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UK: Drugs campaigner sent illegal plant to minister

Daily Post

Wednesday 26 Jul 2006

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Drugs campaigner sent illegal plant to minister

A NORTH Wales drugs campaigner sent a cannabis plant to cabinet minister
John Reid a jury was told yesterday.

Jeffrey Ditchfield posted the plants to the Whitehall office of Mr Reid,
the-then defence minister, as a stunt over the drug's medical use.

The 47-year-old of Water Street, Rhyl, is part of Bud Buddies, which
provides cannabis to people suffering from arthritis, multiple
sclerosis, cancer or other serious conditions.

Karl Scholtz told the Mold Crown Court jury the attempt to give Mr Reid,
now home secretary, a cannabis plant "was more of a stunt, you may
think, rather than any belief John Reid would take it home and start to
grow it."

The jury heard Ditchfield was alleged to have supplied cannabis to two
people as pain relief.

He was also charged with cultivating cannabis found at the home of an
arthritis sufferer at Rhyl and at a hidden room in his own home.

Additionally he was charged with possessing cannabis, found in his
fridge and freezer, with intent to supply.

He denied all charges. But Mr Scholtz told the jury Ditchfield did not
have a defence to six of the eight charges.

"There is no doubt that the defendant did the acts and that he is guilty
of the first six charges, Indeed he admits as much," he explained.

Mr Scholtz said the jury might wonder why they were listening to a
trial, but while Ditchfield, he said, admitted the ingredients of the
offences before them, no one could force a person to plead guilty, and
no judge could tell a jury to find a man guilty.

But if Ditchfield asked the jury to acquit him, that would mean that
they would not be true to the oaths they had taken to try the case on
the evidence before them, Mr Scholtz claimed.

Along list of admissions agreed between the prosecution and the defence
were read to the jury in which it was admitted Ditchfield supplied
cannabis as a pain relief to MS sufferer Laurence Brierley, a patient at
the Chadderton Total Care nursing home, Manchester.

He would use it to relieve the spasms and alleviate the pain, smoking
six cannabis cigarettes a day.

Between January and June 2004, Ditchfield visited him every week and
supplied him with rolled cigarettes containing cannabis.

He supplied between half and three quarters of an ounce a week but
neither sought or received payment.

Arthritis patient David Newton of Aber Road, Rhyl, also used cannabis to
relieve the pain.

Between June 2003 and January2004 Ditchfield supplied him with a
cannabis-based cream and capsules.

After a fire in March 2004, the police found a hydroponics growing
system at Mr Newton's home.

It was admitted Ditchfield supplied the equipment and plants, and he or
someone else from the Bud Buddies organisation would collect it when
mature.

It was agreed Ditchfield posted a package at Rhyl Post Office to Mr
Brierley in the nursing home.

It had 86 cigarettes in it, containing cannabis.

But the jury heard staff called the police when they became suspicious
because of the smell.

Last November, a MoD registry clerk opened a package addressed to Mr
Reid and it contained a cannabis plant.

The jury heard it was accepted Ditchfield cultivated cannabis at a room
at his premises in Water Street where a book shelf hid the door giving
access to the room.

The police seized equipment and plants and also found further cannabis
leaf in a fridge and freezer.

Mr Scholtz said it was not known if the plants were frozen to extend
their "shelf life" or whether it was part of a process to make
particular forms of cannabis named "snow hash" or "pollen".

The trial continues.

http://icnorthwales.icnetwork.co.uk/news/regionalnews/tm_objectid=17450958%26method=full%26siteid=50142-name_page.html

 

 

 

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