Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Pubdate: Thursday, June 11, 1998 Author: Peter Edwards POT GROWING LOTTERY WINNER FINED LONDON, Ont. - A mechanic who won a $22.5 million lottery jackpot has been fined $25,000 for growing marijuana in his basement. Bernie Nauss, 60, won the Super 7 lottery this spring. Yesterday he pleaded guilty to charges laid a year ago of cultivation and possession for the purpose of trafficking of marijuana. As well as being ordered to pay the fine to anti-addiction centres, he was prohibited from possessing firearms for the next 10 years, and ordered to perform 120 hours of community service. 500 PLANTS Nauss had nearly 500 plants in his cellar, but ``presumably he doesn't need to grow marijuana any more,'' Crown Attorney Dave Rowcliffe said. The rural auto mechanic was gullible and hard up when he agreed to set up a fairly sophisticated marijuana cultivating operation in his ramshackle farm home, his lawyer, Joe Foreman argued in Ontario Court, provincial division. ``This marijuana escapade that he got into is frankly the most tragic thing that he has ever done,'' Foreman told the court. ``He has never been involved in the drug trade and would not have been if he had not listened to someone he thought had more brains than he did.'' Charges were dropped against Nauss' 36-year-old wife Kris, who hid her head in her hands during the case. Her husband, dressed in a denim shirt, non-descript pants and scuffed brown shoes, appeared interested in the proceedings, but not particularly worried and showed little emotion upon hearing the sentence. The couple lives in Parkhill, 50 kilometres west of London. The plants found throughout their basement were worth at least $123,500, and the cultivation equipment was worth about $10,000, Rowcliffe said. Foreman argued the value of the drugs and apparatus was worth considerably less than the crown's estimate. Rowcliffe had argued for a jail term of between three and six months. ``Certainly your present circumstances are very unusual,'' Judge Deborah Livingstone said in passing the sentence. The couple has given frequent and generous amounts to charity since the windfall, but the money has brought them headaches as well as financial comfort, Foreman said. Nauss has faced ``absolutely shocking'' pressure from panhandling strangers and members of the media, who think nothing of knocking on his door at all hours, Foreman said. Despite this, Nauss has remained a man of his rustic community, sticking inside his long-time family home rather than escaping to some exotic island retreat, Foreman said. Earlier this spring, Nauss was convicted of having rifles improperly stored, but Foreman said the guns had nothing to do with the basement crop. ``The .22 rifle was used to shoot varmints around the place,'' Foreman said, arguing his clients weren't aware of recent changes to gun laws calling for safer storage. ``They, quite frankly, don't read the papers to a large extent,'' Foreman said. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski