#415 Canada’s Prince Of Pot Becomes A Marijuana Martyr

Date: Wed, 30 Sep 2009
Subject: #415 Canada’s Prince Of Pot Becomes A Marijuana Martyr

CANADA’S PRINCE OF POT BECOMES A MARIJUANA MARTYR

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DrugSense FOCUS Alert #415 – Wednesday, 30 September 2009

Former DEA administrator Karen Tandy in a press release on the day of
Marc Emery’s arrest, July 29th, 2005, stated:

“Today’s DEA arrest of Marc Scott Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture
magazine, and the founder of a marijuana legalization group, is a
significant blow not only to the marijuana trafficking trade in the
U.S. and Canada, but also to the marijuana legalization movement….
Drug legalization lobbyists now have one less pot of money to rely
on.”

Philanthropist Marc Emery funneled millions of dollars in resources
and funds to the marijuana legalization movement on both sides of the
border.

The Vancouver Sun’s columnist Ian Mulgrew covers what is happening to
Marc and why below.

Monday, September 28th marks another infamous event in the history of
the efforts to suppress the cannabis culture.

To read current and future press items about Marc please use this
link: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery

Your letters to the editor are always helpful.

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Pubdate: Mon, 28 Sep 2009

Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)

Copyright: 2009 The Vancouver Sun

Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html

Author: Ian Mulgrew, Vancouver Sun

PRINCE OF POT’S SENTENCE REEKS OF INJUSTICE AND MOCKS OUR SOVEREIGNTY

Emery’s Jail Term Longer Than for Some Violent Crimes

After two decades as Canada’s Prince of Pot, Marc Emery will surrender
himself today in B.C. Supreme Court and become the country’s first
Marijuana Martyr.

Emery will begin serving what could be as long as five years behind
bars as Uncle Sam’s prisoner for a crime that in Canada would have
earned him at most a month in the local hoosegow.

It is a legal tragedy that in my opinion marks the capitulation of our
sovereignty and underscores the hypocrisy around cannabis.

Emery hasn’t even visited America but he was arrested in July 2005 at
the request of a Republican administration that abhorred his politics.

He is being handed over to a foreign government for an activity we are
loath to prosecute because we don’t think selling seeds is a major
problem.

There are at least a score of seed-sellers downtown and many, many
more such retail outlets across the country.

In the days ahead, once the federal justice minister signs the
extradition papers, Emery will be frog-marched south to Seattle where
his plea bargain will be rubber-stamped and he will be sent to a U.S.
penitentiary.

For comparison, consider that the B.C. Court of Appeal last year said
a one-month jail sentence plus probation was appropriate punishment
for drug and money-laundering offences of this ilk.

The last time Emery was convicted in Canada of selling pot seeds, back
in 1998, he was given a $2,000 fine.

In July, his co-accused Michelle Rainey and Greg Williams were given
two years probation for conspiracy to manufacture marijuana.

They were indicted along with Emery for their role in what the
authorities described as a $3-million-a-year business.

Rainey, 38, worked for Emery from 1998 to 2005, helping him operate
the B.C. Marijuana Party and his mail-order business.

The 54-year-old Williams took phone orders.

Emery flouted the law for more than a decade and every year he sent
his seed catalogue to politicians of every stripe. He ran in federal,
provincial and civic elections promoting his pro-cannabis platform.

He championed legal marijuana at parliamentary hearings, on national
television, at celebrity conferences, in his own magazine, Cannabis
Culture, and on his own Internet channel, Pot TV.

Health Canada even recommended medical marijuana patients buy their
seeds from his company.

From 1998 until his arrest, Emery even paid provincial and federal
taxes as a “marijuana seed vendor” totalling nearly $600,000.

He was targeted because of his success, targeted as surely as pot
comic Tommy Chong — who spent nearly a year in U.S. jail because his
son ran a company selling glass pipes.

Emery challenged a law he disagrees with using exactly the
non-violent, democratic processes we urge our children to embrace and
of which we are so proud.

“The same seeds I sold are being sold right in America,” Emery
complained. “The people in California are doing it the same way I did
so there’s a terrible hypocrisy at work here.”

He’s right.

Emery recently wrapped up a 30-city “farewell tour” of speaking
engagements across Canada.

And, he’s banking on the transfer agreement that allows Canadians
convicted and jailed in America to serve their time here and take
advantage of our very liberal early-release laws.

If that happened, he could be out within a few years. But Ottawa has
regularly rejected drug offenders for the program and I doubt Emery
will find any sympathy.

I suspect he’s likely to moulder in a violent, overcrowded U.S. jail
for probably his full five-year sentence.

“I’m going to do more time than many violent, repeat offenders,” he
noted.

“There isn’t a single victim in my case, no one who can stand up and
say, ‘I was hurt by Marc Emery.’ No one.”

He’s right again.

Emery is facing more jail time than corporate criminals who defraud
widows and orphans and longer incarceration than violent offenders who
leave their victims dead or in wheelchairs.

Whatever else you may think of him — and I know he rankles many —
what is happening to him today mocks our independence and our ideal of
justice.

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Prepared by: Richard Lake, Senior Editor www.mapinc.org

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