Cannabis crusader, 71, is given a suspended jail term

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Cannabis crusader, 71, is given a suspended jail term

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"http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales ... ed-8258561

http://www.walesonline.co.uk - Dec 09, 2014 15:02 By Robin Turner

Cannabis crusader, 71, is given a suspended jail term after admitting growing and supplying the drug

Image
Eric Mann outside Swansea Crown Court

A West Wales pensioner who campaigned over three decades to have cannabis legalised as “a medicine” has been given a one year suspended jail term after admitting two counts of producing the drug at his home.

Eric Stanley Mann, 71, of Harbour Way, Pembroke Dock, a former coal miner and construction supervisor, also admitted one charge of supplying cannabis to people suffering a variety of conditions including cancer.

Mann was forced into retirement in the 1980s by crippling arthritis but “self medicated” using cannabis he grew himself claiming it relieved his pain and allowed him to function when previously he “could not put his socks on”.

Swansea Crown Court heard Mann has made numerous appearances before magistrates and judges since 1987 on cannabis related charges leading to him being fined, imprisoned and given suspended jail sentences.

Before Tuesday’s sentencing, Mann, representing himself, indicated he would argue a public interest defence based on the Human Rights Act but at the last minute pleaded guilty to producing cannabis plants and distilling it into oil at his home in the summer of last year and of supplying cannabis oil to others. He also admitted producing more cannabis plants and oil in June this year.

Ian Ibrahim, prosecuting, said Dyfed Powys Police discovered 21 small cannabis plants and five jars of cannabis oil at the defendant’s home last year and in another raid this summer found he again been producing cannabis.

Mr Ibrahim said: “He admitted producing the plants and distilling it into oil and supplying it to individuals who suffered ailments including cancer. The defendant regards himself as a care giver and looks upon cannabis as a medicine allowing him to break the law.

“He even went to the extent of removing the psycho-active element of cannabis so users would get the benefit but not get high out of it.”

The court heard Mann had no convictions up to the time he began coming before the courts for using cannabis to treat his arthritis.

Before being sentenced, he said in mitigation: “I worked all my life, down a coal mine and as a supervisor in construction and when I got ill I tried conventional drugs but they didn’t work. One drug I was using was withdrawn because people were killing themselves after becoming suicidal on it.

“When you’re in pain all the time and you can’t even put your socks on or make a cup of tea or anything life isn’t worth living but I found I could function through the use of cannabis as a medicine.”

Judge Paul Thomas, who added a one year supervision order to Mann’s jail term which was suspended for a year, said: “The law of the land is the law of the land and has to be obeyed. People can’t pick and choose which laws they want to obey and which they don’t.

“Week in, week out in these courts I and others see the effects cannabis has on people, particularly on their mental state. Whatever your views, cannabis does effect people’s minds, that is my experience and there is very good medical opinion on why people should not take cannabis.

“I think you genuinely consider you are helping yourself and can do a service to others and that cannabis can cure or at least have a beneficial effect on cancer sufferers but the vast proportion of medical opinion is that you are misguided in that and you are deluding yourself and others.”

The judge added he hoped Mann would now look at alternative methods of pain relief.

After the hearing, Mr Mann said he believed cannabis could be used to treat a variety of ailments and that it did not have side effects."


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Re: Cannabis crusader, 71, is given a suspended jail term

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"The judge added he hoped Mann would now look at alternative methods of pain relief."

maybe the judge should be the one looking at alternative methods :)
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Re: Cannabis crusader, 71, is given a suspended jail term

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"http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales ... ar-8284834

http://www.walesonline.co.uk - Dec 13, 2014 18:31 By James McCarthy

Cannabis campaigner Eric Mann says fighting for legalisation of drug cost his 50-year marriage

Image
71 year old Eric Mann pictured at his home in Pembroke Dock, west Wales.

Cannabis campaigner Eric Mann has revealed his quest to have the drug legalised wrecked his marriage of 50 years.

But the 72-year-old former coal miner, who appeared in Swansea Crown Court this week after admitting growing and supplying the drug, remains convinced it should be regulated for medical use.

“I have lost my marriage because of it,” the former miner and oil rig worker said.

“My missus got fed up and left. That was three years ago.

“I have been married 50 years this year and now I am going through a divorce. I have got to sell my house and move out.

“That’s life and it’s not easy. But there you go.”

He said that his wife, Bridget, had put up with his long campaign for nearly three decades but finally decided she had “had enough”.

“The house kept getting raided and being searched,” Eric said.

“People were talking all the time and she did not like it.”

Eric has received a string of convictions since he began his campaign.

The convictions began in 1997 when he was handed a nine month suspended sentence for growing and using cannabis.

In 1999 he was locked up for using the drug.

“I did about six or seven months,” he said.

“I quite enjoyed it actually. I went to an open prison with my own room and a key. I helped a young boy to read and enjoyed the company of people.

“I came out and just got on with my life. They left me alone for about nine years.”

This week he was given a 12-month suspended sentence at Swansea Crown Court after pleading guilty to producing cannabis oil.

Judge Paul Thomas told him to find legal pain relief.

Eric redoubled his campaign after his sister died from multiple sclerosis 10 years ago.

“That made me determined to fight for its use as a medicine,” he said.

“I’m not screaming about social use. I just want it to be made available as a medicine.

“She was drugged up and lying there in pain and was like that for a year until she died.

“It just made me determined to get people to understand cannabis is a medicine.”
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