Donna Nelson, who claims she was love scam victim, jailed for smuggling drugs into Japan

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A court in Japan has sentenced an Australian woman to six years in prison after finding her guilty of smuggling methamphetamine into the country, ignoring her claims that she had been the victim of an online romance scam.

Donna Nelson, from Perth, was found guilty of smuggling 2kg of the drug concealed beneath a false bottom in her suitcase when she arrived at Narita airport near Tokyo from Laos in January 2023.

Prosecutors had demanded a 10-year sentence and a $30,000 fine.

The 58-year-old claimed she did not know the drugs had been hidden inside the suitcase, which she said had been given to her by the acquaintance of a second man who she met online in 2020 and was planning to marry.

Nelson said she had been instructed to take the suitcase to Japan and give it to the man she believed to be her online lover. The man, whom Nelson named only as “Kelly”, had told her he was the Nigerian owner of a fashion business. He reportedly paid for her flight to Japan but was not at Narita airport when she arrived.

The pair had reportedly sent each other numerous text messages and spoken multiple times on video chats during their online “romance”.

Prosecutors head to Chiba district court with evidence.
Prosecutors head to Chiba district court with evidence. Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP

Prosecutors acknowledged that the case was linked to an online romance scam, but insisted Nelson knew what was inside the suitcase when she left Laos.

When she arrived in Japan, Nelson did not declare the bag as belonging to someone else, and wrote that she was in the country on business.

“If she had nothing to hide, why didn’t she just tell the truth, and why didn’t she tell customs that she was going to see her fiancé?,” prosecutor Ogata told the court, according to the ABC.

Her daughters have repeatedly protested her innocence and have been present at Chiba district court, east of Tokyo, during her trial.

One of Nelson’s daughters, Kristal Hilaire, told the court her mother was “a good person” during a hearing last month – the first time Hilaire and her sister had seen their mother since her arrest almost two years ago.

“She thought she was coming to Japan for her love story,” Hilaire said. “She didn’t have any other intentions other than that. And that’s what we need everyone to know and hear at the court this week.”

Nelson’s lawyer, Rie Nishida, claimed that the poor English-language ability of customs officials at Narita might have led to mistranslations and the allegation that Nelson knew she was carrying an illegal substance.

Nelson has attended court escorted by uniformed guards, who removed her handcuffs and a rope around her waist as she took her seat.

Her case has highlighted the slow pace of justice in Japan, where suspects can be detained for long periods without charge and face lengthy trials before being convicted or freed.

It was not immediately clear if Nelson’s legal team planned to appeal her sentence.

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