Pubdate: Sun, 17 Jan 2010 Source: Sunday News (New Zealand) Copyright: 2010 Fairfax New Zealand Limited Contact: http://www.stuff.co.nz/sunday-news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5119 Cited: The Daktory http://thedaktory.org.nz/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?251 (Cannabis - New Zealand) MORE GREEN WOES DAKTA Green - the man behind New Zealand's first cannabis-smoking club - - plans to defend fresh drugs charges after a police raid on the club last Saturday. West Auckland police raided the Daktory - where about 2000 members have met to buy and smoke cannabis for the last 14 months - after Sunday News asked police national headquarters what they'd do about the 59-year-old's plans to open similar clubs nationwide from next month. Green, who was already due to appear in court last week on other matters, faced four fresh charges resulting from the raid on his Delta Steet, New Lynn, home and Daktory club rooms. Those charges were: permitting a premise to be used for cannabis offending; cultivating cannabis; give/sell/supply/administer cannabis and possession for supply of a Class C drug. Green appeared at Waitakere District Court on Tuesday and entered no plea. The long-time campaigner for cannabis law reform was bailed to reappear in the court later this month. As part of our story on the Daktory and Green, Sunday News asked readers whether cannabis should be legalised. The paper received the biggest response to a text-message question ever, receiving over 1000 responses. Almost every one of them was in favour of cannabis being legalised. Meanwhile, a man who helped Green set up the Daktory, Brian Borland - who goes by the name Dakta Grower - is currently five months through a two-year, four-month prison term for growing and selling cannabis. Borland, serving time at Rangipo Prison, Turangi, formed a company called the Roaring Lion Cannabis Shoppe to sell his product before he was busted and sentenced in August 2008. Following the National Reform of Marijuana Reform's (Norml) national conference, in Turangi in November, 10 members visited Borland at the prison, arriving there in their protest bus, Mary Jane. According to the Summer 2010 issue of Norml News, prison authorities ordered the Norml members off the bus and conducted a thorough search. No drugs were found. Pictured alongside a story is a photograph of Borland dressed in orange prison overalls and a Norml T-shirt, doing a Daktory hand signal. The signal signifies the five strands of a cannabis leaf and how a user's hand looks when they're smoking a joint. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake