Pubdate: Tue, 02 Aug 2005
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2005 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Doug Ward and Darah Hansen
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

DEA POT RAID: 'IT'S A WAR ON CANADIANS, IN CANADA'

Store manager Heidi Farnola thought it was a joke when a group of 
scruffy-looking men and women, some wearing T-shirts bearing a marijuana 
leaf, entered the B.C. Marijuana Party Bookstore Friday morning, shut the 
doors behind them and ordered everyone to freeze.

"This guy said, 'Nobody move, this is a DEA-Vancouver raid,' " Farnola said 
of the bust, which was conducted by plainclothes officers from the 
Vancouver police department, on behalf of the U.S. Drug Enforcement 
Administration.

"I just looked at him and said, 'That's not . . . funny.' "

Turns out, few others think it's funny either. The raid on the BCMP 
Bookstore at 307 West Hastings -- and the subsequent criminal charges laid 
by U.S. authorities against B.C. pot activist Marc Emery, as well as 
Michelle Rainey-Fenkarek and Gregory Williams, on charges of distributing 
marijuana seeds south of the border via the Internet -- has many in 
Vancouver talking these days.

And the question on everyone's lips is: How can American authorities 
orchestrate an arrest of Canadians on their home turf, especially when 
Canadian law enforcement officials have tolerated Emery's marijuana seed 
business for years and declined to prosecute?

"A lot of people who don't even smoke pot think this is completely absurd," 
said Farnola of the feedback she's received over the weekend from customers 
at the marijuana paraphernalia store.

"This is a war on Canadians, in Canada. It's bad," she said.

Emery and Williams are scheduled to appear for a bail hearing in B.C. 
Supreme Court today.

Emery's lawyer, John Conroy, said the Crown is seeking to keep his client 
in detention and will be seeking $25,000 bail from Williams. 
Rainey-Fenkarek was released Friday on bail of $25,000.

According to Simon Fraser University criminologist Neil Boyd, it could take 
up to two years before the trio face extradition hearings on the charges.

In the meantime, Canadian criminal justice officials will have to answer an 
important question: Will they allow Emery and the others to face a much 
harsher U.S. criminal sentence than would be imposed under similar 
circumstances on this side of the border?

"My gut feeling is that he won't be handed over without some pretty serious 
negotiations about the approach to be taken . . . I would think that Canada 
would want to seek assurances with respect to the kind of penalty that will 
be sought against Mr. Emery," Boyd said.

Assistant U.S. attorney Jeff Sullivan said Friday Emery is facing a maximum 
sentence of life in prison.

Conroy said the question of extradition could hinge on whether Canada's 
courts consider it "unjust or oppressive" to send him to the U.S.

"We will argue that it is unjust if the offence is allowed to occur or is 
tolerated openly in Canada for a long period of time," Conroy said.

He noted that Emery's seed distribution business was part of the thriving 
"Vansterdam" scene of marijuana-related businesses in this city.

"Even the mayor said we should regulate and tax marijuana," Conroy said.

"So what's the problem? All of a sudden, after having done nothing, our 
officials are assisting the American government in their effort to give 
Emery life without parole."

The role of the DEA in Emery's arrest has sparked controversy. Many 
observers, including three city councillors who will likely compete to be 
Vancouver's next mayor, are concerned about the U.S.-directed raid.

"While there is a legitimate argument about the legalization of marijuana," 
said councillor Sam Sullivan, "I think bringing the American drug war 
issues into this debate in Canada isn't helpful."

Sullivan called Emery "a helpful part of a legitimate debate," adding that 
"throwing him in jail doesn't help us in our understanding of the issue 
further."

Fellow councillor Peter Ladner said Emery's arrest "sounded to me like an 
intrusion by American justice officials onto Canadian soil."

Ladner said he was alarmed to read that the assistant U.S. attorney 
justified Emery's arrest by saying that "there are more kids in treatment 
for addiction to marijuana than every other illegal drug combined."

"I find that statement extremely hard to believe," Ladner said.

Vision Vancouver mayoral candidate Jim Green called the DEA instigation of 
the arrest "very troubling."

Green said the arrest goes against the increasingly liberal approach toward 
marijuana in Canada.

"It's a very definite intervention into what we are doing here," he said. 
"The mayor (Larry Campbell) has been strong in supporting legalization of 
marijuana. The Federation of Canadian Municipalities is looking into it. I 
really don't understand it [the arrest]."

The raid on Emery's bookstore was requested by the U.S. government through 
the Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, a federal law 
administered by the Department of Justice. A search warrant was authorized 
Thursday in B.C. Supreme Court, based on an affidavit provided by a 
Vancouver police officer.

U.S. authorities say the warrant was the result of an 18-month 
investigation of Emery's international seed-selling business.

Boyd said an incident such as Friday's raid was imminent ever since the DEA 
set up office in Vancouver in 2002.

According to Farnola, an estimated $10,000 in donations poured in over the 
weekend from hundreds of people outraged by news of Emery's arrest.

"People know Marc's name and they know he's pushed the limits . . . the 
fact that we can sell [marijuana] seeds and smoke pot openly, that's all 
due to Marc pushing the limits," she said.

"He's just got it in his blood to fight for things."
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MAP posted-by: Beth