A man who turned to cocaine use after being left permanently afflicted by a flesh-eating disease has been sentenced for possession and supply of the drug. Charles Temple Meyer, who owned the Hunting and Fishing franchises in Otaki and Wairarapa, was ordered to pay reparation of $2500 for the supply charge, which was to be donated to the Mash Trust - a drug rehabilitation charity.
He was convicted and discharged in the Levin District Court today for the possession charge.
During sentencing on Wednesday, Judge Stephanie Edwards said Meyer had become depressed after contracting the illness in 2013. It put him in hospital for a month and he needed multiple operations over the next eight months.
He was left with a permanent disability, which made walking difficult.
The court was told Meyer laid out two lines of cocaine on the microwave in the lunchroom at his Otaki store In December last year. He then handed a rolled-up $20 note to an employee, telling him his Christmas bonus was in the lunchroom.