If you're planning on leaving the country that the incident occurred in, be sure to check with a lawyer / solicitor before you do about the statute of limitations for your particular charge in your country. If you're going to be tried for importing, selling etc. then I'm assuming you're being tried on indictment, and may be facing a charge of drug trafficking. In many European countries there is NO statute of limitations on charges of drug trafficking / possession of drugs with intent to sell or supply over a certain value. This means that no matter how long you leave the country for, your charge will still be active when you return, whether it be 3 years or 30 years.Pay a solicitor / lawyer for a consultation - once you've paid them you've activated lawyer/client privilege (the scope of which varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction so don't bare all or implicate anyone else) and you can tell them your story - what you were caught with, the amount, and the street value that the cops have attributed to it. Obviously you won't tell them that you plan to skip bail and leave the country.They'll be able to advise you on whether your charge carries a statute of limitations or not. If it does, excellent, you can lay low for X amount of years and return once it's over. If not, then be prepared to assume a new identity, cut all ties with friends and family, and be sure never to appear on a social networking site of any type. A LOT of people "laying low abroad" have been caught because a picture of them appears on Facebook or some other such social networking site. Even in clubs with photographers, you may be caught in the background, that picture will then appear on their Facebook or website and someone may recognise you. It's a lot harder to disappear successfully these days than it was 20 - 30 years ago.Ensure that you travel to your new destination by bus / rail whenever possible, discreetly disguised and NEVER with your real identity documents on you. Post them to your new destination if possible. Go somewhere that you're going to blend in easily. Ensure you speak the local language / dialect fluently, and have a back story that you stick to rigidly and can back up with professional-grade doctored documents if necessary. NEVER stray from this back story and keep your body language in check when lying to people, be they new friends or authority figures. Reveal your past to no one.All of the above may seem like common sense but it's very easy to slip up when you're trying to assume a new identity.Take care of yourself mephfreak.- grahamgreene(In response to your new reply, a new seller here "fullfrontal" offers passports printed up from official blanks. They're most likely stolen and will show up as such if checked, but would be handy for boat / rail journeys and the like. He offers Latvian and Lithuanian passports and various EU identity cards. As a new seller he has to stay in escrow until he has 35 transactions so placing an order with him should be 100% safe.NOTE: I'm not vouching for his products or services as I have not yet used them.)