Adult content creator Bonnie Blue’s outraging public decency charge dropped by CPS

Prosecutors have dropped outrageous public decency charges against adult content creator Bonnie Blue over a demonstration outside the Indonesian embassy in London.
The 26-year-old, whose real name is Tia Billinger, was charged by the Crown Prosecution Service in December after making an obscene gesture while standing outside the embassy in Great Peter Street, Westminster.
Surrounded by masked men, Billinger was filmed dragging the Indonesian flag across the ground and using her hand and mouth to simulate a sex act.
He was due to appear in court earlier this month to face a charge of outraging public decency, but the hearing was postponed after his lawyers made specific submissions to the CPS that the charge should be dropped. The postponed hearing was planned to be held at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Friday.
But a CPS spokesman confirmed the criminal case had now been abandoned, saying: “We have a duty to keep all live cases under review and following further review of this case we have concluded that there is no realistic prospect of a conviction.”

Billinger was accused of “simulating oral sex on a male in public” during her performance at the embassy on December 15 last year.
She made headlines around the world in January 2025 when she had sex with 1,057 men in 12 hours.
The embassy incident took place after Billinger and his entourage were arrested on the island of Bali and deported from Indonesia after being accused of producing illegal pornography.
He was later released from police custody with a fine for traffic violations and did not face any criminal charges, but was deported from the country.
When the criminal case was announced in March, Scotland Yard said: “Tia Billinger, 26, of Draycott in Derbyshire, was charged with postal seizure on Monday, March 16, following a Metropolitan Police investigation. The charge relates to an incident in Great Peter Street, Westminster, on Monday, December 15.
“An investigation was launched on Tuesday, February 2 and a woman in her 20s was interviewed under caution.
“A referral was subsequently made to the Crown Prosecution Service which authorized the above charge.”




