'He had me totally fooled': Australian woman sits in Cambodian jail despite the AFP having knowledge of romance scam

An Australian woman has been in a Cambodian prison for three years after being scammed into smuggling drugs. The Australian Federal Police has information that suggests she's innocent.


The Police Judicial prison on the outskirts of Phnom Penh was once a camp used by the Khmer Rouge to interrogate, torture, and ultimately murder its victims. 

Now, its decaying walls and overcrowded conditions present a new kind of hell for inmates - including 44 year-old Australian woman, Yoshe Ann Taylor.

This is where Taylor has spent the past three years. She was convicted of drug smuggling in 2013 after being caught trying to leave the Cambodian capital with 2kg of heroin concealed in her luggage.

Taylor ended up in this prison based on information provided to Cambodian authorities by the Australian Federal Police. Her sentence is 23 years, enough to miss the entire childhoods of her young son and daughter, who now live without her in their Queensland home even though Australian authorities have folders of evidence that suggest she is innocent.

Now, a joint investigation by SBS’s The Feed and Fairfax Media can reveal that Yoshe Ann Taylor was the victim of an internet dating scam run by an international drug smuggling syndicate. 

And the syndicate which entrapped her, and a number of other Australian women, continues to operate, apparently unabated, from inside the Cambodian prison system, targeting Australian women with the intention of turning them into unwitting drug mules. 

The AFP and Commonwealth prosecution authorities are aware of its operations.
Australian woman caught in Cambodian drug scam
“good morning hon, how was your night. hope you slept great” - Precious Max Source: Supplied
In 2013, Yoshe Taylor was a single mother living on an isolated property in Queensland. She’d recently lost her job as a kindergarten teacher, and was working part-time as a tutor while homeschooling her own two children, aged 9 and 14. She dreamed of building a new career in the arts.

Like millions of others, she went online in search of companionship. There, she came across a man who offered even more - not just charm, sex appeal and romance, but also a possible job in an arts and crafts business.

He went by the name Precious Max, and claimed he was a successful South African businessman working in Cambodia at the so-called Khmer Arts and Crafts business.
“good morning hon, how was your night. hope you slept great” - Precious Max
Over a period of 12 months, the pair shared photographs and flirtation. Long-haired and muscular, Precious posed in photographs at bars and shirtless in the pool. Slowly he gained Taylor’s trust. 

She had never travelled overseas, so when her new love interest offered to pay her way to Phnom Penh, she jumped at the chance. There, he wined and dined her, and talked more about her setting up a Brisbane branch of his business. 

Over three months, Taylor travelled three times to Cambodia. On her second trip, Precious asked Taylor to carry back a package to give to a contact who supposedly ran the Sydney branch of the Khmer Arts and Crafts business. “He apparently has a job for me running an Cambodian art gallery in Australia,” Taylor told a friend in a message. “Read a contract. It seems legitimate”.
"Read a contract. It seems legitimate - Yoshie Taylor"
The long digital trail between the pair indicates Taylor believed Precious Max’s front. The Feed  and Fairfax  Media have reviewed dozens of pieces of correspondence in which Taylor discusses with others the concept behind the business opportunity. She even contacted real estate agents in search of a place to set up shop. 

Precious provided Taylor with a copy of his passport, which was later confirmed by the South African embassy in the US to be a fake, as well as an employment contract and a copy of a fake authorisation for $50,000. 

The money, he said, was seed funding for Taylor to help her set up the business.
passport
Source: Supplied


What Taylor did not know was that every move she and Precious Max made was being monitored by the Cambodian authorities. And for good reason.

Precious Max is not South African. He’s a Nigerian national. His real name is Precious Chineme Nwoko, and he’s a drug trafficker and fraudster who has groomed dozens, possibly hundreds of women in Australia and other countries.

To do it, he’s created a number of convincing online profiles across multiple platforms including Facebook, Tagged, Badoo and Twoo. He’s sent photos of offices and fake passports, along with other documents, to convince his victims of his legitimacy.

He gave me a contract, but first I’d asked him for copy of his passport,” Taylor told The Feed and Fairfax Media from her prison cell. “Then when I got here, he provided me authorisation for seed money … he had me totally fooled’.
"He provided me authorisation for seed money … he had me totally fooled" - Yoshie Taylor
On September 18, 2013, Taylor was in Cambodia on her third trip and was due to fly back to Australia. This time Precious had asked her to carry back a backpack full of samples.

She hadn’t even made it to the check-in counter at Phnom Penh airport when police swooped. They immediately went for the backpack. In the lining they found just over 2kg of heroin.

Nwoko was arrested only hours after Taylor.

In local media, deputy chief of the Cambodian police’s anti-terrorism department Lieutenant Colonel Kong Narin said Taylor and Nwoko “were arrested by our Cambodian anti-terrorism police based on a report from Australian anti-drug police after they seized a stash [of heroin] sent from Cambodia to Australia in early 2013.” 

Nwoko’s lawyer also said his client had been arrested based on a report from Australian authorities - a story confirmed by Taylor.
Yoshe Taylor
Yoshe has been incarcerated for the past three years. Source: Supplied
“There are so many people who’ve been tricked, I’m not the only one” - Yoshe Taylor
Taylor was far from the first to be tricked by Precious Max. Just under a month before her dramatic arrest, another woman, Kay Smith*, had arrived back in Melbourne after a whirlwind four-day tour of Phnom Penh. She’d gone there to meet a love interest who she’d met online. 

This time, Nwoko had sold himself as a successful South African businessman in the import-export trade. He wined and dined Smith, before proposing marriage on the day she was to return to Australia. 

It was her first trip overseas, too. Giddy with the excitement of the engagement, she agreed to carry back samples that Nwoko claimed were for an Australian associate.

At the Customs counter at Melbourne airport, the fairytale came crashing spectacularly to earth. She was stopped by officers who discovered 2kg of heroin sewn into a secret compartment. 

CCTV footage of the search shows Smith collapsing to the floor. It’s not only the drugs being revealed to her at that moment, but the treachery of the man she thought she would marry. Officers lifted her into a chair.



At Smith’s committal hearing in 2014, an AFP representative confirmed Australian authorities had passed information to their Cambodian liaison officer in the Phnom Penh embassy.

But Smith herself was not prosecuted. In early 2015, a year and a half after her arrest, the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions dropped the case against her. It accepted that she had been duped - that she simply had not formed criminal intent.

The prosecution brief in the Cambodian case against Taylor, though, includes details taken from Kay Smith’s case in Australia, as well as that of one other Australian, a man, who’d been arrested carrying drugs on behalf of Nwoko.
"The AFP refused to comment on Taylor’s case"
In June this year, AFP Commissioner Andrew Colvin was in Cambodia to sign a memorandum of understanding with the Cambodian National Police to establish Strikeforce Dragon, which focuses on the illicit drug trade. The aim, according to Colvin, is to “protect our respective communities and to bring to justice those that seek to profit from transnational crime”.

But when contacted by The Feed and Fairfax Media, the AFP refused to comment on Taylor’s case, or their involvement in her arrest. Police would only acknowledge that their senior liaison officer in Cambodia had received documents from Taylor’s family in 2014. 

These documents, her family say, provide further information that suggests Taylor is innocent. 

According to Taylor and her family, she has crucial information that could assist the AFP in the fight against drug trafficking: she not only met Nwoko and his associates in Phnom Penh, but she also spoke on the phone and met with his so-called “business partners” in Australia. 

On her second trip to Cambodia, Taylor brought back a parcel, supposedly for a man called Alex. When she spoke with Alex by phone, he had an Australian accent. But the person who arrived to collect the package was, she believes, a Cambodian national. To her knowledge, the AFP has never followed up this lead.

In her three years in prison, Taylor has never been interviewed or spoken to by the AFP. Taylor’s family and friends have also not been interviewed by Federal authorities.
"No one has ever spoken to me, I’ve never seen anyone from the AFP - Yoshe Taylor"
No one has ever spoken to me, I’ve never seen anyone from the AFP, they did not even come to my trial, no one has ever visited me here,” she says.

The Department of Foreign Affairs would say only they were providing “ongoing consular assistance” to an unnamed Australian woman.
Yoshe Taylor
Yoshe's son, Archer, has not seen mother in three years. Source: The Feed
The AFP has refused to answer questions relating to prosecutions brought against any who are connected to Nwoko’s syndicate within Australia.The Feed and Fairfax Media were unable to find an example of any individual being prosecuted.

The failure to follow-up on the case of Yoshe Taylor raises concerning questions regarding the capacity of Australian law enforcement to stop the flood of illicit substances making their way into Australia, and seriously undermines the Government's message on border security.
“He used to video call me, he sent money, he paid for my ticket - all from jail” - Joanne Mitchell
The Feed and Fairfax Media can confirm that Nwoko continues to operate from within a Cambodian prison.

In 2015, two years after Taylor was arrested and Nwoko was imprisoned, a third victim, Joanne Mitchell*, a single mother of three from Melbourne, became his victim.

Again, Nwoko claimed to be a South African businessman - this time with the name Curtis - and was quick to declare love and propose marriage. “I love you so much. Happy to be yours forever,” Mitchell responded. 

But when she travelled to meet him, he said he’d been called away on urgent business and could not meet her. She did not know he was in jail at the time.

“Curtis” told Mitchell to return to Australia, but not before retrieving a special gift - a musical instrument. At Melbourne airport, Mitchell was told that the saxophone she was carrying concealed nearly 2kg of heroin - $1.5 million worth of the drug.

“I’m a strong person … but you will never get over it,” she said, remembering that moment.

Last year, Joanne Mitchell provided the AFP with an 18-page statement. All charges against her were dropped. 

The Feed and Fairfax Media understand that yet another drug mule, conned by Nwoko’s syndicate and arrested in Australia, had their case go to trial but was found not guilty.

Today, Precious Max, aka Nwoko, still has active social media profiles. On Twoo, his profile has been accessed within the past 30 days. 

Is he back online from behind bars? Are others in the drug syndicate operating the profile?Whatever the case, it means that another Australian woman could be in the process of falling in love, travelling to Cambodia and ultimately carrying a bag of drugs back into the country.
But while Nwoko’s victims, who were arrested and charged in Australia, are free to try and pick up the pieces of their lives, Yoshe Taylor is facing another two decades inside the former Khmer Rouge torture camp that is now PJ Prison.

She does not blame the Cambodian system. She says they were just doing their jobs. But she is furious at authorities in her own country, whom she feels have abandoned her.

In her three years there, her children have grown taller, lost teeth and gained new ones, moved up three grades at school. They know that their mum is in jail, but they don’t know all the details.
Yoshe Taylor
Yoshe's daughter, Kahlyla. Source: The Feed
Outside court in the mid-morning heat of Phnom Penh, Taylor broke down when asked if she had a message for her family. 

It was simple one: “I love you. I miss you”.

’I haven’t spoken to my kids since November 2014, when I was taken to hospital” - a sympathetic guard had allowed her to use their mobile.

Taylor is now appealing her conviction in Cambodia. A decision is due to be handed down on the December 6. 

Tune in to #TheFeedSBS at 7.30pm Monday - Friday on SBS 2, stream live, or follow us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.


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12 min read
Published 19 November 2016 9:24am
Updated 6 December 2016 12:58pm
By Elise Potaka, Luke McMahon
Source: The Feed, Fairfax Media

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