UK Crime

Bonnie Blue London court hearing adjourned while prosecutors examine decency case

Prosecutors are reviewing the case against adult content creator Bonnie Blue, whose first court appearance on a charge of outraging public decency has been delayed following a request from her defence team.

The case against Tia Billinger, 26, who performs under the name Bonnie Blue, was administratively adjourned by Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday, April 21, 2026. A court official confirmed the adjournment was made on a joint application by the prosecution and defence, and that a barrister for the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has now been instructed to review the case. If the charge is not dropped, Billinger is scheduled to appear at the same court at 2pm on May 1, 2026.

The Specifics of the Charge

The charge itself is one of outraging public decency, an offence which, upon conviction in a magistrates’ court, carries a maximum penalty of six months imprisonment, an unlimited fine, or both. According to the Metropolitan Police, the allegation is that Billinger was “imitating oral sex on a male whilst in public.” The charge was authorised by the CPS and announced by Scotland Yard on March 16, 2026, following an investigation. Billinger, from Draycott in Derbyshire, was charged via postal requisition after having been interviewed under caution in early February.

The legal test for outraging public decency requires that the act was done in a public place, that it was capable of being seen by two or more people who were actually present, and that it was of such a lewd, obscene or disgusting nature that it would outrage minimum standards of public decency. The CPS review will likely scrutinise whether the evidence meets this high threshold.

The Embassy Stunt and its Backdrop

The incident that led to the charge occurred on December 15, 2025, outside the Indonesian embassy in Great Peter Street, Westminster. Billinger was filmed holding an Indonesian flag while surrounded by masked men, allegedly performing the lewd gesture. This stunt came shortly after Billinger was deported from Indonesia and banned from re-entering for ten years. She had been arrested in Bali that same month for allegedly producing adult content while on a tourist visa, and was fined for immigration violations and for failing to use a goods-transport vehicle for its intended purpose, thus avoiding more serious pornography charges. Following the Westminster incident, the Indonesian Embassy in London filed a formal complaint with British authorities.

The embassy stunt is part of a pattern of controversial acts by Billinger, who has built a career on provocative publicity. Born in 1999 and raised in Draycott, Derbyshire, where she attended Friesland School, she previously worked in recruitment for the National Health Service before transitioning to adult content creation in early 2023. She gained rapid popularity on platforms like OnlyFans, from which she has since been banned for participating in a “petting zoo” event, moving her content to Fansly.

She first made global headlines in January 2025 for claiming to have had sex with 1,057 men in a 12-hour period, an event which inspired similar stunts by other creators. She has also claimed to have had unprotected sex with approximately 400 men in one day during a university freshers’ week tour. In February 2026, she claimed to be pregnant, later revealing it was a lucrative publicity stunt. Her notoriety has extended to reports of being considered for reality television shows, including “I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!”.

The CPS review will now determine whether the case against her for the embassy incident proceeds to a courtroom where these details would form the backdrop to a narrow, but potentially significant, legal question of public decency.

Alaric Whitcombe

Political Correspondent
Alaric Whitcombe is a political correspondent reporting from Westminster, London. He covers UK politics, parliamentary activity, government decision-making, and UK Crime, providing clear, fact-based context around legislation, policy developments, and major public-safety stories. His work focuses on factual reporting and clear explanation, helping readers follow political events without bias or speculation.
· Westminster lobby reporting, select committee analysis, court proceedings coverage
· Parliamentary debates, legislation and policy, elections, criminal justice system, policing, Crown and Magistrates' Courts

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