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This drug doesn t hurt anyone, but the law does

News and Star, Carlisle

Tuesday 17 Oct 2000

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MARK Gibson, who is standing for Penrith and the Border in the next General Election, claims that "ordinary people" are being turned into criminals because of the laws on cannabis.

Mr Gibson is the husband of Lezley Gibson, the multiple
sclerosis sufferer who made national news when she was cleared of possession of cannabis last month after a jury at Carlisle Crown Court heard she used the drug for medical reasons.

Last week Mr Gibson announced that he would stand for the
Legalise Cannabis Alliance against one of Cumbria's longest
serving MPs, Conservative David Maclean.

He says many otherwise law abiding people are living under
the shadow of a criminal record which goes along with a
cannabis conviction, and in some cases it has ruined their
lives.

He also claims that freelance TV cameraman Barrie Leather,
who hanged himself last year, took his life because he was
depressed after being sacked by Border TV following a
conviction for possession of cannabis. "I think the law of
the land is at fault. It is an unjust law which took my
friend's life," said Mr Gibson, who was a pallbearer at Mr
Leather's funeral.

Mr Leather's inquest heard evidence that he had suffered
depression and talked of suicide in the years before losing
his job.

"Barrie did suffer from depression before, but this was the
trigger," said Mr Gibson.

"He lost everything in the space of six months. He went
from driving a £24,000 car to getting around on a mountain
bike. He lost his home and moved into a bedsit. He just felt
bereft."

Nigel Moore, a self-employed book distributor from Carlisle,
was a close friend of Mr Leather.

He said: "Barrie lost everything. His job was all, and after
he lost it he did not want to move away for work. His dad
was quite ill in hospital and he did not want to leave his
dad."

Barrie's father Rod has since died. Mr Moore added: "It's not as if Barrie had been standing outside a school selling
heroin to children. He was a recreational smoker in the
privacy of his own home.

"Cannabis doesn't harm anyone, but the law does. His family
lost a brother and only son and I lost a friend of 20 years."

Border TV director of programmes Neil Robinson said: "The
company's policy is that we do not take misuse of alcohol
or drugs lightly. We ask people to seek treatment for any
drink or drugs problem. We look at every case on its merits."

Mr Gibson says he has suffered the effects of a criminal
record dating back 14 years because he smokes cannabis.

He says he was fined in his early 20s for possession of
cannabis after police searched a record store he then ran
in Carlisle's Lanes, called Penny Lane Records.

In 1989, he and Lezley were in a car in Carlisle when police
stopped them and found £6,000 worth of cannabis.

"A passenger in the car had the cannabis which I was unaware
of," he said.

He added that in court he pleaded guilty to using cannabis
and received a two-year conditional discharge.

A police raid at the Gibsons Alston home in 1995 led to
Mark admitting further charges of possession and being fined.

"I smoke cannabis recreationally. I have never said I would
stop. I am not going to deny it," he said.

The effects have been long running.

After Mark and Lezley married in 1990, they were burgled
and their wedding presents were stolen.

He said: "We lost the TV and Hi-fi, ornaments, presents and
keepsakes. When we put in a claim on the insurance it was
denied because we both had criminal records, which hurts a lot.

"Lezley has no other convictions. She didn't even get detention at school," he said. "I have a motoring offence for speeding five years ago. We are not a pair of criminals. We are victims of the country's laws."

Neil Crossland, 26, a painter and decorator from Alston, says one cannabis conviction has prevented him from seeing his uncle in Canada for the rest of his life.

Six years ago plain-clothes police officers entered his
girlfriend's house.

"I told them where the cannabis was in a pair of jeans next to the bed, and I had a tiny bit on me, worth about £25," he said.

"There were also two tiny plants the police said were worth
£100.

"They searched the house and trashed it, even checking behind the posters on the walls."

Mr Crossland was fined £225.

He said: "I have always wanted to go to Canada to see my
uncle but now I will never be allowed because they won't let
people in with criminal records."

 

 

 

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