"Cocaine Babe" Who Shared Drug-Smuggling Trip On Social Media Convicted

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Melina Roberge (left) with her accomplice Isabelle Lagace, who was jailed last year
A Canadian woman who tried to smuggle millions of dollars worth of cocaine
into Australia has been convicted and sentenced to eight years behind bars.Melina Roberge, 24, was sentenced Wednesday after pleading guilty
to smuggling 95 kilos (209 pounds) of the drug into the Sydney Harbour in 2016, following an exotic weeks-long cruise that she and an
accomplice documented on social media.Roberge and her accomplice, Isabelle Lagace, had turned their Instagram accounts into travel diaries
in the summer of 2016, posting glamorous photos and boasting about their intercontinental adventures on the MS Sea Princess, a cruise ship
that docked in 17 ports in 11 countries before it finally stopped in Australia.They captured their first photo bomb, in New York's Times
Square, and their first Irish coffee in Cobh, a seaport town in Ireland
They showed off their tans on a Bermuda beach, where one of them wrote in a caption: "Gone to a place very peaceful - leave a message after
the tone." They rode recreational vehicles over the desert sand
They got tribal tattoos
They made new friends
Then, they were arrested.Roberge - who became known as "Cocaine Babe" in headlines - will serve at least four years and nine months, without
eligibility for parole; she will eventually be deported to her home country, the AP reported."She was seduced by lifestyle and the
opportunity to post glamorous Instagram photos from around the world," Judge Kate Traill said in New South Wales state District Court,
according to The Associated Press
"She wanted to be the envy of others
I doubt she is now.Roberge's Instagram account disappeared following her arrest.But before the drug bust, she had written: "Traveling is one
thing
But traveling with an open mind, ready to taste everything, see everything, learn everything and get yourself out of your comfort zone
is probably the best therapy and lesson ever
I used to be afraid to get out of my little town and now I feel like I don't want to see that little town anymore cause it's beautiful out
there and it's sooo worth it."Upon arrival in Australia, border agents searched the ship, discovering 35 kilograms in the women's cabin and
60 kilograms a cabin belonging to Andre Tamin, a wealthy Canadian man in his mid-60s whom Roberge described as her "sugar daddy," according
to the AP.The three were charged with importing a commercial quantity of cocaine, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison,
authorities said.Late last year, Lagace, 29, was sentenced to 7-and-a-half years in prison
Tamin is scheduled to be sentenced in October, according to the AP.The two women were packing so much cocaine in their suitcases that, the
Australian Border Force said, they "did not have much room for clean underwear or spare toothbrushes."Roberge told the court that she was an
escort and met Tamin on the job in 2015
She said he invited her to go on a drug-smuggling trip to Morocco the next year.She realized, she told the court, that she had put