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‘I WAS ASKED TO TAKE IT BY TWO GUYS WHO TOLD ME IT WAS CBD,’ HE TOLD POLICE A British driver has been fined one million euros and a suspended jail sentence for transporting half a tonne of
cannabis through France. The 38-year-old, identified publicly as Matthew D., was stopped at Grande-Synthe near Calais (Nord), after crossing the border from Belgium on February 8, 2024. The
border police, or douanes, searched his Renault Master van and found 567kg of cannabis in boxes on wooden pallets. The driver told them it was CBD, or Cannabidiol, which is a legal form of
cannabis that does not contain tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive compound that produces a high. “I was looking for work,” he told police. “I met two guys near Mons in Belgium who
asked me to transport some CBD to the carpark of a service station in Calais. I said ok and they loaded my van.” The court estimated the market value of the cannabis at €992,000. The border
police also found a GPS tracker hidden with it (thought to be to track the valuable cargo). Local newspaper Nord Littoral reports he had no valid identity papers with him at the time of the
arrest. Read more: Police ID checks in France and foreign documents explained Matthew D., who is reportedly from the traveller community, lives in the UK and did not return to France for
the hearing on June 12. The court did not consider his testimony to have been given in good faith. Matthew D. was found guilty of drug smuggling and given a three-month suspended sentence
and a fine of €992,000 - corresponding to the value of the drugs he tried to smuggle.