Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Cannabis-cooking Granny Defiant Despite Being Busted

Rod Minchin

PA News

Tuesday 25 Jan 2005

---

Pottering about her kitchen with her grey hair and spectacles, grandmother
Patricia Tabram cuts an unlikely figure as a drug dealer.

But the sprightly 66-year-old, who prides herself on her home-made herbal
cookies, casseroles and soups, has admitted possessing cannabis with intent
to supply from her home in East Lea, in Humshaugh, near Hexham, Northumberland.

She has cooked up treats laced with the drug for neighbours and friends in
her village after being introduced to it last year.

A defiant Mrs Tabram told the Press Association today from the sitting room
of her remote bungalow: 'Friends introduced me to cannabis in February 2004
when they gave me a cigarette.

'I suffer from depression, whiplash in my neck and back pain. I went to bed
and the next morning I felt so much better.

'I didn't know what I had taken so I asked my friends. They said it was
cannabis.

'But I don't like smoking so they said I could cook with it.'

Soon, the grandmother-of-two began cooking regularly for friends with food
laced with the illegal herb.

However, Northumbria Police were tipped off about the savoury smells and
activities coming from Mrs Tabram's bungalow and twice raided her house in
May and June.

They seized 31 cannabis plants growing in her loft and another one from her
hallway table, which officers had missed until Mrs Tabram pointed it out.

'When the police came to my door I invited them in,' she said.

'They said I had been growing cannabis plants in my shed. They went to look
for them but didn't find anything.

'I told them to look in the loft and I offered them some tea and biscuits.'

The teetotal grandmother added: 'From the way the police were talking you
would think I was the biggest criminal in Hexham.'

As she sits in her armchair, she rings her friends to tell of her
newly-found celebrity status.

'It's grandma here,'4 she says, as she talks to one neighbour.

There's a knock at the door. Another friend had come to see her.

Not wishing to give his name, the man in his 20s, said: 'To say she is
convicted drug dealer is just crazy, if you ask me.

'It is terrible the way she has been treated by the police and the courts.

'She is 66 years old and is classed as a drug dealer. The police keep
picking on her yet they do nothing about cocaine dealers round here.'

Mrs Tabram, a former chef, has continued to cook, making her chicken and
leek pies, curries, beef casseroles, chocolate cakes and biscuits - but has
left out the illegal herb from the recipes.


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!