Pubdate: Sat, 16 Feb 2008 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2008 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/regina/leaderpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Barb Pacholik ACCUSED 'HIDING BEHIND THEIR CULTURE' The use of culture, treaty rights, and religion by six men in their defence on drug charges has sparked outrage among some First Nations people. During the 15-day trial, which ended this week, the Leader-Post received phone calls and letters raising concerns about the reasons the accused offered for creating a massive marijuana grow-op potentially worth millions. The group's leader said he is a traditional chief who was told by the "Creator" to grow "medicine" for his people. "They're hiding behind their culture," Eleanor Dubois said. Formerly of the Pasqua First Nation, where the grow-op was discovered, Dubois followed the case from her home in Alberta. "I am offended and embarrassed by the claims that this operation was requested by the Creator," she said. "To use culture and spirituality to mask criminal activity is to exploit that culture and spirituality and that is shameful beyond measure." Joe Northwest worried the claims may reflect poorly on all of the First Nations community. "I'm offended because I'm an elder. And this is against my beliefs and my values to have some man mock my beliefs," said the Regina man. "A lot of people are saying, 'What is he doing? . Is he just trying to make First Nations people look like fools?' " The controversy stems from the case of six men charged with producing marijuana after an Aug. 21, 2005 search found more than 6,000 plants in greenhouses. Three men were acquitted, but the jury convicted Lawrence Hubert Agecoutay, 52, his brother Robert Stanley Agecoutay, 48, and Chester Fernand Girard, a 59-year-old white Ontario man who paid for his adoption by the First Nations group by cultivating the plants. Family head Lawrence Agecoutay testified he is Chief Ka-Nee-Ka-Neet -- the seventh generation, international, traditional, inherent and spiritual chief for the Anishnabe Federation of Sovereign Nations. A seal on letters identifies him as the head chief of the Anishinabe Nations of Turtle Island Indian Reserve, a "sovereign nation" with its own laws. He used Turtle Island reserve letterhead and his certificate of Indian status (formerly known as a treaty card) to buy tax-free items, such as lumber, delivered to the grow-op site. (Goods sold to residents on a reserve are tax-free.) Carrying a sacred bundle with a ceremonial pipe into court each day, Agecoutay said the Creator told him to grow medicine to cure cancer and diabetes. "I'm doing the Creator's work," he said after the verdict, adding the jurors may not have understood the issues. "They were not educated in this area." But some fear Agecoutay's lessons from the witness stand have done more harm. In a letter to the editor, university student Shane Sunshine worried about the implications for "an under-informed public," furthering "false beliefs" about First Nation rights. "Agecoutay and his accomplices, exploiting the tax-free status of reserves to fund an illegal enterprise will, I fear, give credence to the idea that aboriginals in Canada do not pay taxes. This is a silly idea," Sunshine said. Both Northwest and a frustrated, unidentified caller to the Leader-Post raised concerns about Agecoutay taking a sacred bundle and the ceremonial pipe it holds into a courtroom, saying their use is for sacred events. Bill Asikinack, who is Anishinabe, is department head of indigenous studies at the First Nations University of Canada. In explaining people's strong reaction to the case, he noted a person had to earn their leadership in traditional Anishinabe society. "They had to have good qualities about who they were and thus, the people would then follow this person. But they would only follow this person if this person was speaking properly for them," Asikinack said. He said the Anishinabe nation, which stretches from Lake Ontario to northern B.C., doesn't have a grand chief. "There are traditional leaders and traditional leaders can potentially inherit the position, but they have to earn it by being good people and being people of respect," Asikinack said. "Turtle Island" is a name most First Nations people use to describe North America, but "there is no reserve called Turtle Island," he said. After the grow-op was busted in 2005, Pasqua Chief Elaine Chicoose and Lawrence Joseph, then vice-chief of the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations, said there is a zero tolerance to drugs. Neither returned phone calls from the Leader-Post this week, but Joseph, now FSIN chief, appeared on CTV News on Friday, saying he too was offended by the use of culture as a defence to producing drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek