VIDEO: Donna Nelson is serving six years in a Japanese prison, where she spends more than 23 hours a day in solitary confinement.
Donna Nelson is serving six years in a Japanese prison, where she spends more than 23 hours a day in solitary confinement.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

AU Financial Review
4 days ago
- AU Financial Review
Lex Greensill ‘slippery and prone to lying', court told
London | The former head of SoftBank's Vision Fund described financier Lex Greensill as 'slippery and prone to lying', according to correspondence disclosed in a complex $US440 million London court battle between the Japanese conglomerate and a fund of the defunct bank Credit Suisse. Rajeev Misra made the comment in an email to a colleague at SoftBank, whose funds were a big investor in Lex Greensill's eponymous lending company before its collapse in 2021 triggered a sprawling political and financial scandal.


Perth Now
31-05-2025
- Perth Now
No clubs, no worries as prodigy makes US Open move
After surviving a real-life nightmare, American golf prodigy Amari Avery has Australian Gabriela Ruffels to thank for being in the thick of the mix at the US Women's Open in Wisconsin. Avery had to borrow Ruffels' clubs for the second round following a frightening midnight mix-up after an intruder tried to break in to her rental home near Milwaukee. The 20-year-old former junior world champion was forced to hastily pack up all her gear in the middle of the night and book into a hotel. Unfortunately, Avery's boyfriend was using the same type of travel bag and flew back to Los Angeles with her clubs on Friday morning (Saturday AEST). In one of golf's wildest tales, the blunder left Avery needing to use Ruffels' clubs, and even the hat off the Australian's head. Ruffels had missed the cut following her morning round before Avery proceeded to defy the odds and climb into contention at the year's second major. With consecutive birdies at the 14th and 15th holes, her fifth and sixth of the day after teeing off on No.10, Avery surged to three under for the championship. She dropped a shot on her 12th hole but was only six strokes off the lead, tied for 20th at two under with Australian stars Minjee Lee and Hannah Green, when a storm forced the suspension of play. Avery will return to the course, possibly with her own equipment, hunting down Japanese leader Mao Saigo when her boyfriend's mother flies back with her clubs on Saturday.


7NEWS
26-05-2025
- 7NEWS
Spotlight investigation into ‘Love Mules' leads team to Japan to speak to Donna Nelson
Watch, wallet, coins, phone. I empty my pockets in front of a wary prison guard and put them into a small locker. I look around. The inside of this mega prison in Chiba Japan looks like the outside. Grey, bleak, cold and uninviting. I'm standing with Kristal Hilaire and she's nervous. She hasn't seen her mother Donna Nelson in months, and she's not sure what she will find on the other side of the glass. Donna Nelson is 58 years old. She's smart, articulate, and has a busy professional life. One year she even ran as a federal candidate for the greens party. She has five strong daughters and a solid family structure, weekend barbeques, birthdays and lots of grandkids. So how did she get arrested arriving in Tokyo with two kilograms of methamphetamine or ICE in her suitcase? That's why I'm here in Chiba Prison to find out. We are ushered into a small cold concrete room, white walls and fluro lights. It's divided by a glass wall – and on the other side is Donna Nelson. If I didn't know I was going to see her, I might have told them they brought the wrong person. Compared to photo's I've seen she's lost at least 30 kilograms. She's gaunt in the face, her clothes are hanging off her. But the worst thing is her voice. Thin and raspy, I have trouble hearing what she is saying through the glass. She explains it's the first time she has used her voice in months. Since she's been in this prison she's been instructed not to speak, even to the guards and is not allowed to mix with the other prisoners. Even her visit to the shower block every third day is by herself. Donna Nelson has been in solitary confinement for two years. Surely somewhere there's an international law against that. The details of how she ended up here are extraordinary. An online relationship with a man known as Kelly for two and a half years. They spoke every day on video calls and Kelly even spoke to her daughters. A relationship just like any other, two people seemingly in love trying to work out a way to be together. I have seen the messages. Thousands and thousands of them. A wedding was planned, wedding rings organised. There was just one small favour: Could she pick up a suitcase for him in Laos on the way to meet him for a holiday in Japan. It was for his new fashion store opening soon. The one he's been speaking about for two years. Donna Nelson, dizzy with excitement, flying business class to finally meet her fiancée in Japan didn't even think twice about the suitcase. She just picked it up and added her clothes to it. What she didn't know was there was two kilograms of crystal methamphetamine or ICE packed into the lining. Arrested in Tokyo airport and thrown into prison to await her court hearing, it took her over a week to work out it was her fiancée who set her up. The similarities between the case of Donna Nelson and that of Veronica Watson are incredible. Veronica Watson, a 59-year-old grandmother of nine, was also looking for love online and she found it in the form of a handsome American soldier. They planned to marry and move to the United States together and after speaking constantly online for more than two years, he asks for one small favour: Can she fly to Brazil and pick up some investment documents for him. It was an investment that would fund their future life together and her first time out of the country. The exotic destination of Brazil. A chance to finally meet her online boyfriend… the lure was too much. Veronica's bag was loaded with 1.5 kilograms of cocaine, tucked into a hidden compartment. Veronica was thrown into jail, it was overcrowded and dangerous. She bursts into tears whenever you ask her about it. So, what can police do about it? The answer is not much. How do they find the scammer? How can they connect him to the bag and the drugs? Which country is he even in? The truth is – they don't even try. No wonder it's a growing scam, in many respects it is the perfect crime.