Pubdate: Thu, 01 Sep 2005
Source: Athens News, The (OH)
Copyright: 2005, Athens News
Contact:  http://www.athensnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1603
Author: Matt Mernagh
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

NOT AN OUTLAW IN CANADA

U.S. tanks didn't need to roll into Vansterdam to snatch our beloved Prince 
of Pot, Marc Emery, on Friday, July 29.

All the Yanks had to do was whisper to the B.C. Supreme Court, and the 
RCMP, the Vancouver Police Department and Minister of Justice Irwin Cotler 
fell in line. Emery was detained in Halifax for extradition on U.S. charges 
of conspiracy to launder money and distribute marijuana seeds and marijuana.

At their press conference, Seattle DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency) special 
agent Rod Benson gloated like he'd bagged himself a big Mafia don. But the 
crimes Emery is charged with have all been dealt with in Canadian courts. 
And he won: Canada tolerates seed peddling in yet another complex pot gray 
zone. Yet Benson said Emery showed "overwhelming arrogance and abuse of the 
rule of law." Now whose law would that be?

Jeff Sullivan, from the U.S. Attorney General's office in Seattle, boasts 
that "a substantial amount [of seeds] was going to commercial marijuana 
operations, and we think they'll be significantly affected once he's out of 
business." Now, this is really hilarious. Pot production is going to drop 
south of the border? Doesn't he know it's still business as usual for 
another 60 seed banks still operating in Canada?

But this is all terribly dangerous, says lawyer Alan Young, part of Emery's 
quickly assembled legal team, for many reasons, not least of which is the 
money-laundering charge.

"Every Tom, Dick and Harry in our movement has received his cash," states 
Young flatly about the potential money-flow chart. Emery has said he pays 
about $10,000 a month in taxes for his seed operations, bookstore, magazine 
Cannabis Culture and sales of paraphernalia (Revenue Canada accepts grass 
taxes willingly, doncha know), an indication of how much cash he's 
bestowing on the pot community.

"I took plenty of money from Marc," Young says about the benefactor who 
funded many legal pot challenges. "If this were the late '90s, I'd be 
f---ed [because of the number of cases Emery paid him for]. But using you 
and me [to concoct] a money-laundering scheme isn't a very good strategy. 
We don't make money like buildings or investments."

The whole community receives dividends from our partnership with Emery. 
Myself, I'm fretting like a fiend. If the DEA or U.S. Attorney's office 
issues a deck of Canadian narco terrorist cards, I'd like to be the ace of 
spades. Last November, Emery asked me to write for his magazine. The day 
before the raid, I signed and faxed a contract to pen a series of columns 
on marijuana activism on terms that would make any freelancer envious.

But the question is, does this whole thing stink so bad that non-toking 
public pressure on our justice minister will make it inconvenient to sign 
the extradition order?

According to Ed Morgan, a professor at the University of Toronto law 
school, there are certainly a lot of dicey issues here. "Emery was simply 
using the Internet for anybody who wanted to order from him," he says. "He 
wasn't conspiring to ship drugs to the U.S.; he was simply making them 
available over the Internet to anyone worldwide. For any country to seize 
jurisdiction over the Internet makes the whole world vulnerable to long-arm 
jurisdiction. That seems dangerous to notions of sovereignty."

Human rights lawyer Paul Copeland points to the stiffness of American 
penalties as opposed to those levied by Canadian courts - and wonders if 
that fact alone will doom the extradition attempt. "The Americans are 
talking 10 years to life [for pot crimes]," he says, "so it will be 
interesting to see if anyone is able to persuade the minister of justice 
that the available penalties in the U.S. basically constitute cruel and 
unusual punishment, and whether that would be sufficient to persuade the 
government that Emery shouldn't be sent to the United States."

Guy Caron, a specialist on Canada-U.S. relations with the Council of 
Canadians, says it's the first time he's heard of a Canadian being arrested 
by Canadian law enforcement at the request of the U.S. for an infraction 
committed on Canadian soil. He poses an interesting mental exercise.

"Try to see what would happen if we were to turn the case around," he says. 
"Let's say the Canadian government wanted to extradite a U.S. citizen who 
is peddling hate-mongering documents in Canada through the Internet - white 
supremacy, anti-Semitism or anything else against Canadian hate laws. Do 
you think the U.S. would agree to extradition for this citizen to face 
charges in Canada? Of course not. I personally would be very shocked if the 
extradition goes the U.S. way."

Despite several calls, the Canadian Department of Justice would not provide 
comment.

Meanwhile, according to John Conroy, Emery's lawyer, his client has been 
cleaned out financially by posting bail for himself ($50,000) and fellow 
arrestees Gregory Williams and Michelle Rainey-Fenkarek. "To keep our 
beloved Prince in Canada," Conroy says, "is going to take a massive 
financial effort."

As a weird sidewinder, Conroy tells me he has letters from medical 
marijuana users saying Health Canada actually advised them to purchase 
their seeds from the Net. "We have one hand of the government telling 
people where to get seeds via the Internet and another arm allowing 
arrests," he says.

The marijuana grassroots is already in high gear. On July 29, some 
Vancouver supporters laid down in front of the police van confiscating 
seeds, potential client lists and other documents, and others did what they 
always do when something like this happens. Smoke weed, play hacky-sack. 
Also known as a pot rally. In Toronto, 30 dedicated souls blitzed the U.S. 
Consulate on Monday, Aug. 1, an action that resulted in one police 
apprehension: mine.

The extradition will involve a two-year fight. Given its gravity, 
opportunities to burn something other than green on University Avenue (in 
Toronto) will abound. A nationwide Sept. 10 rally is planned. Dragging me 
back to 52 Division in cuffs on swearing charges will be a more common 
sight than Old Glory going up in flames.

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Editor's note: This piece ran in the Aug. 4-10 edition of NOW, an 
alternative newspaper in Toronto, Canada.
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MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman