OT: - American basketball player arrested in Indonesia | Page 2 | The Boneyard

OT: American basketball player arrested in Indonesia

Can almost guarantee that the “laws are laws” folks here would be singing a completely different tune if one of their adult children got caught breaking a foreign law.

The mental gymnastics would be olympic gold level.
Yes any parent would understandably be devastated thank you captain obvious.
 
Malaysia and Thailand have similar drugs laws as Indonesia where the 34 year old “kid” pulled his dumb ph|uck idiocy. Thailand has zero responsibility for the latter’s actions nor those of the seller or EMS World shipment. Obviously, Malaysia has absolutely zero involvement.
 
lol I’m sure you read the entire legal code every time you enter a foreign country.

If you travel in that part of the world they're not exactly subtle about it. And this dude lives in one of the biggest cities on earth.

In my 20s I was hiking through the mountains in northern Vietnam and I smoked some hash with our guide - I spent at least a day expecting the police to parachute out of the trees and arrest me.
 
Michael Fay.

Besides Midnight Express, which Tom mentioned above, there were also a couple movies that came out in the late 1990s and showed what happens if you're caught in a 3rd world Asian country with drugs: Brokedown Place, with Clare Daines and Kate Beckinsale, and Return to Paradise, with Vince Vaughn and Joaquin Phoenix.

Now this dude probably hasn't seen those movies. But he's been LIVING there. But no matter how dumb he is, the law is ridiculous, and I feel terrible for him and his family.
Seeing the movie Hostel was enough for me to know not to mess around in other countries, I saw Midnight express during the height of Covid.
 
Seeing the movie Hostel was enough for me to know not to mess around in other countries, I saw Midnight express during the height of Covid.
Midnight Express is a forgotten but very good movie. I once met Paul Smith, the actor who portrayed the big prison guard. As I shook his hand, I told him I hated him in Midnight Express. He stopped and scrunched his eyebrows for a second and then broke out into a deep laugh and said "well that was the point wasn't it ?" Nice guy and very gracious with his time.
 
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Michael Fay.

Besides Midnight Express, which Tom mentioned above, there were also a couple movies that came out in the late 1990s and showed what happens if you're caught in a 3rd world Asian country with drugs: Brokedown Place, with Clare Daines and Kate Beckinsale, and Return to Paradise, with Vince Vaughn and Joaquin Phoenix.

Now this dude probably hasn't seen those movies. But he's been LIVING there. But no matter how dumb he is, the law is ridiculous, and I feel terrible for him and his family.
It's ridiculous by our standards but I'm sure they look at how relaxed we are with our laws and enforcement of our laws and think we're ridiculous. In 2022 Indonesia's murder rate was .3 per 100,000 people. The US murder rate was 6.3 per 100,000 people.

You can come to the US and make a mockery out of our laws but it's not like that in many other places in the world. I feel terrible for him and his family but he brought it on himself.
 
I didn't need to, I saw Midnight Express.
I've been to that prison. Really, I was stationed in Turkey and it was a tourist destination for us GI's, just to see it at least from the outside. I've seen the inside of the stockade of Ft Lewis too, and hoo boy were my guys happy to see me! (Because if I was there, it meant I was bringing you home.)
 
So what action does Malaysia take against Thailand for knowingly shipping drugs?

Thailand could have warned the buyer. You know like all export packages to Malaysia may be subject to search.

Just saying a young life and family will be permanently destroyed over a very stupid and ignorant action of a kid who fafo.

As a parent this was tough to see (potentially put to death) especially being gummies involved, which Americans practically dismiss here. I'm having a hard time comprehending the amount of trouble he's in.
A 34 year old is still a kid?
 
I have traveled the world. Rule #1 is follow local laws. I feel bad for the guy, but what're ya gonna do
 
It's ridiculous by our standards but I'm sure they look at how relaxed we are with our laws and enforcement of our laws and think we're ridiculous. In 2022 Indonesia's murder rate was .3 per 100,000 people. The US murder rate was 6.3 per 100,000 people.

You can come to the US and make a mockery out of our laws but it's not like that in many other places in the world. I feel terrible for him and his family but he brought it on himself.
I agree. The laws may be especially strict but they believe that's preferable to having millions of homeless and drug addled citizens wasting finite resources.
 
It's ridiculous by our standards but I'm sure they look at how relaxed we are with our laws and enforcement of our laws and think we're ridiculous. In 2022 Indonesia's murder rate was .3 per 100,000 people. The US murder rate was 6.3 per 100,000 people.

You can come to the US and make a mockery out of our laws but it's not like that in many other places in the world. I feel terrible for him and his family but he brought it on himself.

That's the cost of freedom, and I say that without judgment one way or the other. One of those freedoms is the freedom that the Supreme Court says is afforded by the Second Amendment. 80% of US murders involve guns. (Presumably some material percentage of those also involve drugs.)

Personally, I wouldn't want to live somewhere with a government as repressive as Indonesia's, even though I'd expect to be able to avoid doing stupid stuff such as vandalizing cars and importing THC gummies.
 
Can almost guarantee that the “laws are laws” folks here would be singing a completely different tune if one of their adult children got caught breaking a foreign law.

The mental gymnastics would be olympic gold level.

Man unknowingly performs mental gymnastics.
 
That's the cost of freedom, and I say that without judgment one way or the other. One of those freedoms is the freedom that the Supreme Court says is afforded by the Second Amendment. 80% of US murders involve guns. (Presumably some material percentage of those also involve drugs.)

Personally, I wouldn't want to live somewhere with a government as repressive as Indonesia's, even though I'd expect to be able to avoid doing stupid stuff such as vandalizing cars and importing THC gummies.

Saudi Arabia's got a pretty low crime rate too. I'm not dying to move there.
 
It is delusional to write scripts for other countries about what is "fair". People who travel even in this country have to do such things as take off their shoes, have their luggage searched etc. I not only feel bad for people who fall into these situations but it is terrifying what can happen to even in the wrong hood in this country let alone a foreign country jail or prison. We have Mexico right next door and it is about as dangerous as any place on earth. When you become an adult you need to act responsibly and that often means don't even go there let alone have drugs sent to you. Times have changed.
 
That's the cost of freedom, and I say that without judgment one way or the other. One of those freedoms is the freedom that the Supreme Court says is afforded by the Second Amendment. 80% of US murders involve guns. (Presumably some material percentage of those also involve drugs.)

Personally, I wouldn't want to live somewhere with a government as repressive as Indonesia's, even though I'd expect to be able to avoid doing stupid stuff such as vandalizing cars and importing THC gummies.
I wouldn't want to live there either but I respect their laws.
 
I wish we had a death penalty for heroin and fentanyl selling / trafficking.
 
132 pieces of cannabis candies or 38 ounces (nearly 3 pounds) is some serious weight even here. Even if he was stupid he knew what he was doing in that Country and the seriousness of the consequences.

Still a horrible situation though that appears hopeless.
 
You have to be olympic level stupid to not know Indonesia has incredibly strict drug laws. The dude is 34, there’s really no excuse.
Played at Oklahoma State and Utah State. Didn't say anything about going to school, perhaps he can't read? :eek:

PS the article says they were Delta 9 THC gummies, which you can buy legally in CT outside dispensaries under a certain concentration.
 
There's no way he wouldn't have heard not to do it. It's not a matter of him having to research laws lmao
 
He got released by his team immediately so obviously it's a league rule as one would expect.
 

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