HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Pot Advocate Convicted On Trafficking Charges
Pubdate: Wed, 24 May 2006
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2006, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Shannon Kari
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

POT ADVOCATE CONVICTED ON TRAFFICKING CHARGES

Former Cafe Owner Faces Up to 10 Years

VANCOUVER -- The former owner of a well-known east Vancouver cafe that
openly sold marijuana until a police raid in September, 2004, was
convicted of two marijuana-trafficking charges yesterday.

A British Columbia Supreme Court jury found Carol Gwilt guilty of
possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking as well as
possession of the proceeds of crime.

Her co-defendant, Michael Boudreau, was acquitted on the single charge
that he faced, possession of marijuana for the purpose of
trafficking.

The two defendants were arrested on Sept. 16, 2004, after police found
just over 400 grams of marijuana and $11,000 in cash in the car that
Ms. Gwilt was driving.

Police said the street value of the marijuana was just over $4,000.
The arrests came one week after more than 40 Vancouver police officers
raided Ms. Gwilt's business, the Da Kine cafe.

She is facing separate trafficking charges in connection with that
widely publicized raid, which included officers clad in balaclavas, in
a trial that is expected to take place later this year.

The jury heard evidence during this trial that Vancouver police
continued surveillance of the cafe and Ms. Gwilt after the raid. Her
car was stopped when she was observed entering the vehicle with Mr.
Boudreau, who was carrying a sports bag.

Ms. Gwilt has been an outspoken advocate of legalization of marijuana.
She testified last week that some of the marijuana found in the car
was for sale at the Da Kine cafe. She insisted that the money was from
donations people made at the cafe to her legal defence fund.

"It was definitely donation money," Ms. Gwilt said outside court after
the verdict.

She also questioned the amount of public money spent to prosecute her
on these charges and in her upcoming trial.

"It's a huge amount of money. It's money that should be spent on
health care," she said.

Mr. Boudreau was charged because the officers conducting surveillance
saw him carrying a sports bag to Ms. Gwilt's car. The jury accepted
Mr. Boudreau's defence that he did not know the bag contained marijuana.

"He was just being a gentleman," Ms. Gwilt said outside the court, as
she explained why Mr. Boudreau was carrying the sports bag.

Mr. Boudreau was unavailable for comment. His lawyer Michael Mines
said his client was relieved. "This was a nearly two-year-long ordeal
for someone with no criminal history," Mr. Mines said.

Jason Gratl, the lawyer for Ms. Gwilt, said his client effectively
confessed to the trafficking charges in her testimony so she could
explain that Mr. Boudreau was not part of the sale of marijuana at the
Da Kine cafe.

"Her priority has been to make sure innocent people do not get caught
in the web," Mr. Gratl said.

The proceeds of crime offence is the more serious of the two charges
for which Ms. Gwilt was convicted and carries a maximum penalty of 10
years in prison.

Mr. Gratl said his client "understands the consequence of civil
disobedience," but he is hopeful the Crown will not seek a jail
sentence against Ms. Gwilt.

She remains free on bail until her sentencing hearing on July 6.
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