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UK: Cannabis cafe boss is convicted on drug charges at third trial

Ian Herbert, North of England Correspondent

The Independent

Thursday 03 Oct 2002

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Detectives in Manchester could scarcely hide their delight yesterday
when, at the third attempt, they won drugs convictions against the owner
of Britain's first Amsterdam-style cannabis cafe.

Colin Davies was acquitted at his two previous trials after persuading
juries that the class-B drug was medicinal. But the 44-year-old, who has
been in custody for a year for a breach of bail conditions, was sent
back to jail after being convicted of offences for which he was arrested
on his Dutch Experience cafe's first day of trading, in September 2001.

A jury of seven men and five women took five hours to convict him of six
offences, including importing and supplying drugs. He faces a maximum
14-year term but will probably get far less. Davies traded cannabis
while on bail. He was recording a BBC TV interview when police made
further raids.

"He has been openly laughing at the law but thankfully it appears
justice has caught up with him at last," one police source said. "Davies
has been a thorn in our side for years and we are very pleased he has
got his just desserts."

In the three-week trial, the prosecution at Manchester's Minshull Street
Crown Court claimed the cafe provided a "facade of moral legitimacy".

The volume of cash and drugs linked to Davies appears to have convinced
the jury. Police had found £3,000 in cash in his Stockport flat at a
time when he was drawing £56.25 a week in disability benefits.

Customs officials also seized £18,000 worth of cannabis at Dover in
eight packages, complete with 430 ready-made joints - all destined for
addresses linked to Davies, a former carpenter. A cafe volunteer was
found to have £1,160 in cash on him, while 4.5lb of cannabis resin was
discovered in the boot of Davies' Dutch business partner's car.

But Davies' customers, as in previous trials, testified that his £15
packets of super-skunk grass and Lebanese Gold resin were medicinal.

Davies claims the roots of his enterprise lie in an encounter in the
smoking room at the Sheffield spinal injuries unit where, temporarily
paralysed by breaks to three vertebrae, he met a paraplegic car crash
victim who told him to try cannabis for the pain.

At a time when the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, was planning in
effect to "decriminalise" cannabis, the authorities seemed resigned to
Davies' trade. Davies will not be sentenced until he has faced two
further trials on charges of perjury and possessing cannabis later this
year. But his work has already left a legacy. His cafe has spawned plans
for similar enterprises from Brighton to Glasgow.


 

 

 

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