Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Fined over cancer claim

- Lea Emery

A FORMER airconditi­oning electricia­n advertised and sold herbal remedies as cancer treatments for about a year despite no proof the tablets were successful.

For about 12 months from 2018, Darrell Charles Barnett used his company Futurepro, trading as Inet Herbal, to sell herbal remedies like gumbi gumbi and bloodroot. He spruiked the remedies on Facebook, ebay and his own website as “compliment­ary (sic) and beneficial natural cancer treatments”.

Bloodroot and gumbi gumbi have not been proven to treat cancer.

Barnett and Futurepro pleaded guilty in the Southport Magistrate­s to seven charges each, including advertisin­g therapeuti­c goods, exporting therapeuti­c goods, importing therapeuti­c goods, manufactur­ing therapeuti­c goods and supplying therapeuti­c goods.

Magistrate Gary Finger on Thursday fined Barnett $25,000. He placed Futurepro on a $5000 good behaviour bond for three years.

“It is not in my view (an offence) of a trivial nature and they are certainly not trifling,” he said.

“It was a deliberate practice on your part and the company’s part.

“You knew of the warning given to another party in a similar situation, but you continued to trade.”

The court was told Barnett, 58, advertised and sold products such as gumbi gumbi capsules, bloodroot capsules, Zen Pain Relief drops and Zenith Salve with DMSO.

It was stated in court documents: “The business sells therapeuti­c goods that are represente­d as providing compliment­ary (sic) and beneficial natural cancer treatment as well as beneficial treatments for other ailments.”

None of the remedies had been approved for use by the Therapeuti­c Goods Administra­tion, a fact Barnett noted on the website.

The Facebook and ebay pages also made similar claims, the court was told.

On ebay, Barnett and Inet Herbal instructed users to go to a Facebook discussion to “find out all the wonderful benefits of bloodroot and learn how people naturally treat their cancers”.

The court was told Inet Herbal had a turnover of about $25,000 in the year it was operating.

Defence barrister Carl Tessmann, instructed by Potts Lawyers, said some of that turnover had come from other items sold by Inet Herbal.

He told the court Barnett started selling the herbal remedies after a friend who had terminal cancer used them and said he imported them in small quantities from the United States.

Mr Tessmann said Barnett had worked for most of his life as an airconditi­oning electricia­n until an injury in 2015 left him unable to work.

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