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Search as cannabis man goes missing

News & Star, Cumbria

Saturday 26 Jan 2002

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THE search continued last night for a Carlisle cannabis
campaigner who went missing on the day he was due at court.

Thirty-nine-year-old Alan Mason failed to turn up to be
sentenced at Carlisle Crown Court yesterday morning,
sparking fears for his safety.

His lawyers told Judge Anthony Proctor that they were
concerned that Mason - a known suicide risk - may have done
himself some harm inside his flat in Stonegarth, Morton.

Police entered his flat shortly after midday yesterday -
after a warrant was issued for his arrest - but found no
sign of him. He had left a note pinned to the door,
addressed to "the pigs and the world" which said "Ask Betty.
**** you all."

Mason was convicted in December of growing 51 cannabis
plants with intent to supply the drug - a charge he denied.
He told the court during his trial that the plants were for
his own use and he needed cannabis to stop him from killing
himself.

Cannabis campaigner Mark Gibson, of the Legalise Cannabis
Alliance, supported Mason throughout his trial. He said last
night he was surprised that Mason had gone missing without
any warning to his friends.

"I didn't know him that well - I attended his trial more in
a professional capacity than anything else,"Mr Gibson said.

"I've no idea where he is but I don't believe that anyone
convicted of having any amount of cannabis should be
incarcerated. It does no good whatsoever."

Mr Gibson said Mason's case had been blown "out of all
proportion" by the authorities. "He had a few plants to help
with health problems," he added. "He's an ill man who has
been dragged through the courts for growing weeds. I can
understand him not wanting to go to prison. Fair play to
him."

Mason's website carried daily updates on the progress of his
trial and conviction - entitled The Day that Justice Died.
He had planned to challenge his prosecution under the Human
Rights Act - claiming it was an infringement of his right to
take drugs. That collapsed less than four days before the
trial started because of a High Court ruling that matters of
human rights should not be put before a jury.

He said he was preparing for a period of enforced absence,
and he would have to be carried "kicking and screaming" into
a cell.

A Cumbria police spokesman said officers were following a
"number of lines of inquiry" into Mason's disappearance.


 

 

 

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