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UK: Caring son gave up top computer job to farm cannabis in

Shirley English

The Times

Wednesday 20 Apr 2005

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A COMPUTER consultant who quit his UKP60,000 job to grow cannabis plants in
his attic as pain relief for his sick mother escaped a jail term yesterday.

Stephen Renton, 38, from Newtongrange, in Midlothian, was arrested after
cannabis plants worth UKP77,000 were discovered by firefighters during a
blaze at his home caused by an electrical fault.

Over two years he had cultivated about 20 different cannabis varieties and
had used them to try to develop a pain-relieving cream for his mother
Sheila, 67, who suffered from chronic nerve-end damage.

The High Court in Edinburgh was told that his father, Colin Renton, 67,
bought the flat next-door to the family home and his son knocked the two
attics together for his cannabis garden.

After the fire last May police seized a small library of books on
cultivation methods. There was also a sophisticated hydroponic growing
system worth UKP6,000, an electrical generator and powerful lighting. In a
garage were seeds and plant cuttings stored in bin bags.

Police said it was the largest-ever haul of cannabis plants in the Lothian
and Borders area.

Renton's mother had taken part in a cannabis trial at Gartnaval Hospital in
Glasgow but without success. The medication, delivered in the form of a
spray, caused unpleasant side-effects.

No cannabis tablets were available and Renton thought that a cream might
help. The court was told that when his computer consultancy business went
through a bad patch two years ago, he decided to put his ideas into
practice. He experimented by mixing the cannabis with alcohol and oils.

Jim Stephenson, for the defence, told the court that Renton had been on a
crusade to help his mother. "This was a tunnel-vision view of trying to get
a cream that would alleviate his mother's suffering," Mr Stephenson said.
His client now realised, however, that he had made things worse for his family.

Renton admitted charges of illegally producing cannabis and being concerned
in its supply. The judge, Lady Dorrian, sentenced him to 240 hours' unpaid
community work yesterday after reading background reports on the case.

Afterwards Renton said: "I am very pleased and very relieved. The court has
made an investigation into the whole circumstances and realised it wasn't a
commercial operation and have been very lenient in this case." He said that
his mother still needed 27 tablets a day to help to control her pain.

"I don't think cannabis should be legalised. There are bad side-effects. It
is not for general use but if someone is on opiates for pain relief then
cannabis is useful in these circumstances."

 

 

 

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