Pubdate: Thu, 04 Aug 2005 Source: Gateway, The (U of Alberta, CN AB Edu) Copyright: 2005 Gateway Student Journalism Society Contact: http://www.gateway.ualberta.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3149 Author: Tim Peppin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) MARC EMERY MUST NOT BE EXTRADITED So Marc Emery has been arrested again, and this time, it seems, it's serious. Marc Emery, for those of you who don't know, is the president of the British Columbia Marijuana Party. He runs a prolific marijuana seed distribution company, or ran one I should say, as it has now been raided and shut down. He is famous for having smoked marijuana in front of police stations across the country in the summer of 2003 to demonstrate the absence of valid anti-marijuana laws. And he has frequently been put through the Canadian legal system on pot-related charges: a conviction in 2004 for "trafficking" comes to mind, when he was seen by police officers to have passed a joint to a university student. Heaven forfend. Ordinarily, Mr Emery's arrest wouldn't surprise me. When you openly flout standing laws--hypocritical and asinine though they are--and are an outspoken political activist, the attentions of law enforcement officials are likely to be disproportionately directed towards you, regardless of whether this should be the case in an ostensibly rational and free society. What does trouble me about Mr Emery's arrest is that it was not initiated by Canadian law enforcement. The investigation and subsequent arrest of Mr Emery was a result of the attentions of the American Drug Enforcement Administration, an agency which is now requesting his extradition. If extradited, he will be tried on charges of conspiracy to distribute marijuana and marijuana seeds, and conspiracy to launder money. Given his unabashed involvement in the legalization movement and the simple existence of a seed distribution company bearing his name, a conviction would be assured. The maximum sentence, when convicted, is life imprisonment. Now I understand that as a sovereign nation, the United States has the right to create and enforce any laws which it chooses, no matter how ludicrous. But Canada has the right--and the obligation--to protect its citizens from persecution deemed injust or excessive. Surely we must admit that in a country which no longer prosecutes the distribution of marijuana seeds, which in many areas willfully neglects to prosecute the traffic of marijuana, and which as a whole is considering its decriminalization, the extradition of a political activist to face some of the harshest prison sentences and conditions on the continent is inconsistent, to put it mildly. The American War on Drugs has failed in its objectives and caused considerable social harm. This most recent attempt to force misguided and ineffective law enforcement methods across our border is an imposition we must not tolerate. If Marc Emery is extradited to be prosecuted for actions which we on the whole no longer believe to be criminal, it will be an infringement upon our sovereignty as a nation, our rights to free expression and behaviour as individuals, and our belief in political freedom. Serious, indeed. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth