NST Online
Sunday, July 06, 2008, 05.48 AM
World News
   
eats
Announcement
 
More...
More...
More...
 
 
 

NST Online » Frontpage
2008/05/06
Love, deception and drugs...
By : JENNIFER GOMEZ and DHARSHINI BALAN
Email to friend Email to Friend         Print article Print Article

I may have become a drug mule, says one woman who nearly fell victim to a sweet-talking foreigner who romanced her, proposed marriage and a trip to Spain...'
I may have become a drug mule, says one woman who nearly fell victim to a sweet-talking foreigner who romanced her, proposed marriage and a trip to Spain...'

A woman has come forward with an account of how she was almost duped by a foreigner into leaving her job and following him to Europe after a whirlwind romance. She relates her tale to JENNIFER GOMEZ and DHARSHINI BALAN after reading reports of women being conned into being drug mules


The <i>New Sunday Times</i> report on May 4.
The New Sunday Times report on May 4.
PENELOPE Mukan (not her real name), a 33-year old senior executive, met an American named William on a popular online dating site two years ago.

William claimed to be a bassist with a popular 1990s rock band. He sent her photographs of himself, his parents and friends. The "relationship" grew fast and within weeks, he told Penelope he wanted to meet her.

"I was sceptical at first because things were happening too fast. My friends also became worried when they realised I was obsessed with him," she said.

William arrived in Kuala Lumpur on the eve of Valentine's Day 2006, and the first thing that struck Penelope was that he looked nothing like the photographs he had sent.
"He said someone else's face was superimposed on his for a promotional shot of the band and I left it at that."

William was a fast worker. The next day, armed with a diamond ring, he proposed at dinner.

"The following weeks were incredible. I was madly in love and introduced him to my parents."

Her friends, however, were sceptical and shocked when they heard that Penelope had said "yes".

While Penelope was busy making wedding plans, William said he had to return to the US to finish some work.

Doubts crept in when she found out that he was flying to the United States via Manila on a budget airline.

"I checked his passport but he became defensive. Again, I left the matter alone and he went off.

"A few days later, he contacted me and said he had booked tickets for a holiday in Ibiza, Spain. I was excited because Ibiza is known as 'the' place to party."

Then came a request from William, which set off the alarm bells.

"He asked me to meet him in Europe and then we would fly off to Ibiza. But the route he chose was suspicious."

The tickets were for KL-Rome-Amsterdam-Ibiza-Amsterdam. The return leg to Kuala Lumpur was left open.

Penelope was ready to resign from her well-paid job in Kuala Lumpur until she told her friends about her grand dreams and they "knocked some sense into my head".

"They told me about cases of human trafficking and drug mules.

"And when they saw the roundabout way of getting to Ibiza, one of my friends tore up the tickets."

The friends did not stop there. They started checking William's background and even accessed the Interpol website.

At this juncture, a shell-shocked Penelope did her own checking.

She managed to track down William's mother to a farm in the US.

His mother told Penelope that her son was not in any rock band and that he was on a business trip to Manila. She also knew nothing about the wedding.

Penelope then sent a card to the recording studio which William purportedly "owned" in the US. It came back with a "return to sender" stamp.

The final blow came when Penelope took the diamond ring to a jeweller and was told it was a fake.

"I contacted him on his mobile and he admitted that it was all a hoax. I just hung up on him."

The incident happened less than two years ago and until today, Penelope is still in shock, wondering what would have happened had she gone on the trip.

"I may well have been another Malaysian woman locked up in a foreign jail."

What frightened her even more was the fact that William was spotted in Seremban several weeks ago, having a drink with a woman in a restaurant...

 
RELATED STORIES




School Sponsorship Programme
Picture OTHER STORIES

Picture MOST READ TODAY!

Dewan Rakyat







TEXT ADS
US pre-emptive political meddling
ORIFERA : Nature's Gift To Better Health
3000 MB Webhosting RM80/Year Only !
Advertise With Us Here!

WEEKEND READ


FIERY, shiny and imported by the tonne -- that's how Malaysians like the RM3.6 million worth of cili padi that makes its way into sizzling sambals here every month.
Spotlight: No gimmicks, just serve the people

At the parliamentary debate on the government’s efforts to address inflation on Monday, sole Independent MP Datuk Paduka Ibrahim Ali stood up and really let rip; firing salvos at the government and opposition benches. ANIZA DAMIS and ELIZABETH JOHN speak to Ibrahim
Can Malaysia go nuclear?

Nuclear power is no longer a bad word in light of the skyrocketing price of fuel and depleting world oil reserves. But the question is, should we and can we go nuclear? NURRIS ISHAK and CHAI MEI LING write.
MY INTEREST
Beauty BEAUTY
Beauty ASK LAURA MERCIER
Tech TECH
Tech NOW & THEN: Smoke signal, anyone?
Music/Games MUSIC/GAMES
Music/Games Splendour of chamber, Egyptian music
Movies/Theatre MOVIES/THEATRE
Movies/Theatre Tok Perak lacks drama
CBT MOTORING
Motoring Volkswagen bags green car award
Fashion FASHION
Fashion Thingamajiggy: Chic Crocs phone case
Health HEALTH
Health Future food trends
Deco DECO
Deco An old-fashioned getaway
Travel Times TRAVEL
Travel Thailand on a shoe-string budget
Food FOOD
Goodbites Chicken rice, Thai style

corporate info About NST | Contact Us | Advertising | Subscribe Online | Privacy Policy | How To Get There
Write to the Editor for editorial enquiry or Sales Department for sales and advertising enquiry. Copyright © 2008 NST Online. All rights reserved.

web stats