Travel

I was dazzled by Dubai. But a tiny mistake left me trapped in hell for two years and heading for a prison where rapes are a ‘daily occurrence’

By Editor,Ruth Bashinsky

Copyright dailymail

I was dazzled by Dubai. But a tiny mistake left me trapped in hell for two years and heading for a prison where rapes are a 'daily occurrence'

Tierra Allen knows what it’s like to have your freedom almost ripped away from you for what may seem like the smallest of offenses.

When she heard about the harrowing case of Mia O’Brien, Allen, a 30-year-old from Houston, Texas, was reminded of her own personal hell in Dubai, one of the world’s richest cities.

O’Brien, 24, was handed 25 years in prison in October 2024 after authorities in the United Arab Emirates found her with 50 grams of cocaine.

The British student’s family said she made a stupid mistake. Now she faces a bleak new reality of decades locked up at Al-Awir prison, where multiple accounts from former inmates have described the conditions as horrific.

Rape inside the jail is an ‘everyday occurrence’ and guards and inmates are involved in violent assaults, a report from Human Rights Watch detailed last year.

The daunting fate Allen narrowly avoided two years ago was eerily similar.

She told the Daily Mail about being stripped of her passport and credit cards, terrified she’d be thrown into the same notorious prison where O’Brien will spend the next two decades of her life.

For four hellish months, Allen had no idea if she would ever see her friends and family again.

The long-haul truck driver and social media influencer known as the ‘Sassy Trucker’ said she was ‘so miserable’ she contemplated suicide. She was miraculously released in August 2023.

Allen had traveled to the UAE in March 2023 to visit her then-boyfriend.

She had been to Dubai six months earlier on a girls’ trip and was excited to return to the city of ultra-modern architecture, luxury shopping and posh hotels.

But her vacation turned into a nightmare when her boyfriend got into a fender bender in a rental car and was arrested for driving without a license.

Following the accident, Allen went to the rental agency to collect her belongings.

When staff refused to hand over her passport and credit cards without a hefty payment, she protested.

A heated exchange followed, and the employee called police. Allen was accused of screaming at the staff.

She was later summoned to the police station. But, thinking it was a prank, she ignored the call.

‘I thought it was a joke and thought the car rental agency was playing tricks on me,’ she recalled.

An officer told her they were opening up a case on her, and she was absolutely stunned.

She went to the jail to check on her boyfriend in an almost catastrophic move.

‘The officer asked if I was Tierra Allen. When I said yes, they told me there was a warrant out for my arrest,’ she said.

Allen was taken into custody and held for hours before being released. Little did she know, this was only the beginning of the ordeal.

She was then banned from leaving the UAE and was threatened with up to two years in prison for the car rental outburst.

Allen even went to the airport to try to book her flight home, and was told she couldn’t.

‘Everything was in Arabic. I felt like I was just signing my life away without fully understanding,’ she said.

For two months, she stayed at her boyfriend’s apartment while he languished in Al-Awir prison.

When he was released, he lost his apartment due to the fallout from his arrest. For several weeks, they bounced between hotels.

All the way from Houston, Allen’s mother contacted Radha Stirling, a UK-based human rights advocate who has helped more than 25,000 foreigners trapped in the UAE. With Stirling’s guidance, Allen’s attorney fought the case.

After about three months of legal wrangling, the charges were dropped and the travel ban was lifted. Allen’s mother then paid a $1,360 fee to recover her daughter’s passport.

In total, Allen spent four months trapped in Dubai before she was able to fly home in late August 2023.

Allen later learned through Stirling that she had been the victim of a common rental car extortion scam.

‘It’s the standard playbook,’ Stirling told the Daily Mail.

‘Lots of Americans have been caught up in the same situation. They use the travel ban system to extort cash.’

Stirling said Allen’s case mirrored others she had handled, including two young Americans forced to hand over $20,000 to escape similar charges, and New Yorker Elizabeth Polanco De Los Santos, 21, who was detained in July 2023 after she brushed the arm of a female airport employee while wearing a medical brace.

Santos was sentenced to a year in prison despite paying a fine of AED10,000 ($2,722). Stirling’s advocacy and US diplomatic pressure secured Santos’ release after five months.

‘Certainly, Santos and Allen would have gone to prison if we hadn’t intervened,’ Stirling said.

Other cases have been equally shocking. Air Force veterans Joseph and Joshua Lopez were jailed for a month in June 2023 after being drugged and robbed at a yacht party.

Stirling said it was intervention from then-Ohio Senator JD Vance that prevented a harsher sentence.

Women are particularly vulnerable in the UAE, Stirling added, pointing to widespread cases of drugging and sexual assault.

Allen said she feared for herself: ‘I was never drugged, but the thought of being sexually assaulted in prison haunted me.’

Her boyfriend, who is African, was deported just weeks before her release.

The ordeal has left her deeply shaken. ‘Dubai don’t play,’ Allen said. ‘I would never go back. Never again.’

Allen said she was horrified to hear about British national O’Brien.

Besides the draconian jail term, O’Brien was fined $136,000, including $3,377 for the drugs’ street value.

‘It’s such a tragic story,’ Allen said. ‘Even small amounts of drugs can lead to extremely long sentences there. It’s a reminder of how fragile freedom is and how quickly circumstances can turn.’

O’Brien, who pleaded not guilty, is appealing her sentence. Stirling is not handling her case but said British government pressure will be critical.

‘Whether she gets home will largely depend on public sympathy and whether the UK pushes for a royal pardon.’

Stirling said the British government is giving O’Brien tremendous support.

‘A life sentence is extremely tough, and I genuinely hope that it is overturned on appeal,’ she said.

‘If convicted and sentenced, her last hope will be a royal pardon.