Monday, September 20, 2004

Police Officer sends CV to pro-drugs site

The officer was really after a new post as an airborne spotter with North Wales Police's helicopter, and boasted of her powers of observation.
She found the knife used by convicted pyschopath Michael Khan to murder Prestatyn pensioner Brian Dodd.


But instead of sending her CV to the force's own website, she emailed it to Jeffrey Ditchfield, who runs the Beggars Belief cafe and shop in Rhyl.
Last night a police spokeswoman described the incident as "a mistake waiting to happen".


Full details on the link below

http://icnorthwales.icnetwork.co.uk/news/regionalnews/tm_objectid=14663482%26method=full%26siteid=50142-name_page.html

Sunday, September 05, 2004

A Bud Buddie passed away - Biz Ivol RIP

One of the inspirations behind the formation of Bud Buddies, Ms Biz Ivol passed away, her death had a profound effect on me.

Biz suffered from MS and found that cannabis added to chocolate gave her relief from the symptoms of her MS, which she described as "like somebody pulling barbed wire through my spine"

Biz had been prosecuted on a number of occasions for supplying cannabis chocolates to fellow MS sufferers and for cultivating cannabis in her back garden,
The BBC news article below explains

MS cannabis campaigner raided

Biz Ivol takes a stand: "I am not a criminal"

Police have raided a dope-smoking multiple sclerosis sufferer, who featured in our weekly Real Time series explaining how she sent cannabis chocolates to other sufferers.

Biz Ivol, who campaigns for cannabis to legalised for medicinal use, has had her home raided by police.

The Orkney Islander said four officers from Kirkwall Police searched her house last Monday, and took away her cannabis plants, address book and computer.

Biz Ivol first tried cannabis on her doctor's advice

"They were here for more than two hours, going through the house with a fine-tooth comb, but they haven't charged me with anything yet," she told BBC News Online.

Police confirmed that the house was searched, and their inquiries are continuing.

Ms Ivol, 53, uses cannabis to relieve the shakes and pains of multiple sclerosis and sends the surplus free-of-charge to other sufferers around the country.

Not only did the police quiz her about who took her parcels to the post office, she says they also questioned the local post mistress.
'Not a criminal'

In December 1997, Ms Ivol was admonished in Kirkwall Sheriff Court after admitting growing 27 cannabis plants.

Cannabis relieves nausea and eases muscle spasms

Ms Ivol says she is not a criminal. "What makes me cross is that people say it's my own fault for selling drugs. But I've never made a cent from what I'm doing."

Each time she hits the headlines, anonymous supporters from as far away as Ireland and Switzerland send her packages of cannabis seeds through the post.

She grows the plants in her home and, until recently, made cannabis-laced chocolates to send to other sufferers. But demand has grown so rapidly she has handed production over to fellow campaigners Mark and Lezley Gibson in Cumbria.

"When I stop taking it, the difference is frightening"

Ms Ivol, who was diagnosed with MS in 1990, spoke to BBC News Online in May about her fight to get cannabis legalised for medicinal use.
She said then that nothing alleviates the symptoms as effectively as cannabis.

"When I stop taking it, the difference is frightening. I've got uncontrollable muscle spasms - my hand starts banging off the table, my legs fly up into the air - my eyesight goes and I feel ill.

"And I can't tell when I need to go to the toilet without cannabis. I'm utterly and completely incontinent."

Earlier this year Canada became the first country to issue permits for the medical use of marijuana, but a ban remained on recreational use.
In October a House of Commons committee is due to start an investigation of possible decriminalisation of cannabis.

During one of her Court prosecutions, on the question of the legality or decriminalisation of the drug, this, said Sheriff Mackenzie, was for the politicians, not the courts, to decide.

This stance by the judicial authorities is one I will refer to at a later stage, however the plight of Biz was raised by her Member of Parliament with the Prime Minister, who responded

I understand the concerns that the hon. Gentleman raises and those of his constituent. As he probably knows, we are currently reviewing the issue of cannabis and people with diseases such as multiple sclerosis. We are not yet in a position to state the findings of that review, but we are giving it urgent consideration. We understand that there is potentially a distinction between those who need cannabis for medicinal purposes and those who do not. I am sure that people will take a sympathetic view of the position of the hon. Gentleman's constituent, although that must remain a matter for the authorities, not the Government. Tony Blair (Prime Minister) 3rd July 2002