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A criminal - for turning to cannabis when medicine to help epilepsy

Rachel Banham

Evening Telegraph, Peterborough

Wednesday 11 Jul 2001

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IT'S a debate which has rumbled on for years. Now the controversy
about legalising cannabis has reared its head again through comments
from various MPs circulating in the national media.So what do people
in Peterborough think? Features editor RACHEL BANHAM reports.

EPILEPTIC Marcus Davies spends thousands of pounds on drugs to ease
his fits each year.

But he doesn't buy them over the counter - and he currently has four
convictions for cultivating, supplying and possessing the drug. Each
time he's appeared before magistrates. And each time he's been
fined.

Marcus (34), of Parnwell, Peterborough, is a qualified electronics
designer. Yet, in the eyes of the law, he's a criminal.

For the last 16 years, Marcus has been unable to work fulltime
because of his epileptic fits. He says all legal medicines failed to
work effectively for him, and he spent five years wasting away,
suffering from both illness and treatment.

So, in 1988, he tried cannabis. And he claims it changed his life.
He had previously been having epileptic seizures every day. "These
seizures rendered me useless," he said. "I use to pray that seizures
occurred in the late evening, which gave me the night to recover,
and during the following day I could behave as a normal person. I
have scarring of the tongue and many scars of the limbs damaged
during seizures. I smoke cannabis for medicinal purposes.When I don't
smoke it, I have convulsions."

Marcus has smoked cannabis medicinally for 13 years, and has
welcomed the latest debate on the issue. "This is most definitely a
step forward," he said.

Mr Davies estimates he spends about pounds5,500 a year on the drug which
he buys from several dealers in the city. He has little time for
dealers, but knows it's the only place he can get the drug. "The
people I buy it from know my views on them very well, but they also
like my money. Throughout the country that's millions of pounds
going to the wrong people," he said. "Cannabis should be brought out
into the open.People like myself do not want to be gangsters dealing
with the underworld. When I want to smoke a joint, I'll smoke one -
as long as I'm not offending anybody else. But I feel like a
criminal, and I don't want to."

Marcus says that within an hour of smoking cannabis for the first
time, he felt better than he had for the previous five years. He
says he has had only about eight seizures in 13 years of smoking
cannabis.

While living in Lancashire, his home was searched by police and for
the following six days he stopped taking cannabis. He says he had
seizures every hour and was admitted to hospital. "After a brief
discussion with the doctor about my case history I was unofficially
advised to keep taking the cannabis medicine and keep my head down
and my mouth shut. Until now, this is what I've done," he said.

Although epilepsy is the main reason for taking cannabis, he also
believes it relieved pain when he had laser therapy on his eye -
treatment made necessary by his diabetes. "Cannabis is very
effective at encouraging me to eat at regular times," he added. "This
phenomena, known as the munchies, must be extremely useful in
the treatment of patients with wasting diseases, and has proved to
stimulate my appetite often."

Marcus is a representative of Legalise Cannabis Alliance in
Peterborough, and has his own website telling his story. He says the
only reason that cannabis leads to other drugs is through the
pushers. "Being illegal is the only thing that causes it to lead on
to other drugs. You have to purchase it from somebody who would
sooner sell you something else. It's nothing to do with the drug," he
said.

"If we legalise it in this country, we remove that element of
society that is getting an awful lot of money for doing
nothing.Cannabis needs to be imported properly and the quantity
maintained.Tax it by all means - the Government would make billions
out of it."

The debate on cannabis has been welcomed by drugs workers in
Peterborough. Lisa Mellen, deputy manager of the Bridgegate Drug
Advisory Agency, based in Broadway, said: "We work within the
framework of the law at the moment.Debate around drugs is very
healthy, and we would encourage it. But cannabis does have its
risks. It is not a completely safe drug. Smoking cannabis can cause
lung problems or psychiatric difficulties. It is not
harmless.However, it is not probably as harmful as other drugs
people may choose to experiment with."

While Bridgegate does not see as many cannabis users as those on
other drugs, its effects can still be significant. "When it does
cause problems it's a big problem to that person," Lisa added.

>> For more information about the agency call 01733 314551, or visit
the centre at 51 Broadway, Peterborough.



 

 

 

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