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Australian mum and love scam victim Ann Yoshe Taylor granted appeal in drug case

AN Australian mother who is serving a 23 year sentence in a Cambodian prison after she fell for a Nigerian internet love scam will have her case redetermined in a stunning legal win.

Australian charged with drug trafficking in Cambodia

AN Australian mother, who is serving a 23 year sentence in a Cambodian prison after she fell for a Nigerian internet love scam, will have her case redetermined in a stunning legal win.

Yoshe Anne Taylor, a Queensland kindergarten teacher, was arrested before boarding a flight to Australia at Phnom Penh Airport with 2.2kg of heroin in her backpack in September 2013. She has always denied any involvement in the crime.

Fairfax Media and SBS revealed in 2016 that the 46-year-old mother-of-two was a victim of an internet dating scam run by an international drug smuggling syndicate, which seduced her to Cambodia promising companionship and assistance in helping her start an arts and crafts business, before using her as a drug mule.

MORE: Children’s heartbreaking letters to jailed mum

MORE: Yoshe Ann Taylor sentenced to 23 years behind bars

Yoshe Ann Taylor has had renewed hope for freedom with the court’s latest decision. Picture: Supplied
Yoshe Ann Taylor has had renewed hope for freedom with the court’s latest decision. Picture: Supplied

The AFP and Commonwealth prosecution authorities are familiar with the syndicate and reportedly have plenty of evidence that suggests Ms Taylor is innocent.

Now her case has been revoked by Cambodia’s Supreme Court and will be remitted to the Cambodian Court of Appeal.

Unbeknown to Cambodian authorities at the time of Taylor’s 2014 trial, or her unsuccessful appeal in 2016, her co-accused, Nigerian national, Nwoko Precious Chineme, who went by the online pseudonym “Precious Max”, scammed a number of other Australian women caught entering Australia with drugs.

The mother is said to have lost a significant amount of weight during her five year stint in prison.
The mother is said to have lost a significant amount of weight during her five year stint in prison.
Pictured during much happier times at her Esk home in Queensland.
Pictured during much happier times at her Esk home in Queensland.

He told his online victims that he was a successful South African businessman working in Cambodia, procuring them with charm, sex appeal and job opportunities.

Ms Taylor has spent five years living in horrible conditions at the Police Judicial Prison on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, where she has developed a string of health complications and suffered serious weight loss.

A mugshot of Nigerian man Nwoko Precious Chineme. Picture: Supplied
A mugshot of Nigerian man Nwoko Precious Chineme. Picture: Supplied

Her two young children are still living in Queensland and have written their mother letters to ask when she will be coming home.

Before her 2016 appeal, the mother told Fairfax: “I just want to come home and be with my kids, I miss them so much, they mean the world to me. I just want this nightmare to be over.”

No date has yet been set for the court of appeal hearing.

Originally published as Australian mum and love scam victim Ann Yoshe Taylor granted appeal in drug case

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/national/australian-mum-and-love-scam-victim-ann-yoshe-taylor-granted-appeal-in-drug-case/news-story/e2bc97828eed8f6a93272bb2ef09844e