Laliberte's organization, Lune Rouge, affirmed in an announcement Wednesday that he is being explored "for supposed complicity in development, ownership, and utilization of cannabis."
The organization depicted Laliberte as a "therapeutic cannabis client" who develops the plant "for his own utilization just" at his bequest on the remote, modest atoll of Nuketepipi in the South Pacific Ocean, which structures some portion of the Tuamotu archipelago in French Polynesia.
The Center of Specialized Consultations in Alcoholics and Drug Addiction, a particular compulsion administration in French Polynesia that is under the supervision of the wellbeing service, says on its site that developing cannabis, "in any event, for individual utilization," is unlawful.
The business person showed up in court in Papeete on Wednesday and left the town hall that evening "with no conditions," as indicated by Lune Rouge. He has not been accused of medication dealing.
"Mr. Fellow Laliberte completely denies and separates himself totally from any gossipy tidbits embroiling him in the deal or the traffic of controlled substances," his organization said in an announcement.
In an announcement discharged through his organization later Wednesday night, Laliberte said he "will keep on participating with the legal specialists of French Polynesia."
He included that the cops have treated him "in an expert and conscious way which is a splendid spot in this misfortune."
"The unbalanced significance is given to this issue, which is by and large trivialized for somebody possessing a few plants of cannabis for carefully close to home use, incredibly shocks me," Laliberte said.
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