Pubdate: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 Source: Scotland On Sunday (UK) Copyright: 2000 The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Contact: scotlandonsunday.com Address: 108 Holyrood Road, Edinburgh EH8 8AS, Scotland Fax: (+44) 0131 226 7420 Website: http://www.scotlandonsunday.com/ Author: Peter Laing FISCAL ABANDONS PROSECUTION OF CANNABIS GROWER I'll carry on smoking, says man who is told criminal case is 'not in the public interest' A FISCAL has dropped legal proceedings against a disabled man who uses cannabis for pain relief, saying that continuing with the case would not be in the public interest. Neil Winters, who lost the use of his legs in a motorbike accident, was told by letter the case had been dropped and he was free to collect from police the lights he uses for growing cannabis plants. Winters, from Shetland, said he would carry on growing cannabis. The 33-year-old, who has two previous convictions for cultivating the class B drug, was facing a jail sentence of up to six months if the case at Lerwick Sheriff Court had gone ahead. The decision not to prosecute Winters was welcomed last night by campaigners for the medical use of cannabis. A recent Scotland on Sunday survey revealed that support is growing among the public for legalisation, with 43% of adults favouring a change in the law. Winters appeared in court last November and pleaded not guilty to a charge of cultivating cannabis at his home in remote Eshaness. Roderick Urquhart, the procurator fiscal in Shetland, confirmed that the case had been dropped. He said: "Mr Winters has a number of medical problems. He is not going to be fit to stand trial for six months and possibly longer. Having this hanging over him could be detrimental to his recovery. I have to balance the public interest in applying the requirements of the Misuse of Drugs Act against his interests in getting his health back. "There is a compelling argument for saying there should be a presumption against prosecution unless there are good reasons in the public interest." Urquhart denied his decision had been influenced by the cannabis debate, or that it should be taken as a statement of policy. But Winters said: "In my opinion, the legal system doesn't have the stomach for going through with cases like this. The last time I was busted, the sheriff said if I appeared again I would go to jail. I don't think anyone wanted to see me jailed for six months. "I hope what has happened in my case encourages people to carry on with the campaign to have cannabis available for medical use." Winters described as a "nonsense" the fact he pays a drug dealer around UKP120 a week to supply cannabis when he could grow it for himself for a few pounds. "I keep getting busted by the police and they take the lights and plants away and so I can't grow cannabis. That means I have to buy it, which clears me out of money and leaves me in abject poverty. "I plead not guilty to the charge because I planned to argue medical necessity." Winters was seriously injured in a motorbike accident in Glasgow's Great Western Road in 1987. A spinal injury confined him to a wheelchair. He decided to move to one of the remotest parts of Shetland, where he lives alone, helped by social workers and his nearest neighbour, who lives seven miles away. He says some locals keep complaining to police that he is a drug dealer. "The police tell me they don't want to have to keep busting me but they can't ignore the complaints," said Winters. He added: "The letter from the fiscal said I could go to the police station and get my lights. As soon as I can, I will get them back and start growing cannabis again. It does not matter if I get busted again. I can't afford to do without it. "I have a lot of pain and tremors from my condition. The cannabis is the only thing that helps the tremors. It also helps me relax, helps digestion, appetite and avoid getting depressed. I should be getting the stuff on prescription." Hamish Crisp, an MS sufferer from Edinburgh who uses cannabis for his medical condition and campaigns for its legalisation, welcomed the decision of the Shetland fiscal. Crisp, from Edinburgh, said: "This is another case of common sense prevailing. How can Neil Winters be a danger to the public? There is no victim and no crime." The campaign to legalise cannabis for medical use has attracted wide support including Phil Gallie, the Tory spokesman on law and order, and Scotland Against Drugs. The British Medical Association, mindful of the harmful effects of smoking, has called for research to identify the relevant active ingredients of cannabis to create a new drug. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck