Pubdate: Mon, 13 Sep 2004
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2004 Times Colonist
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Krisendra Bisetty, CanWest News Service
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

DEFIANT OWNER REOPENS POT CAFE

VANCOUVER -- People were lined up 20-deep for marijuana outside the Da Kine 
Food and Beverage shop within minutes of its opening Sunday, while across 
the street Vancouver Mayor Larry Campbell said the drug should be legalized.

"I support legalization of marijuana but at the same time that doesn't mean 
they (Da Kine management) get to flout the law until the law is changed," 
Campbell said.

While Da Kine's selling of marijuana was illegal and a police issue, 
Campbell said his earlier comments that it was not a "big deal" was made 
from the point of view that it was open for four months with no complaints.

"Certainly there is a big deal from the point of legality. It's illegal and 
there's nothing the city can do to change that. It's a federal law and this 
idea that we can pass a bylaw that says coffee shops can sell marijuana is 
craziness. We can't do it, it's not a municipal responsibility."

While Da Kine continues to sell marijuana -- "poking a stick at the police" 
- -- Campbell says there would obviously be repercussions, referring to 
Thursday's police raid at the pot shop. In addition to a haul of marijuana 
and cash, Da Kine owner Carol Gwilt and seven employees were arrested.

"My answer is you legalize it and tax the living hell out of it. And every 
bit of the tax should go straight to health care, not the general fund," 
Campbell said.

Gwilt and others linked to her shop have said selling marijuana over the 
counter for medicinal purposes helped get rid of street peddlers. But the 
mayor dismissed that argument, saying the cafe's staff "are peddlers 
themselves.

"The fact of the matter is that it is against the law, it is illegal, they 
are trafficking in a drug. Would it make any sense if they opened up and 
started selling heroin?"

As customers squeezed inside her store and others lined up outside, Gwilt 
- -- who was possibly contravening a condition of her release from custody 
that she stay away from marijuana or any location or person where it is 
present -- said in an interview that if Campbell can approve of a safe 
injection site for heroin users, he should do the same for those who smoke 
marijuana.

"There's a safe injection site in Vancouver although heroin is illegal. 
Why? Because there's a need for it, because people are dying on the street. 
And our wonderful mayor has realized this and has come to the aid of his 
people, which is what any good mayor will do," Gwilt said.

She described the police raid as a waste of taxpayers' money. "If they come 
again it's just absolutely absurd and if they got the balls enough to do 
that I got the balls enough to open up again. This is war."

Gwilt said she works 15 hours a day seven days a week and smokes pot during 
every one of those days for relief from a chronic "vertigo condition" she 
had since she was a child.

"I'm able to live each day and get out of my bed because of marijuana."

A customer leaving her shop after buying an undisclosed amount of marijuana 
said he smoked it daily for 24 years simply to "get high" because his job 
as a driver in Vancouver is stressful.

"It takes the edge off, but I'm not a drug addict, except for pot," the 
57-year-old man said, clutching a plastic container.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager