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UK: Bitter sweet end for cannabis candies

Murdo MacLeod

The Scotland on Sunday

Sunday 04 Nov 2001

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SHE put an ounce and a half in every bar. But now Biz Ivol - the Orkney
woman who popularised cannabis chocolate - is giving up her career as a
confectioner of Class-Bs.

Ivol's deteriorating health means it is no longer possible for her to post
free cannabis-laced chocolates to fellow sufferers of multiple sclerosis.

But the 53-year-old, whose home was raided by police in August this year,
has passed on her recipe to friends in England, and has vowed to defy the
authorities by continuing to grow the drug.

Now friends of Ivol have pleaded with their local MSP - Justice Minister
Jim Wallace - asking him to intervene.

Ivol told Scotland on Sunday: "I have begun growing cannabis again. I have
plants in the house, and I take some cannabis each night to relieve the
pain before I go to bed.

"But, unfortunately, because I can't get out of the house any more, I can't
post cannabis chocolates to others. And I don't want to run the risk of
getting other people into trouble, so I have been forced to stop sending
chocolates away."

Ivol added: "I think I'm really past caring whether they come around and
arrest me or caution me or whatever. I think it's crazy that they are
making criminals out of harmless MS-sufferers who are otherwise peaceful
and law-abiding. I'm hardly the criminal type, I think you'd admit."

Ivol confirmed she had passed her special recipes for cannabis within
Belgian chocolate to others in Cumbria and Leicestershire, who were
continuing her work in distributing the chocolates.

Ivol added she was unimpressed by the government's recent announcement that
cannabis was to be reclassified as a Class-C drug, meaning those caught in
possession would no longer be arrested.

She said: "This has created as much of a grey area as ever. I can still be
cautioned for smoking cannabis. What will they do? Warn me that if I
continue they might warn me again? Supplying cannabis to other people who
have MS will still be an offence. It's absurd."

The change in the law does not apply to supplying cannabis, which is
punishable by up to two years in jail.

Orkney police say they are still investigating Ivol and her cottage
cannabis-chocolates industry, although she has not been charged.

A spokeswoman for Northern Constabulary, based in Inverness, said that
their enquiries were continuing.

In August's raid, police confiscated Ivol's cannabis, along with her
address books. Ivol said the homes of some of the people she had supplied
cannabis chocolates to had also been raided by the police.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the Scottish Liberal Democrats confirmed that
friends of Ivol had approached Jim Wallace to ask if he could help resolve
her legal dilemma.

The spokesman said Wallace would not involve himself directly in the matter.

However, the spokesman added that Wallace was sympathetic to those who
wished to use cannabis as a palliative.

He said: "Jim Wallace has a long record of backing motions in the Commons
to allow the medical use of cannabis.

"There's a higher than average incidence of MS in Orkney and Shetland and
he has had a number of constituents who have approached him on this issue."

 

 

 

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