Pubdate: Fri, 23 Nov 2001 Source: Manchester Evening News (UK) Copyright: 2001 Manchester Evening News Contact: http://www.manchesteronline.co.uk Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1313 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) OWNER 'DEALT IN CANNABIS AT HIS CAFE' The owner of Britain's first cannabis cafe is operating as a drug dealer, a court heard. Stockport magistrates were told Colin Davies' claim he supplied the drug at the Dutch Experience only to those who use it for medicinal purposes was not true. Police had evidence the premises on Hooper Street, in Stockport, were being used for the commercial supply of the drug to anybody who wished to purchase it, prosecutor Lesley Mott said. The claim was made after magistrates allowed reporting restrictions to be lifted following an appeal by Mr Davies' solicitor, Lesley Herman, during a dramatic court appearance yesterday attended by dozens of his supporters. Ms Herman admitted her client was a nuisance to the police and the authorities but pointed out that Mr Davies had twice been acquitted of drugs offences, in June 1997 and July 1998, by separate juries. Pain Relief She said Mr Davies had badly damaged his spine in 1996 which required numerous operations and which caused pain so severe that morphine and other painkillers could not help. When he was offered it at a spinal injuries unit in Sheffield, cannabis provided him with the first proper night's sleep since the accident and now he wanted to make it available to other sick people in his situation, she said. Mr Davies set up his cafe on a slightly different basis, where the sale of tea and coffee with the help of donations would be used to provide the drug to sick people and patients in his Medical Marijuana Co-operative, the court heard. Ms Herman said her client admitted possession of the drug, but added: "It has always been Mr Davies' intention that he has not supplied cannabis for money." Earlier, prosecutor Ms Mott described how police raided The Dutch Experience on September 15 just before its grand opening. Raid Police seized bags containing cannabis, smoking "bongs", pipes and other cannabis merchandise including T-shirts, ashtrays and stickers, while officers also seized more bags of cannabis and computers at Mr Davies' home in Brinnington, she said. Another raid on Tuesday afternoon this week had been preceeded by numerous newspaper articles indicating cannabis was being openly smoked on the premises, she said. Ms Mott said police seized a kilo of cannabis in the process of being weighed out for re-sale, along with scales and bags full of cannabis being sold at UKP10 each. The value of the drugs was up to UKP3,000, she said. She also said Mr Davies had been charged with importing "very large quantities of cannabis" from the Continent, adding that one video cassette box seized by customs officers hid a kilo of cannabis resin. Ms Herman made an application for her client, who is charged with string of drug offences, to be freed on bail. A decision to refuse the application was greeted with uproar from the public gallery. Mr Davies was remanded in custody until November 29 while three others, who are also charged with drug offences, were released on conditional bail until January 3. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager