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Britain Goes After Medical Marijuana Suppliers

Drug War Chronicles

Friday 21 Jul 2006

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In two separate trials, one beginning this week and one beginning next
week, British authorities are prosecuting medical marijuana providers
under the country's drug laws, the Guardian reported. The continued
prosecution of medical marijuana providers comes despite the
government's downgrading of marijuana from a Class B drug to the less
serious Class C in 2004.

Four members of Therapeutic Help from Cannabis for Multiple Sclerosis
(THCforMS(} faced charges of conspiracy to distribute marijuana this
week in crown court in Carlisle. THCforMS supplies free cannabis
exclusively to MS sufferers and says on its web site it has handed out
33,000 cannabis chocolate bars to patients.

Next week, Bud Buddies founder Jeffrey Ditchfield goes on trial in Mold
crown court on nine counts of cultivation and distribution of cannabis.
Bud Buddies offers a number of marijuana preparations for anyone with a
proven medical need and requires documentation of that need from a
physician.

Under current British marijuana law, all of the defendants mentioned
face up to 14 years in prison.

Meanwhile, life has become more difficult for as many as 30% of British
MS sufferers who use the herb to alleviate the pain and spasms
associated with the disease. One of those patients, who asked not to be
identified, said she had applied to use the marijuana tincture Sativex
on a trial basis, but was turned down. The preparation is currently
undergoing a three-year trial. "I find it inconceivable that the crown
sees these prosecutions as in the public interest when there is still no
legal way for the people who are helped by cannabis to obtain and use
it," she said.

The British Medical Association said in a 1997 report: "While research
is under way the police, the courts and prosecuting authorities should
be aware of the medicinal reasons for the unlawful use of cannabis by
those suffering from certain medical conditions for whom other drugs
have proved ineffective."

Even if the crown prosecutors don't get it, some trial courts do -- or
at least they did. Up until last year, medical marijuana patients and
providers successfully raised the "necessity" defense, which allows
illegal acts to prevent a greater harm. But an appeals court ruling last
year held that the "necessity" defense did apply to the use of marijuana
to relieve chronic pain.
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/445/britain-medical-marijuana-busts.shtml
http://www.thc4ms.org/
http://www.budbuddies.com/
http://www.lca-uk.org
http://www.ccguide.org.uk/

 

 

 

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