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Russel Crowe supports decriminalistaion


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Crowe jumps to Corby defence

13:48 AEST Fri Apr 22 2005

AAP

 

Actor Russell Crowe has appealed to the Australian government to act to save Schapelle Corby from life in jail over what he says is a questionable charge.

 

Crowe, who owns a property at Nana Glen on the mid-north NSW coast not far from the hippie capital Nimbin, also said it was time to decriminalise marijuana, as the current system was jeopardising too many lives.

 

The 41-year-old Oscar award winning actor jumped to the defence of the Gold Coast woman, who faces life imprisonment if convicted of smuggling more than 4kg of cannabis into Bali's Denpasar airport in her bodyboard bag last October.

 

Photographs of the distraught 27-year-old were all over the front pages of Friday's newspapers after Indonesian prosecutors announced they would seek life imprisonment rather than the death penalty.

 

Crowe called on Prime Minister John Howard to act, saying it was ridiculous that Corby could rot away in prison for the rest of her life.

 

"When there is such doubt, how can we, as a country, stand by and let a young lady, as an Australian, rot away in a foreign prison?" he told the John Laws Radio Program.

 

"That is ridiculous.

 

"We just gave Indonesia how many hundreds of millions of dollars in tsunami relief? We're not disrespecting your (Indonesia's) laws or anything but in our minds we think there is a massive doubt here."

 

Crowe said the government should request Corby be brought back to Australia to face trial under our judicial system.

 

"The photographs of Schapelle Corby broke my heart," he said.

 

"The first thing I thought this morning was, like, how can I get Johnny Howard on the phone and say `look, what are you gonna do, mate, what are you gonna do? - that's ridiculous, what if it was your daughter?

 

"You know it as well as I do - all of these things, international diplomacy, can be moved to meet the needs of the individual country in that time.

 

"The due process of Indonesian law we have to respect from an international relations point of view but from my individual point of view, looking at it, it's like it's bullshit, let's deal with it."

 

But his sympathies appeared to run dry when it came to the nine Australians caught in Bali this week over an 8.65kg heroin seizure.

 

Four of the group allegedly had heroin strapped to their bodies and police have said they could face death by firing squad if found guilty of trafficking.

 

"Now the other guys - the other recent thing with your heroin taped to your body and you're there to make some money - that's a completely different thing," Crowe said.

 

©AAP 2005

 

Author: AAP

Date: 13:48 AEST Fri Apr 22 2005

Source: AAP/NineMSN National Nine News

Copyright: ©AAP 2005

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