Source: Vancouver Sun
Date: January 14 2008
Author: Ian Mulgrew
VANCOUVER – Marc Emery, Vancouver’s self-styled Prince of Pot, has
tentatively agreed to a five-year prison term in a plea bargain over
U.S. money laundering and marijuana seed-selling charges.
Facing an extradition hearing Jan. 21 and the all-but-certain prospect
of delivery to American authorities, Emery has cut a deal with U.S.
prosecutors to serve his sentence in Canada. He also hopes it will save
his two co-accused – Michelle Rainey and Greg Williams, who were his
lieutenants for so much of the past decade.
The three were arrested in August 2005 at the request of the United
States and charged even though none had ventured south of the border.
Since then, they have been awaiting the extradition hearing. With the
proceedings about to begin, Emery says his lawyer brokered the best deal
possible.
If accepted by the courts in both countries, Emery said he will serve
the full term and not be eligible for Canada’s lenient
get-out-of-jail-early rules.
“I’m going to do more time than many violent, repeat offenders,” he
complained. “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. Whatever else you may think of Emery – and he grates on
many people, what is happening here is a travesty of justice. Emery’s
case mocks our independence as a country. Prosecutors in Canada have not
enforced the law against selling pot seeds and all you need do is walk
along Hastings Street between Homer and Cambie for proof.
There are numerous stores selling seeds and products for producing
cannabis. Around the corner, you’ll find more seed stores. You’ll find
the same shops in Toronto and in other major Canadian cities.
The last time Emery was convicted in Canada of selling pot seeds, back
in 1998, he was given a $2,000 fine. Emery has flouted the law for more
than a decade and every year he sends his seed catalogue to politicians
of every stripe.
He has run in federal, provincial and civic elections promoting his
pro-cannabis platform. He has 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 Emery. From 1998 until his arrest, Emery even paid provincial
and federal taxes as a “marijuana seed vendor” totalling nearly $600,000.
He is being hounded because of his success. The political landscape has
changed dramatically as a result of Emery’s politicking for cannabis.
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.
But along the way he has angered the anti-drug law-enforcement community
the same gang that insists we must continue an expensive War on Drugs
that has failed miserably for more than a quarter century and does more
harm than good.
Canadian police grew so frustrated that neither prosecutors nor the
courts would lock up Emery and throw away the key, they urged their U.S.
counterparts to do the dirty work. And that’s what’s wrong.
Emery is being handed over to a foreign government for an activity we
are loath to prosecute because we don’t think it’s a major problem. His
two associates were charged only as a way of blackmailing him into
copping a plea.
It’s a scandal.
Emery is being made a scapegoat for an anti-cannabis criminal law that
is a monumental failure. In spite of all our pricey efforts during the
last 40 years, and all the demonization of marijuana, there is more pot
on our streets, more people smoking dope and more damage being done to
our communities as a result of the prohibition.
There is a better way and every study from the 1970s Le Dain Commission
onward has urged change and legalization.
Regardless of what you think of Emery, he should not be facing an
unconscionably long jail term for a victimless, non-violent crime that
generates a shrug in his own country. Emery is facing more jail time
than corporate criminals who defrauded widows and orphans and longer
incarceration than violent offenders who have left their victims dead or
in wheelchairs.
And while he has long seemed to court martyrdom, Emery is by no means
sanguine about what is happening. He is angry at local lawyers for
failing to come up with a viable defence.
“They had two years and $90,000 and they came up with nothing,” he
fumed. “John Conroy called me up and said ‘take the deal – Michelle will
die in jail. Michelle will die in jail!’ What can I say to that?”
Rainey, who has a medical exemption to smoke marijuana, has Crohn’s
disease. Incarceration in the U.S. would deprive her of her medicine,
and she fears it could lead to her death.
“It’s an ugly situation but Marc expects miracles,” Kirk Tousaw, one of
the lawyers involved, told me. “There aren’t any here.”
He’s right. Our extradition law puts Canadian citizens at the mercy of
foreign governments and judges can’t do much about it. Emery is being
forced to accept a deal because not only are two of his friends in
jeopardy if he doesn’t, but also to go south for an unfair trial would
mean serving as much as 20 years in prison, perhaps more.
One of his friends, for example, was handed a 30-year sentence for
growing 200 plants. This is wrong.
If Emery has been breaking the law and must be jailed, our justice
department should charge him and prosecute him in Canada. It’s time for
Justice Minister Rob Nicholson to step in and say, sorry, Uncle Sam, not
today – not ever.