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UK: Defiant

The Worthing Herald

Friday 26 Aug 2005

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WORTHING'S last cannabis cafe has reopened just days after police shut it down.

Up to 40 officers used a huge saw and cutting gear to force through two
5in-thick reinforced doors to get into the Amsterdam-style cafe in Victoria
Road, Worthing, on August 11.

Two men and a woman were arrested on suspicion of supplying controlled
drugs and West Sussex fire officers closed down the premises over safety
fears that there was no fire escape.

But traders working close to the venue were appalled to discover that it
was back open for business on Saturday with a steady flow of up to 200
customers a day, little more than a week after officers swooped.

One businesswoman, who asked not to be named, said: "It is a joke. If I
tried to open a business with no planning permission, which was illegal,
and had no fire regulations or sufficient fire exits and completely waving
two fingers at the law, I wouldn't expect to get away with it for two years."

Mikey Allday, head of cafe security and one of those arrested, defended the
venue's safety record since it opened more than two years ago and claimed
cannabis was less harmful than alcohol.

He said: "There has been no trouble here in the two years it has been open.
Not one fight, not one fist thrown.There have been no drugs, other than
cannabis, since the place was opened. And certainly no class A drugs."

A sign adorned the entrance excluding customers under 18 and warned anyone
caught with alcohol or class A drugs faced a lifetime ban.

Mr Allday, who admitted serving a prison sentence for drugs offences, has
installed two new doors, improved security, and built a fire escape since
the operation. Area fire commander Neil Odin inspected the property last
Friday and declared it safe to reopen. Mr Allday, the British prison bench
press record holder, accused police of adopting a heavy-handed approach
during the raid with 30 people trapped inside the building and smoke seen
coming from the chimney.

He added: "I have repaired the damage the police have done and installed a
new security system to prevent anyone from getting in here unlawfully. The
police entered unlawfully and they won't do it again."

Inspector Steve Eldridge, who led the investigation called Operation
Firebird, said: "This is an ongoing investigation and we are going to use
appropriate methods to deal with the problem."

 

 

 

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