Schapelle Corby, whose drug trafficking trial transfixed and divided Australians, was carrying drugs to Bali for her father, according to a new book.
Sins of the Father, by Eamonn Duff, claims Michael Corby was part of a syndicate smuggling hydroponically grown marijuana from Australia to the Indonesian tourist island.
It says Schapelle, who is serving a 20-year sentence after 4.1kg of the drug was found in her boogie board bag at Bali's Denpasar Airport in 2004, willingly took the fall for her father.
Duff, a journalist with Sydney's Sun-Herald newspaper, quotes Malcolm McCauley, a convicted drug trafficker, as saying he had a long-standing arrangement to deliver marijuana from South Australia to Michael Corby's home on Queensland's Gold Coast. Corby - who died of cancer in 2008 - would then send it on a flight to Bali, where corrupt airport officials would pocket a A$1000 ($1302) bribe placed inside.
Schapelle has always maintained her innocence, claiming the drugs were planted by Australian baggage handlers. Before her father died, he admitted being convicted of marijuana possession in the 1970s and said he had faced "half a dozen" drink-driving charges, adding: "Who hasn't?"