An Australian mother has
issued a desperate warning to other women after travelling to Cambodia on the
promise of love, before unwittingly being used as a drug mule.
Nigerian Precious Chineme
Nwoko, was a member of an international drug syndicate who is spending 27 years
in jail in Cambodia. He was sentenced in 2014 and an attempt by him in 2016 to
get a reprieve failed.
Yoshe Taylor, a 47-year-old
single mother and school teacher, met South African businessman ‘Precious’
through the dating app Tagged.
He was caring and sweet,
with a buff gym body and a broad smile.
Battling depression and
struggling to keep up with mortgage repayments, when her internet boyfriend
offered Ms Taylor the opportunity to fly to Cambodia to meet him she saw it as
the perfect escape.
Instead she ended up
spending six years in one of Cambodia’s worst prisons, having falling victim to
her fraudster boyfriend – a member of a huge international drug syndicate.
‘I had been all by myself
for a long time, four years, just me and the kids,’ she told the ABC’s Australian
Story.
‘I was talking to him for a
long time; I thought I got to know him and he seemed very nice.’
Ms Taylor would often stay
up late at night exchanging messages with Precious.
He would tell her that when
it came to love it was ‘her or nothing’, while also saying he worried about
whether she was sleeping or eating well.
‘You have a busy day in the
morning,’ Ms Taylor’s lover told her.
But Precious was not a
43-year-old businessman from South Africa like he claimed.
In reality he was a
24-year-old Nigerian whose name was Precious Chineme Nwoko.
By the time Ms Taylor
worked this out it was Christmas 2013 and the 41-year-old was locked up inside
the notorious Prey Sar Prison.
Each cell inside the
women’s prison had 99 inmates and not enough beds, meaning many had to sleep
side-by-side on the floor.
She was found guilty of
drug smuggling and was sentenced to 23 years in prison.
But Ms Taylor wasn’t the
only Australian woman being targeted by Precious, who also had a Melbourne
woman in his sights.
Kay Smith had also met the
African scam artist over a dating app and immediately showed off his softer
side, telling her about the orphanage where he volunteered.
‘The kids here are asking
when I will bring my wife too. Almost cried,’ he told her.
Eventually, having gained
Ms Smith’s trust, he also asked him to travel to Cambodia to visit him.
Precious paid for her
flights, passport and accommodation, but said the trip had to be limited to
only four days as he had business to attend to overseas.
‘I was petrified the whole
journey,’ Ms Smith said of her trip but that anxiety subsided when he turned up
at the airport to collect her as promised.
That night they went out
for dinner and asked her to marry him. She said yes.
On the final night of her
whirlwind trip Precious asked Ms Smith to take two laptop bags back to
Australia with her.
Having gone through the
bags and checked the contents, the first moment Ms Smith discovered what was in
them was at customs at Melbourne Airport.
Shocking CCTV footage from
August 29, 2013 shows Ms Smith falling to the floor as customs officers told
her two kilograms of heroin was hidden in the lining of the bag.
‘In the space of four days,
this guy destroyed my entire life, my existence,’ she said.
Ms Smith spent six months
in a maximum security women’s prison in Melbourne and then 18 months on bail
before police dropped the charges against her.
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