Pubdate: Sat, 16 Dec 2006 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2006 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Patrick Barkham Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) COUPLE GUILTY OF GIVING CANNABIS TO MS PATIENTS Drug helped alleviate symptoms, say sufferers . Operation ran for six years from domestic kitchen A couple who gave thousands of chocolate bars laced with cannabis to multiple sclerosis patients for pain relief were found guilty yesterday of conspiring to supply the drug. Mark Gibson and his wife, Lezley, who has the condition, said they would be forced to abandon their voluntary operation, which they said had helped more than 1,600 MS sufferers, after they were convicted of two counts each of conspiring to supply the drug throughout 2004 and until February 2005. Their associate Marcus Davies, who ran a post office box and a website for their organisation, Therapeutic Help From Cannabis for Multiple Sclerosis, was also found guilty. The couple made the Canna-Biz chocolate, with 2g to 3.5g of cannabis per 150g bar, in the kitchen of their home in Alston, Cumbria, and posted an estimated 33,000 bars to people with MS over six years. They told the jury at Carlisle crown court that they did not sell the treatment but instead relied on donations to cover the cost of making the bars. The court heard they only provided the chocolate to people with MS and insisted that they were given a doctor's note confirming the patient had MS before they would supply the chocolate. Two MS patients in wheelchairs told the court they had provided official medical letters to obtain the chocolate. Michael Wood, a former solicitor, said: "I continued to get bars of chocolate regularly because they were having great benefit to my condition." Mrs Gibson told the court she had been told she would be in a wheelchair within five years after being diagnosed with MS when she was 20. Now 42, she said she took no conventional medicine and could walk without a wheelchair, which she attributed to a regular dose of cannabis. The Gibsons made no secret of their project to give cannabis to MS sufferers during its six-year operation. While an internal police memo revealed in court concluded it would be "oppressive and vindictive" to monitor them after Mrs Gibson was acquitted of possessing cannabis in 2000, two years later the couple were informally advised by a senior police officer to take the chocolate manufacture out of Cumbria. They were arrested in 2005 after a bag containing the bars spilled open in a sorting office and the police raided their home, where they found chocolate-making equipment. The prosecution said receipts linked to donations totalling more than UKP39,000 were found at the home of Mr Davies. There were gasps and sobs in the public gallery and Mrs Gibson broke down in tears when the verdict was delivered. "I'm absolutely devastated," she said outside the court. "I've been told what I've done is against the law but the law is wrong. Who is going to look after all those 1,600 MS sufferers now? ... I can't understand why no one wants to stand up for disabled people." Mrs Gibson said she felt let down by the doctors and nurses who wrote letters confirming their patients had MS knowing they would then receive the cannabis chocolate but refused to speak out in favour of their work in court. Mr Gibson said he believed he had a defence of "medical necessity" in law. But the Crown Prosecution Service has taken a tough line on the use of cannabis to relieve chronic pain, despite the downgrading of the drug from class B to class C. In May last year, the court of appeal ruled "medical necessity" could be no defence for the possession or supply of cannabis as a pain relief. A form of prescription cannabis has been available in spray form for MS sufferers on a special licence since November last year but many patients say they have found it impossible to obtain. A spokesman for the MS Society said: "This case gives even more weight to the calls we have been making for properly-trialled cannabis-derived medicine to be provided on the NHS for the relief of painful and distressing MS symptoms." The Gibsons said they would consider appealing against the decision. It is not expected that they will receive a custodial term but they could face a lengthy suspended sentence and community service punishment. All three defendants were ordered to return to court next month. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek