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Adult content creator Bonnie Blue, real name Tia Billinger, is back in the headlines — this time in London. After her notorious Bali “Bang Bus” stunt and a $13 fine, she’s now facing a criminal charge in the UK for outraging public decency following a viral incident police say occurred right outside the Indonesian Embassy. Law&Crime’s Jesse Weber breaks down Bonnie’s latest brush with authorities with international law attorney David Tafuri.
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Yes, I got a rest in body for film and film.
So it's about time it came to the embassy so they could watch it in person.
She was arrested in Bali, deported, and then banned for a decade.
That should have been the end of the story, right?
Nope, instead Bonnie Bloom is accused of showing up outside the Indonesian Embassy in London
and sparked a whole new criminal case and a possible jail sentence.
What did she do?
And how did this spiral from what a $13 fine to now a charge in the UK?
We're going to break it down.
Welcome to Sidebar presented by law on crime.
I'm Jesse Weber.
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I'm going to be packing and then heading back to immigration.
All immigration I want to do is keep interrogating me.
I've told them they're obsessed with me at this point.
Yes, I got a rest in the body.
I can feel men who are looking at me.
So it's about time.
It came to the embassy so they could watch it in person.
You remember her?
That's Bonnie Blue, real name, Tia Billinger,
the British adult content creator who went to Bali,
got herself arrested on the bang bus, stared down,
what, a 15-year potential prison sentence,
and by the way, an Indonesian prison,
and then walked away with a $12, $13 fine in a decade-long ban from the country.
We thought that was it.
We thought that that chapter was over, right?
She got deported, she went home, and to the story.
Except guess what?
According to authorities, it wasn't.
Because according to police, she then decided,
right after coming back from Indonesia,
she allegedly decided to pay a visit to the Indonesian Embassy in London,
surrounded by mass men holding their flag,
the Indonesian flag, and allegedly mimicking a sex act right outside the gate.
Now spoiler alert, they didn't love that.
Because now she has been charged with the crime
about raging public decency by London police.
She could potentially face up to six months in prison,
and she's also doing court next month.
So now the question is, what is going on here?
She's back in the news we got to talk about.
Hello guys, I am actually pregnant,
so Bonnie Blue's brief admission turns out it was actually a success.
I guess I got to take a step back, right?
Because if you're just joining us and you have no idea who that is,
or what a breeding mission means, let's buckle up here.
Okay, you're about to learn a lot.
That voice belongs to Bonnie Blue, real name Tia Billinger.
She's a 26 year old British adult content creator,
and if you haven't heard of her yet, here's the short version.
Okay, she makes her money online, she travels the world.
It appears that she has a very specific talent,
forgetting herself into trouble in countries with very strict laws,
and the trouble started late last year.
November of 2025, we covered this year on sidebar.
Bonnie Blue lands in Bali, Indonesia.
Now, if you know anything about Indonesia, you know they take morality
and anti-pornography laws incredibly seriously,
like decades in prison seriously.
Now, Bonnie rolls in with a truck, a literal truck, by the way.
She brought it, she bought it for like about 1,200 bucks,
painted it blue, slapped the logo on the side that said,
and I kid you not, Bonnie Blue's bang bus.
Hey parents, my man, I thought I was gonna pick you spoons up.
I wasn't lying.
Bonnie, Bonnie Blue, say, Bonnie Blue.
Hi, Bonnie!
Bonnie, Bonnie Blue!
Bonnie Blue!
I got them, really don't.
Now, Bonnie, Bonnie school is about this year.
For sure, for sure.
Yeah, school is, that's what they call the annual weeklong party,
where Australian high school graduates celebrate finishing school.
So, super young.
And, but adults, super young, not minors.
And, Bonnie's plan was to drive that bus around Bali,
pick up guys, and let's just say make content.
Spoiler alert again, the locals noticed, not too happy.
December 5th, police raid a studio in an area called Pareranon.
Apologies if I mispronounced it.
They see his cameras, phones, condoms, USB drives, the whole kit.
They detained Bonnie Blue in three other men,
so two British, one Australian,
and another 14 guys are questioned and ultimately released.
Now, initially, it's pretty terrifying, right?
We're talking about Indonesia, their anti-pronography laws.
Conviction can mean up to 15 years in prison,
and the headlines, you know, right for themselves.
But then, something happens.
Police start going through the footage,
and according to the international business times in the mirror,
they realize something.
There's no nudity, there's no genitalia,
there's no explicit sex acts, actually being filmed,
at least nothing they could prove was made for public distribution.
And a police spokesperson actually told the press then,
quote, when they were raided, they were making collab content
about a game where the winner would sleep with Bonnie Blue,
no pornographic activities or acts have been found
in the collaborative content.
So, in the end, there was no pornography charges.
Now, that doesn't mean that she walks free,
because now immigration steps in.
And their problem isn't what she was filming,
it's that she was filming it all.
She was an Indonesia on a tourist visa.
You're not allowed to work on a tourist visa,
driving around in a bang bus, making commercial content.
That's basically work.
It might be with me for a trial.
I've been just working up and I've got 20 minutes.
I really wanted to buy my schooltees t-shirt.
The family have strongly said, don't.
That video was posted the morning of her court date, December 12th.
So, she walks into the Denpasar District Court
with the three guys who got arrested alongside her.
And here's where it gets almost comical.
So, the judge finds her, not for pornography,
not even for visa violations, at least not directly.
She gets fined for a traffic violation,
because the bus, it was untaxed.
It was illegally repainted.
The driver didn't have a proper license.
And the fine was 200,000 Indonesian rupiah.
It's about $13 US dollars.
I wanted what deportation upside.
Wow, this is it.
So, she pays the $13, but immigration isn't done.
They deport her.
They kick her out of the country,
and they slap her with a 10-year ban
from ever coming back to Indonesia.
Their official statement says her activities were,
and I quote, inconsistent with the government's efforts
to maintain Bali's quality tourism image,
and that she showed a lack of respect
for local cultural values.
So, Bonnie Bloop gets on a plane.
She flies home to the UK.
And for about, I don't know, maybe 48 hours?
That's it.
Stories over.
Here's past 30 minutes.
We can't eat her.
It was the reason she served her investigation,
but they've got absolutely equal to 11.
So, she and we never bat her on battalion.
The immigration in Bali.
December 15th, same week she gets back,
she allegedly shows up outside the Indonesian Embassy in London.
It's about a mile from Buckingham Palace.
She's surrounded by men, or appears to be surrounded by men
in hoods and masks,
and she's holding an Indonesian flag,
pinter, skirt, trailing on the ground,
and she allegedly proceeds to mimic a sex act
right there on the street.
Yes, I got arrested in Bali for filming.
So, it's about time it came to the Embassy
so they could watch in person.
The video goes viral.
Indonesian notices.
Their embassy apparently files a formal complaint
with UK authorities, and then what happens.
Now, she's being charged by London's Metropolitan Police
without raging public decency.
And just so we're clear what that means,
I looked it up on the website,
the Royal Crown Prosecution website.
It is a common law offense in the UK.
It covers any act in public that's
lewd, obscene, or disgusting.
The kind of thing that falls outside the normal exposure laws
but still crosses a line.
And if convicted, she's looking it up to six months in prison.
And maybe what's known as an unlimited fine,
or a major fine, or both.
Her next court date is set for April 22nd
at Westminster Magistrates Court.
So now we've got big questions.
How does a $13 traffic fine in Bali turn into a possible jail
sentence in London?
Will evidence from there come into this case?
What happens when a diplomatic complaint becomes a criminal case?
What does this mean for someone whose entire brand
is pushing boundaries?
Could she end up behind bars?
We're going to bring in somebody who actually understands
how this works, but first, okay, here's the thing.
To understand this, to try to at least understand this anyway,
you got to understand who Bonnie Blue actually is.
Not the headlines, the person.
And luckily, she documents like everything.
And the girl that rage-based, the one that takes your son's virginity
and has no issue making your husband cheat.
That's how she introduces herself to the world.
26 years old, real name Tia Belinger,
worth reportedly around three million pounds,
and her whole brand is pushing buttons, testing limits,
seeing what happens.
And here's what happened in Bali.
Just a must-seem tear, picked out an apple outfit,
and headed my territory interrogation.
Immigration to be interrogated.
Funny guys, one girl.
You best believe that video's going to get uploaded
as soon as I'm back.
That's her talking about her Bali interrogation,
phone sees, facing years in prison, and she's laughing.
This is Bonnie Blue arriving for questioning
at the Immigration Office in Bali.
Now, according to the report on the scene,
when asked by reporters if she intended
to make more explicit content in Bali,
she replied, subscribe, and you'll find out.
All right, so whenever I talk about international issues,
apparently whenever I talk about Bonnie Blue,
I bring on international law attorney, David Deferri,
to help sort out what all of this means.
David, thanks for taking the time yet again
to talk about this.
How serious is this?
Well, it's probably not too serious that my expectation
is that she will probably be found guilty,
or perhaps plead guilty.
But the sentence could be up to six months in prison.
I don't expect that they would go to that maximum for her.
But I do think that a judge or a jury,
and it could be either one that decides her case,
will find that she did this intentionally,
and that she was looking for a public reaction.
And so they may punish her appropriately
to try to make sure she doesn't do it again.
What is appropriately?
And why do you think it wouldn't be six months?
I think it would not be six months
because I think it's the first time she's been arrested
in the UK for something like this,
and she's the first time offender.
And also, this is, you know,
although it is, you know, public indecency,
and it could cause public outrage,
especially what she did in this instance,
I think that this is still a minor crime.
It's not a serious crime.
No one was harmed.
There's no specific victim of the crime.
And that's why I don't think she'll get the six months,
even though the crime carries a sentence up to six months.
And you believe that she would be found guilty
or there's not really much of a defense here
because I'm going to read you again
what it said from the Crown Prosecution website.
It is an offensive common law to do in public
any act of a lude, obscene, or disgusting nature
that outrages public decency.
This offense should only be considered
if the incident falls outside the statutory offenses,
for example, if it is not possible
to prove the mental element required for an exposure offense,
or exceptionally, if the offense merits a higher penalty,
than that available in relation to the statutory offense.
A lot of legalese there, but you saw the video, right?
It's not like she's, I don't know, running around naked.
It's not like she's actually performing a sex act in public.
She mimicked a sex act, allegedly mimicked a sex act several times,
outside the embassy.
You have all those men in the masks.
Is it rise to the level of this offense?
Yeah, I'm not sure that's going to depend on what the judge,
if it's tried by a judge or the jury, if it's tried
in the Crown's court by a jury, believes.
I think that they will see this as intentional.
There wasn't a mistake here.
She wasn't doing something in public.
She didn't realize people were watching.
She filmed it intentionally.
She was surrounded by men in masks,
which creates a sort of imposing image in the video.
And so, again, it's going to be up to the jury and obscenity
is what people think it is and what it might be.
It's just not clear.
And I mean, she allegedly did it right after she got out of Indonesia,
where she was facing potentially significant prison time.
I mean, if these allegations are true,
that's like pretty bold of her to do this.
And I agree, like, if she did take this to trial,
she was found guilty or she does take a deal.
I do wonder how much the Indonesian case is going to factor into this.
So, let's talk about it.
Is it going to be any evidence from what happened in Indonesia?
Going to factor into this?
Are any of the Indonesian authorities going to testify in this case?
How much do you think that will affect this particular case?
Because I think it goes to the idea of her alleged motive, right?
Her alleged intent here.
These are all good questions that I've been thinking about.
What's surprising about her actions is that she actually got off in Indonesia
and got pretty lucky because she could have been prosecuted in Indonesia
for potentially more serious crimes,
including it's a crime as we discussed last time,
to make a pornographic video in Indonesia.
And in this case, she was in Bali.
And Bali has a very conservative culture.
And so they could have prosecuted her for that,
although they found that they determined that she wasn't making any pornographic materials yet
when they raided her home.
And that's why they decided not to prosecute her for that.
They did charge her with a traffic crime because of her bus or van
that she was driving around in Bali, again, a very minor offense.
And she was ultimately deported on the grounds that she was misusing her visa.
She was there on a tourist visa, but she was engaging in commercial activities, filming videos.
So that was, is basically a compromised position that the Indonesian government took.
They didn't want a prosecutor.
They probably didn't want all the attention of prosecuting a tourist.
When tourism is so important in Bali, but they wanted to make her leave and send her a message.
And so they used the visa issue to deport her.
And so she now goes right in their face, goes to the embassy,
does potentially lute act in front of the embassy.
She's basically, you know, in some ways,
instigating Indonesia to take further action.
They did.
They did the appropriate thing, which is not take action directly against her.
They reported her to the police in the UK.
They don't think what happened in Indonesia is particularly relevant to the crime that she's been accused of in the UK.
That crime is just about, did you do the act in public?
Is it offensive?
Is it lured?
And not what has happened before in another country, although that is some context and background for why she did it.
And it does indicate that she was acting with some vendetta against Indonesia.
Because she could have been charged with this, even if she had never gone to Indonesia, you know.
Miske this, why did take a minute before the charge, right?
So the Metropolitan Police say the charge relates to an incident in Great Peter Street,
SW1 on Monday, 15th of December.
An investigation took place and a woman in her 20s was interviewed under caution on Tuesday, the second of February.
A referral was made to the Crown Prosecution Service, which subsequently authorized the above charge.
So it's not like it's just happened yesterday.
You're talking about something allegedly happened in December.
Now we're all on the way in March.
What, what do you think happened there?
Yeah, apparently she was interviewed in February, as you said.
And if it was her, if that's the interview, I imagine was her.
Yeah, they said they described a woman in her 20s, but it sounds like in some of the media is reporting that it was, in fact, her.
You know, the wheels of justice can turn very slowly here in America, same with in the UK.
My guess is also this was a confounding issue for the UK.
Maybe they wouldn't normally charge someone, but she's gotten so much attention and she keeps doing this and she keeps pushing the envelope.
And so they may have decided that they need to charge her to prevent further future, lewd acts in public.
So it also says Tia Billinger of Drecott in Derbyshire was charged via postal requisition on Monday, the 16th of March.
She will appear at Westminster Magistrates Court on Wednesday, the 22nd of April.
What, what happens next in this case?
I mean, how does it work exactly?
Because I know that the UK justice system is a little bit different than we have here, right?
In terms of you can have an arrest without charges, right?
I think that's the way it works.
But here it sounds like she's being charged.
I mean, what happens next to this court hearing?
How does the process work moving forward?
So first of all, to break down what you said, I think she was received her arrest warrant by mail.
I think that's what the postal indication is.
And so she wasn't physically arrested and she has a date to report to court on April 22nd.
It's not clear to me whether it's going to be a magistrate court or a crown court.
It's a magistrate court.
She'll likely be tried by a judge or a panel of judges.
If it's a crown court, then it would be a jury.
And so they will probably in this first hearing, set the case for trial.
And also she would have a chance to plead guilty or not guilty.
Yeah, how quickly could a trial happen if you know?
I don't know.
It's going to take at least several months perhaps longer.
Could she be restricted from traveling?
Well, it's possible.
They could probably take her passport away if they wanted to make sure that she shows up for her court hearings.
Maybe given, you know, terms by the judge on which allow her to remain outside of prison while her case is pending.
But those terms could insist that she's not permitted to travel.
They may not take her passport, but they may give her those terms or they may take her passport to ensure it's very difficult for her to travel.
And if she were to hypothetically commit any other lute act or kind of act of public decency, moving forward after this charge, how does that affect her case?
I think it would just probably further entrench the prosecutors in their position that they need to pursue this and pursue the highest penalty possible.
That could influence, you know, whether she's sent to jail or not, if she's engaged in further acts, because then it would show that she's not remorseful that she didn't learn a lesson as a result of her arrest.
Any new act would likely be charged separately and it would result in a separate trial.
David Teferri, thanks for making sense of this. I can't believe we're talking about it again, but, you know, quite a development for her.
But we'll see which way this court case, this criminal case proceeds. Thanks for taking the time, sir.
Sure, I feel like it won't be the last time we talk about Bonnie Blue.
We shall see.
And that's all we have for you right now here on Sidebar.
Thank you so much for joining us and, as always, please subscribe on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, wherever she gets your podcasts.
You can also check us out on NBC's Peacock as well.
If you want to follow me, X Instagram, my news nation show, Jesse Weber Live Monday through Friday, 11 p.m. Eastern.
I'll see you next time, everybody.
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