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Bonnie Blue’s 30-hour arrest hell – ‘silly’ cops, ‘disgusting’ bogs and ‘fast fingers’

EXCLUSIVE: Infamous Bonnie Blue consistently gets herself in trouble to promote her adult content empire. In Bali where her job is strictly forbidden, she came close to flying too close to the sun

Bonnie Blue has shared the intimate details of her clash with Bali police and almost being locked up in a hellhole prison for the first time. The infamous adult star revealed to the Daily Star she was “feeling physically sick and scared” – something she has not ever admitted to publicly due to her steely persona – when her lawyers told her she faced 50/50 odds of being imprisoned for 15 years.

The 26-year-old travelled to Bali – a Hindu city in the Muslim country of Indonesia – last November with plans of shooting saucy content with teenage Australian men who had just graduated high school. It was a risky move because porn is outlawed in the Southeast Asian country.

The studio Bonnie was working in was raided by police, and 34 people were detained – as the gang got…banged up. The adult star, whose real name is Tia Billinger, faced 30 hours of interrogation and feared for her future before she was eventually deported.

In an exclusive interview with the Daily Star, she said her “quick fingers” prevented the cops from finding a smoking gun. “The police officers raided the studio I was in and found loads of men and just me,” she said. “They thought ‘we have caught her and there is going to be so much evidence here’.

“But, I can be very quick with my fingers to click a delete button. In terms of evidence, they were getting very frustrated because they couldn’t find anything.”

The controversial star – from Stapleford, Nottinghamshire – was taken to a local police station and grilled for 30 hours with only a two-hour kip on an office chair. “I did 30 hours interrogation first”, she said. “That wasn’t prison because I was non-stop being questioned. I got about two hours sleep in an office chair in a corner.

“I didn’t even have the luxury [of a bed]. There were times when I was thinking if I was in a prison cell, at least I would be able to have a blanket and somewhat of a mattress on the floor.”

On what they said to her in those 30 hours, Bonnie said: “They were telling me they had evidence of porn. Asking me what I had been up to and what locations I had been in.

“The questions were very repetitive. They went through my phone and questioned all the videos I had filmed. You could tell they were getting angry quite quickly.”

She added: “The questions were more, what I had been up to and asking if I had filmed porn while I had been there. Going through photos and a lot of solo naked videos, which were on my phone, they all gathered around to watch on repeat.

“They just tried to do anything they could to try and make me feel awkward or embarrassed.” Bonnie added that she didn’t feel embarrassed and even mocked her interrogators’ girlfriends.

“I more just thought, ‘joke’s on you if your girlfriend is at home not looking the way I do’. You are probably never going to be with anyone who looks like me so enjoy watching my videos in the office with your friends because you are banned from watching it at home.”

While the interrogation from the police didn’t faze Bonnie, what her lawyers told her left her rattled. “There were only two hours when I felt scared because my lawyers said it was 50/50 whether I was going to prison,” she said.

“I was aware if I was going to prison, I wouldn’t be having communications with my lawyer or clean water. There is even a series about Bali prisons being considered the worst in the world. I spent two hours feeling physically sick and scared.

“I even asked my stylist to find any comfy clothes I have and bring them to me, and if I am allowed skin care. I was scared but there was nothing I could do at that point.

“Once I got released from the police station and I was able to have communications with back home, I felt better.”

She also insulted the intelligence levels of the police. “A lot of it felt like a kid’s programme being interrogated by them. But it was also scary because they were getting so aggressive and shouting, screaming and being over the top.

“In my head, I was thinking ‘they are so stupid’. How are they police officers. They are kids dressed up. I would pay millions and millions of pounds to buy the CCTV because it would make brilliant TV.”

The toilet facilities also did not meet Bonnie’s standards. “When you ask for toilet paper over there, they say ‘why do you need that?’,” she said.

“Luckily, once the British embassy visited, they gave me some wipes.” She said she had to hold the wipes “by the lid” because the “squatting area” was “covered in urine and poo”.

She said: “It was very dirty, to say the least, smelly and disgusting.”

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On the whole Bali ordeal, Bonnie affirmed it was the “worst situation she had ever been in”.

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