Pubdate: Fri, 17 Mar 2000 Source: Eastern Daily Press (UK) Copyright: 2000 Eastern Counties Newspapers Group Ltd Contact: Prospect House, Rouen Road, Norwich NR1 1RE, UK Website: http://www.ecn.co.uk/ Author: Brian Farmer CANNABIS GROWER 'NOT BREAKING LAW' "I tried cannabis and it got rid of all my pain within half an hour to an hour" Police found more than 40 cannabis plants growing at the house of a disabled multiple sclerosis sufferer, Ipswich Crown Court heard. Former deep sea diver Thomas Yates, 51, of Lowestoft, said he took the cannabis to ease the pain of his illness and denies producing an illegal drug. Mr Yates, father-of-two from Luzon, Bedforshire, moved to Lowestoft 12 tears ago to run a guesthouse. He argues that it was necessary for him to take cannabis in order to ease his suffering and prolong his life. The court was told that Mr Yates was hoping to take part in government-sponsored trials during which he would be legally allowed to take tablets based on cannabis. Police called at his house searching for a man who had stayed at his guesthouse some years ago. The fugitive was not there, but police found three rooms on an upper floor were being used to grow cannabis. Sally Freeman, prosecuting, told the jury that necessity is not a defence to the production of an illegal drug. "Mr Yates is a very sick man and that no doubt will attract a lot of sympathy," she said. "Mr Yates will in due course, I anticipate, be saying he had no option but to do what he did. "It is the Crown's case that is not a defence. "We will argue that what Mr Yates did is against the law and if that if that law need to be changed it needs to be changed elsewhere." Yates told the court his wife had lung cancer and had been given two years to live. He was trying to stockpile cannabis so that he had enough for up to ten years because he knew that he would have to spend more time caring for his wife. The court heard that he had started to suffer from the symptoms of multiple Sclerosis about 13 years ago. He had to stop running his guest house about five years ago, and now lived on disability benefits. He said he had been prescribed a variety of medication by doctors including morphine, sleeping tablets and anti-depression tablets. But they had accused severe side-effects, making him sick, constipated and unable to eat and sleep. Yates said he had read about the medicinal use of cannabis in an article in the Guardian newspaper and ben advised to take it by fellow sufferers. He had started to cultivate his own cannabis - against his wife's wishes about five years ago. "I tried cannabis and it got rid of all my pain within half an hour to an hour," he said. "The pain had all gone - 95 per cent of it anyway." He added: "My quality of life was 100 times better." Without drugs he was in constant pain, suffered muscle spasms and had difficulty walking." He said cannabis "worked brilliantly", made him feel "euphoric" and able to cope. Yates, whose sister also has MS, said his doctors were aware he was taking cannabis. William Notcutt, a consultant anesthetist at the James Pa get Hospital in Gorleston, said Yates was not the only one of his patients using cannabis to ease the pain of multiple sclerosis. He added: "It (cannabis) is an effective way of managing pain for a lot of patients with multiple sclerosis and many other conditions." Many patients suffered so badly from the sideeffects of morphine that they would rather have the pain than take morphine, he said. Mr Notcutt is a leading authority on the medicinal use of cannabis and addressed a House of Lords committee on the subject two years ago. The hearing continues today. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake