Pubdate: Tue, 14 Sep 2004
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2004, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Page: A3
Author: Jane Armstrong, The Globe and Mail
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

B.C. CAFE SERVES UP POT AND CONTROVERSY

Clients Still Leaving With Smug Smiles Despite Last Week's Raid By
Police

VANCOUVER - The lineup outside the Vancouver cafe forms even before
the doors open. Couples, students -- even the odd senior -- stand
patiently in the September drizzle. They all know what's on the menu,
so it's worth the damp wait.

The cafe is called Da Kine (a superlative in Hawaiian slang) and here
marijuana is sold openly. The sidewalk sign says it's a smoke and
beverage shop. But inside, customers ignore the juice and pop fridge
and head straight for the counter. Two joints cost $10, and most
customers leave with a smug smile on their faces.

Da Kine isn't the first cafe in this pot-friendly West Coast city to
put marijuana on the menu, but it may be the most blatant. Da Kine has
a few chairs and tables, but apart from non-alcoholic drinks, there's
nothing to ingest except pot and hashish.

Owner Carol Gwilt recently raised the stakes -- and police tempers --
by openly admitting her marijuana sales. In some media interviews, it
appeared she was daring police to charge her.

Ms. Gwilt said she's providing a service to the city.

"This is something Vancouver obviously needs," she said yesterday.
"There's an incredible market for it."

A diehard marijuana activist, Ms. Gwilt has vowed to keep selling pot
until Ottawa decriminalizes the possession and sale of the drug. Da
Kine, she said, sells pot to people to relieve pain from a disease or
condition. Her operation is a registered charity, she said, and
customers are required to fill out an application seeking a federal
exemption allowing them to use the drug for medical reasons.

But doctors' notes aren't required, and yesterday no customers were
turned away so long as they could produce ID proving they were over 19
years old.

Those interviewed leaving Da Kine gave the product high marks for
quality. "This is better than what you get off the street," Sundeep
Vickram, 32, said, inhaling deeply from a joint. Mr. Vickram, a
University of British Columbia student, said he has schizophrenia and
uses marijuana to relieve anxiety.

Last week, police had had enough. In a high-profile show of force,
more than 40 officers, some dressed in balaclavas, stormed the shop,
arresting Ms. Gwilt and seven others. They cordoned off the street,
halting rush-hour traffic and a movie that was filming in the
neighbourhood.

But Vancouver police say the pot shop is no harmless operation. Ms.
Gwilt, they said, is a dealer running a large, profitable drug
operation. Police seized more than $70,000 cash in last week's raid,
$27,000 of which was in the till, plus 9.5 kilograms of marijuana and
450 grams of hashish. Police said the shop averaged $30,000 a day in
sales.

Ms. Gwilt was charged with trafficking and possession for the purpose
of trafficking, as were seven staff members. The owner also faces a
charge of possessing proceeds of a crime.

But the morning after the police raid, the store was open for
business.

Now police are urging city officials to yank Da Kine's business
licence. A licensing hearing has been scheduled for next month.

"This is a highly profitable criminal activity," said Vancouver Police
spokeswoman Sarah Bloor, adding that she hopes the city "does the
right thing."

Da Kine customers said they think the shop is good for the
neighbourhood.

Mr. Vickram, the UBC student, said fewer drug dealers are on the
street since Da Kine opened. He praised Ms. Gwilt, saying she is
forcing Ottawa to deal with legalization. "This is a good thing," he
said. "This gets it off the streets and away from the gangs."
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MAP posted-by: Derek