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Canadian Pot activist faces extradition

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themadcowtipper

Smells faintly of rancid stilton.
By ROD MICKLEBURGH

Saturday, July 30, 2005 Updated at 3:04 AM EDT

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

Vancouver — Marc Emery, Canada's most prominent pro-marijuana activist, is facing the possibility of life imprisonment in the United States for selling marijuana seeds over the Internet to U.S. customers.

In a stunning development, RCMP officers arrested the self-proclaimed “Prince of Pot” in Halifax yesterday after a U.S. federal grand jury indicted him on charges of conspiracy to distribute marijuana seeds, conspiracy to distribute marijuana and conspiracy to engage in money laundering.

The charges stem from Mr. Emery's lucrative sale of marijuana seeds, an activity he has carried on from his Vancouver base with minimal legal penalty for 10 years.

“I've sold about four million seeds,” the marijuana mogul boasted in a 2002 media interview. “Unlike most other seed dealers, I use my real name and I'm easy to find.”

U.S. drug-enforcement officials said they will seek Mr. Emery's extradition from Canada to stand trial in Seattle, where conviction on either of the marijuana charges carries a minimum prison term of 10 years to a maximum of life.

Special Agent Rodney Benson of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency said Mr. Emery, 47, has distributed millions of cannabis seeds to U.S. customers over the years, earning as much as $3-million annually.

“I am pleased to announce that he is out of business as of today,” Mr. Benson told a Seattle news conference. “His overblown arrogance and abuse of the rule of law will no longer be on display. Like other drugs, marijuana harms the innocents.”

By mid-afternoon, an attempt to access Mr. Emery's business on the Internet produced a message, in large red letters: “Emery Seeds has been raided by the DEA and is shut down.”

The arrest of Mr. Emery, also head of the B.C. Marijuana Party, was accompanied by a simultaneous Vancouver Police raid of party headquarters on the edge of the city's drug-ravaged Downtown Eastside.

Police were acting on a search warrant signed by Associate Chief Justice Patrick Dohm of the B.C. Supreme Court, who agreed there were reasonable grounds to believe that the three conspiracy charges “over which the United States of America has jurisdiction have been committed.”

Mr. Emery's supporters, four of whom were carted away for lying down in front of a police van, were outraged by the day's events.

Puffing openly on marijuana, they pounded drums, chanted at passing motorists and brandished signs damning the DEA for intruding into Canada.

“I was completely shocked,” said well-known pot activist David Malmo-Levine, who took his fight against Canada's marijuana laws to the Supreme Court of Canada.

“It's appalling for the U.S. to come in here and try to police our country. To arrest Canadians to face their penalties and their laws is completely wrong,” he said, standing in front of an upside down U.S. flag with the words “DEA Go Away” on it.

Two other marijuana activists were also arrested in Vancouver on the same charges as Mr. Emery, at the request of U.S. authorities yesterday — Michelle Rainey-Fenkarek, 34, and Gregory Williams, 50.

Television footage showed an undercover officer wearing a balaclava bundling Mr. Williams into a police vehicle.

The extradition hearing is certain to highlight a clash between the Draconian drug laws of the United States and Canada's more benign approach to marijuana use.

Only last week, the B.C. Court of Appeal rejected a two-year jail term for a convicted marijuana grower as excessive, while Ottawa is moving to decriminalize possession of small amounts of pot.

Assistant U.S. attorney Jeff Sullivan said there is no chance of marijuana being legalized in the United States. “Marijuana is not a benign drug. There are more kids in treatment for addiction to marijuana than for all other illegal drugs combined,” Mr. Sullivan claimed.

Last year, Mr. Emery spent two months in a Saskatoon jail for passing a joint around at a pro-pot rally, the only time he has been sent to prison for any of his 11 marijuana-related convictions in Canada.

U.S. officials praised the “outstanding co-operation” of Canadian law-enforcement agencies in their 18-month investigation of Mr. Emery's seed business, 75 per cent of which they said was aimed at Americans
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20050730.wxdope0730/BNStory/National/

emery.jpg

Activist Marc Emery lights up a large marijuana cigarette in front of London Ontario Police headquarters on Aug. 26, 2003. Police raided a business run by the head of the B.C. Marijuana party on Friday based on a search warrant requested by the U.S. government, which wants Marc Emery extradited to face charges related to the sale of marijuana seeds on the Internet and by mail.

If we only spent as much money trying to catch pedos as we do on the war on drugs....
 
"You can kill the protestor, but you can't kill the protest. You can murder the rebel, but you can't murder the rebellion."
 
Tuvoc said:
"You can kill the protestor, but you can't kill the protest. You can murder the rebel, but you can't murder the rebellion."

That's like suggesting hunters want to kill off all of the deer - we kill protestors for sport. ;)
 
beermonkey@tehbias said:
We need to worry about the meth epidemic and stop wasting money prosecuting nonsense like this.

The sale of an illegal drug (marijuana) is nonsense?
 
I'd much rather they go after Meth right now. I don't do pot or anything deemed illegal but weed is harmless over the short term depending on the user. Meth is a brain fuck within a short time span. Too bad the shit doesn't outright kill the users off quickly because after they've destroyed themselves with the drug society has to accomodate them.
 
beermonkey@tehbias said:
We need to worry about the meth epidemic and stop wasting money prosecuting nonsense like this.

Bingo. Meth is already the number one illicit drug in America and growing fast. I've seen lots of friends throwing there lives away cause of meth. Seriously make pot legal and tax it. Meth on the other hand needs to become the focus of the DEA.
 
The_Sorrow said:
Bingo. Meth is already the number one illicit drug in America and growing fast. I've seen lots of friends throwing there lives away cause of meth. Seriously make pot legal and tax it. Meth on the other hand needs to become the focus of the DEA.
True. You can make it a bathtub or even a fucking coffee maker. Crazy fucking rednecks.
 
Also I'm pretty familiar with drugs(I don't do them anymore but I used to) and I just read the Newsweek article:

The dealing started almost by default, when I began looking for a better price than the $100-a-gram I was paying for coke and discovered I could get a full ounce--28 grams--for $1,000.

Ummmmm thats way to much.
 
The guy shouldn't have been trying to sell to the U.S. and should be punished for not respecting the laws of another country but still, 10 years to life for selling pot? He should have just shot a few people or done some robbin' and raping. Probably would deal with smaller time frames. So foolish.

I certainly hope that our government doesn't let the U.S. get away with this. Or if they have to (because we usually roll over like dogs), at least get the time reduced to something reasonable.
 
California saves over 200 million a year by not prosecuting for small amounts of marijuana for personal use. They will just give you a fine or something. The rest of the country needs to wake the fuck up and deciminalize small amounts of bud.

Pardon me if that paragraph is badly typed, i happen to be stoned right now :D
 
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