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Three Brits are facing the death penalty after being accused of smuggling nearly a kilogram of cocaine into Indonesia in Angel Delight sachets. Jonathan Christopher Collyer, 38, and Lisa
Ellen Stocker, 39, were arrested in Bali on February 1 after being stopped by customs at the X-ray machine. It detected suspicious items in their luggage disguised as food packages, said
prosecutor I Made Dipa Umbara. The accused drug smugglers were ushered into the courtroom, each clad in bright red waistcoats that defendants are forced to wear during trial proceedings in
Indonesia. Mr Umbara told the District Court in Denpasar that a lab test result confirmed that 10 sachets of Angel Delight powdered dessert mix in Collyer's luggage combined with seven
similar sachets in his partner's suitcase contained 993.56 grams of cocaine, worth an estimated six billion rupiah (£272,000). Police later arrested Phineas Ambrose Float, 31, after a
controlled operation which saw the other two suspects hand the drug to him in a hotel car park in Denpasar. He is being tried separately. As he was led to face the drug trafficking charges,
Float told journalists gathered to "f**k off". He arrived at Bali's Denpasar Central Court in a prison van, with his wrists in shackles, wearing a red prison vest over a white
shirt. Walking to a holding cell, the Brit hurled abuse at the gathered members of the media and was pictured in court smiling at Collyer. The drugs were flown into Indonesia from England
with a transit in the Doha international airport in Qatar, Mr Umbara said. The group managed to slip past Indonesian authorities twice before, but were caught on their third attempt, said
Ponco Indriyo, the deputy director of the Bali Police Narcotics Unit. The charges against the group were read out in court before a panel of three judges adjourned the trial until June 10 -
when the court will hear witness testimony. Float had previously been jailed in the UK for armed robbery and drug-dealing. Back in 2012, Float - then aged 19 - was sentenced to 12 months
behind bars after being caught with mephedrone hidden in his sock. He had been attempting to enter the Sugar Mill nightclub in Hull city centre when bouncers stopped him at the door and
conducted a random search. He had secreted 35 bags of the Class B drug, better known as M-Cat or Meow Meow, in his sock, which had a combined street value of £216. He also had £105 in cash
on him. When he was arrested, he was heard telling police: "It's only a bit of M-Cat." Float, who was of no fixed address at the time, refused to give a saliva sample for
police to test for drugs, and later pleaded guilty at Hull Crown Court to possession with intent to supply a Class B controlled drug and failing to provide a sample on suspicion of taking a
Class A drug. He was still on licence after being released from prison halfway through his sentence for armed robbery, and was told to go back to jail to serve the remainder, along with 12
months for the drugs charges. According to data by the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections', around 530 people, including 96 foreigners, are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for
drug-related crimes. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime says the country is a major drug-smuggling hotspot despite having some of the strictest drug laws in the world - partly because
international drug gangs target its young population. Those convicted face lengthy prison sentences or, in some cases, execution by firing squad. The last executions of an Indonesian and
three foreigners were carried out in July 2016. Brit Lindsay Sandiford was arrested in Indonesia in 2012 when 3.8 kilograms of cocaine was discovered stuffed inside the lining of her luggage
at Bali's airport. Now aged 69, Sandiford has been on death row for more than a decade. Her death sentence was upheld by Indonesia's highest court in 2013. AKBP Ponco Indriyo,
Bali Police Deputy Director of Drug Investigation, said at the time: "The drugs carried by the couple were cocaine weighing 994.56 grams. The drugs were brought from England via the
Doha International Airport in Qatar, then to Indonesia. The method of concealment is to put the drugs, packed in food packaging, in a suitcase. The drugs were to be sold on Bali island, but
were intercepted by customs and police officers." Meanwhile, The Mirror can reveal that Stocker has been transferred to Bali's Kerobokan jail - the same hell-hole jail where
pensioner Sandiford has spent more than 12 years awaiting execution for smuggling cocaine. A source said: "Stocker was moved to Kerobokan and placed in isolation as all new prisoners.
Over recent weeks she has slowly been released into mainstream jail life and is due to be assigned a room. It means Sandiford has a new country person."