Corby was released on parole on 10 February 2014 after serving nine years in prison. According to her parole conditions, Corby is not permitted to leave Indonesia until July 2017.
Corby is a town and borough located in the county of Northamptonshire, England.
It is located 23 miles (37 km) north-east of the county town, Northampton. The borough had a population of 61,300 at the 2011 Census. Figures released in March 2010 revealed that Corby has the fastest growing population in both Northamptonshire and the whole of England. The Borough of Corby borders onto the Borough of Kettering, the District of East Northamptonshire, the District of Harborough and the unitary authority county of Rutland. The town was at one time known locally as "Little Scotland" due to the large number of Scottish migrant workers who came to Corby for its steelworks. Recently, Corby has undergone a large regeneration process with the opening of Corby railway station and Corby International Pool in 2009 and the Corby Cube Building opening in 2010. This is home to Corby Borough Council and is a large 450 seat theatre.
The Borough of Corby consists of the town of Corby, as well as the villages of Weldon, Rockingham, Gretton, Cottingham, Middleton, East Carlton, Stanion and Little Stanion.
Schapelle can refer to:
Initially sentenced to 20 years in jail for drug trafficking, Australian Schapelle Corby's term has been cut by five years after a clemency appeal. More: http://bit.ly/ABCRetrospect
In 2004, Australian Schapelle Corby, 27, is arrested at the airport in Bali. She and her family arrive for a vacation; ten pounds of marijuana are in her unlocked boogie-board bag. Seven months later, she's tried for capital crimes. The film picks up the story before the trial and follows it through the verdict. We meet Corby and her extended family. Her cause is adopted by an Aussie businessman, Ron Bakir; he promises legal help. We see a media frenzy at the trial, and we watch the proceedings; we witness her family's pain. Did she do it? Did a family member use her bag in a smuggling attempt? Or, did baggage handlers do it? Is the trial fair? Will she be found guilty?
SCHAPELLE Corby has just six months of her drug trafficking sentence left to serve. On May 27 next year she will officially visit her parole officers for the last time, sign off, say good bye and be deported out of Indonesia, her home for the past 12 years. This week Corby was spotted swimming and snorkelling on a Kuta beach as she serves out her remaining few months in Bali. Locals say that brother Michael Corby comes too and her sometime local boyfriend Ben Panangian. Officials from the Parole Board, which currently monitors her, and Indonesian Immigration have told News Corporation that within the next few months they will organise meetings to iron out the details of her release from parole. The Parole Board has confirmed the release date is May 27. News Bite Global 2016. @newsbi...
Mercedes Corby has touched down in Bali as she prepares to bring sister, Schapelle, back to Australian soil for the first time in 13 years. The convicted drug smuggler is now just days away from flying home.
This is 24x7. It is ruthless, constant and unremitting. They are sticking cameras through holes in the fence. They are dangling cameras in the air. They have zoom lenses positioned high above. They congregate in a threatening gang outside the door, harassing and disturbing her. They follow everything that moves, as a mob. She is now trapped, sick, on the edge of a breakdown, and at risk. These people are not journalists because they don’t report news. They operate under the umbrella of journalism, whilst polluting the word itself. They produce trivia, utter fabrication, and any lie that panders to prejudice and their appalling editorial position. They are a toxic force in society, and in this case, are endangering life. The Australian government has not lifted a finger to help. See t...
schapelle's (nIghtmare) the untold story
A recap of our first on air coverage of Schapelle Corby's release from Kerobokan jail. Studio 10 | 8:30am on TEN
During the last few weeks, every elected federal politician in Australia has received a series of emails from members of the public. Digital 'read receipts' prove that the vast majority have read them. Only two replied, with one of them, on behalf of a prominent Senator, stating that he "will not be initiating any further intervention into this matter". This is not remarkable, as literally dozens of emails on the same subject have met the same fate over the previous three months. What is remarkable, however, is that, de facto, the repeated response failures equate to open complicity with criminality and corruption. THE CRIMES OF A STATE In July 2005, Australian citizen, Schapelle Corby, who was facing 20 years in an Indonesian prison, wa...
Schapelle Corby, Australian was apprehended 14 years ago when she was 27 and is still in 2017 ‘FAR FROM FREE’ Schapelle is required to report monthly to her parole officers who are responsible for ensuring that she is regularly reminded of her obligations under parole to be of good behaviour. It is reported Schapelle will return to Australia on 27-28th May 2017 Which is 94 days away today. This song Freedom for Schapelle. I wrote at the time of her arrest in 2004. I recorded it in 2005 and have followed her story to this day. Although I do not know Schapelle or her family. I believe in her innocence. I have always supported her plight and felt this was a good time to release this little composition into the ether. In support of her future freedom. Many Thanks for the photographs and video ...
Mercedes Corby explains Schapelle's mental illness, and discusses the ongoing abuse of her family. See www.expendable.tv for full information: for the truth.
Mercedes Corby explains Schapelle's mental illness, and discusses the ongoing abuse of her family. See www.expendable.tv for full information: for the truth.
Initially sentenced to 20 years in jail for drug trafficking, Australian Schapelle Corby's term has been cut by five years after a clemency appeal. More: http://bit.ly/ABCRetrospect
In 2004, Australian Schapelle Corby, 27, is arrested at the airport in Bali. She and her family arrive for a vacation; ten pounds of marijuana are in her unlocked boogie-board bag. Seven months later, she's tried for capital crimes. The film picks up the story before the trial and follows it through the verdict. We meet Corby and her extended family. Her cause is adopted by an Aussie businessman, Ron Bakir; he promises legal help. We see a media frenzy at the trial, and we watch the proceedings; we witness her family's pain. Did she do it? Did a family member use her bag in a smuggling attempt? Or, did baggage handlers do it? Is the trial fair? Will she be found guilty?
In a bombshell prison interview, Renae Lawrence blows the lid on her former cell mate Schapelle Corby See more at tennews.com.au
Despite his painful battle with cancer, Schapelle Corby's father had worked out exactly who was to blame for his daughter's torment. See www.expendable.tv for the proof that he was correct.
Convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby may be closer to gaining parole from an Indonesian jail. Dr Keith Suter explains.
Schapelle Corby, advert
Shocking footage! The video comes amid claims that Schapelle hadn't been involved in any interview at all. Watch the gameplay trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbkFSR1Uh_s Weed like to invite you to join the latest mobile gaming sensation by downloading Flappy Schapelle (FREE!) today. Help a young Australian girl along on her journey from Australia, to the airport, to court, to jail at Kerobokan, and finally, to the freedom of the beaches of Bali. Flappy Schapelle challenges you to take on 5 unique stages as you dodge obstacles like kangaroos, customs sniffer dogs, Balinese judges and of course, the law itself. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Addicting gameplay, hilarious tongue-in-cheek graphics and a comical lack of attention to detail...
Jakarta, Indonesia, 20 January 2006 1.Exterior Indonesian supreme court 2.Supreme court sign 3.Supreme court judge Mansur Kartayasa sitting in his office 4.SOUNDBITE: (Indonesian) Mansur Kartayasa "We found the defendant Schapelle Corby guilty of a criminal act of smuggling drugs and sentence the defendant to 20 years in prison and a fine of 100 million rupiahs." Denpasar, Bali, August 2005 5.Convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby arriving in court 6.Corby sitting 7.Pan from judges to Corby Jakarta, Indonesia 20 January 2006 8.SOUNDBITE: (Indonesian) Mansur Kartayasa "Even though the defendant has not enjoyed the result of her action, she is proven guilty of smuggling drugs and must be sentenced accordingly. We think the high court's decision has not been fair if we take i...
A recap of our first on air coverage of Schapelle Corby's release from Kerobokan jail. Studio 10 | 8:30am on TEN
Initially sentenced to 20 years in jail for drug trafficking, Australian Schapelle Corby's term has been cut by five years after a clemency appeal. More: http://bit.ly/ABCRetrospect
In 2004, Australian Schapelle Corby, 27, is arrested at the airport in Bali. She and her family arrive for a vacation; ten pounds of marijuana are in her unlocked boogie-board bag. Seven months later, she's tried for capital crimes. The film picks up the story before the trial and follows it through the verdict. We meet Corby and her extended family. Her cause is adopted by an Aussie businessman, Ron Bakir; he promises legal help. We see a media frenzy at the trial, and we watch the proceedings; we witness her family's pain. Did she do it? Did a family member use her bag in a smuggling attempt? Or, did baggage handlers do it? Is the trial fair? Will she be found guilty?
SCHAPELLE Corby has just six months of her drug trafficking sentence left to serve. On May 27 next year she will officially visit her parole officers for the last time, sign off, say good bye and be deported out of Indonesia, her home for the past 12 years. This week Corby was spotted swimming and snorkelling on a Kuta beach as she serves out her remaining few months in Bali. Locals say that brother Michael Corby comes too and her sometime local boyfriend Ben Panangian. Officials from the Parole Board, which currently monitors her, and Indonesian Immigration have told News Corporation that within the next few months they will organise meetings to iron out the details of her release from parole. The Parole Board has confirmed the release date is May 27. News Bite Global 2016. @newsbi...
Mercedes Corby has touched down in Bali as she prepares to bring sister, Schapelle, back to Australian soil for the first time in 13 years. The convicted drug smuggler is now just days away from flying home.
This is 24x7. It is ruthless, constant and unremitting. They are sticking cameras through holes in the fence. They are dangling cameras in the air. They have zoom lenses positioned high above. They congregate in a threatening gang outside the door, harassing and disturbing her. They follow everything that moves, as a mob. She is now trapped, sick, on the edge of a breakdown, and at risk. These people are not journalists because they don’t report news. They operate under the umbrella of journalism, whilst polluting the word itself. They produce trivia, utter fabrication, and any lie that panders to prejudice and their appalling editorial position. They are a toxic force in society, and in this case, are endangering life. The Australian government has not lifted a finger to help. See t...
schapelle's (nIghtmare) the untold story
A recap of our first on air coverage of Schapelle Corby's release from Kerobokan jail. Studio 10 | 8:30am on TEN
During the last few weeks, every elected federal politician in Australia has received a series of emails from members of the public. Digital 'read receipts' prove that the vast majority have read them. Only two replied, with one of them, on behalf of a prominent Senator, stating that he "will not be initiating any further intervention into this matter". This is not remarkable, as literally dozens of emails on the same subject have met the same fate over the previous three months. What is remarkable, however, is that, de facto, the repeated response failures equate to open complicity with criminality and corruption. THE CRIMES OF A STATE In July 2005, Australian citizen, Schapelle Corby, who was facing 20 years in an Indonesian prison, wa...
Schapelle Corby, Australian was apprehended 14 years ago when she was 27 and is still in 2017 ‘FAR FROM FREE’ Schapelle is required to report monthly to her parole officers who are responsible for ensuring that she is regularly reminded of her obligations under parole to be of good behaviour. It is reported Schapelle will return to Australia on 27-28th May 2017 Which is 94 days away today. This song Freedom for Schapelle. I wrote at the time of her arrest in 2004. I recorded it in 2005 and have followed her story to this day. Although I do not know Schapelle or her family. I believe in her innocence. I have always supported her plight and felt this was a good time to release this little composition into the ether. In support of her future freedom. Many Thanks for the photographs and video ...
Mercedes Corby explains Schapelle's mental illness, and discusses the ongoing abuse of her family. See www.expendable.tv for full information: for the truth.
This is the harrowing story Schapelle Corby, a young woman wrongly convicted of drug trafficking. Schapelle got caught up in the middle of an organised drug
We talk winter olympics, valentine's day and Schapelle Corby this week.
Please subscribe our new channel Crime Sons Documentary2 Expendable: The Political Sacrifice Of Schapelle Corby How a government wilfully withheld vital evidence from a court of law, deceived its public, orchestrated . Crime Sons Documentary2 Expendable: The Political Sacrifice Of Schapelle Corby How a government wilfully withheld vital evidence from a court of law, . Expendable: The Political Sacrifice Of Schapelle Corby How a government wilfully withheld vital evidence from a court of law, deceived its public, orchestrated.
re-upload from ~ The evidential proof of every abuse documented in this film is freely available on the website: . Mirrored from: TruthNetwork15. This is only the first 15 mins of a 1:42:00 documentary. Please, I urge you to watch the rest at: . The Expendable Project: WWW.EXPENDABLE.TV. The official trailer for The Expendable Project - The political Sacrifice of Schapelle Corby. Official website: Expendable presents a disturbing but entirely true narrative; a political horror story which is still unfolding today. It exposes .
Network Ten senior reporter, Candice Wyatt's extensive coverage of Schapelle Corby's release from Bali's Kerobokan Prison on February 10, 2014.
Schapelle http://bit.ly/2bwSJl5 is a telemovie based on the arrest, trial and conviction of Schapelle Corby in 2004-2005. A 27 year old beauty school dropout from the Gold Coast, Schapelle was arrested at Bali airport with 4.2kg of marijuana in a boogie board bag.
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