Pubdate: Sat, 05 Apr 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
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

CROWN, DEFENCE WORLD APART ON SENTENCING

The prosecution's request for historically high prison terms in a 
history-making Saskatchewan marijuana case may have the defence 
wondering who has been smoking what?

"I should have asked for an absolute discharge," defence lawyer Drew 
Hitchcock scoffed Friday during sentencing submissions in the largest 
marijuana grow-operation ever busted in this province. Defence lawyer 
Cam McCannell called the Crown's proposed sentence "a dramatic 
over-reach," with the highest prison term on a pot-growing charge 
around six years.

But in a case where size does matter -- with 6,000 plants seized from 
massive greenhouses -- Crown prosecutor Darrell Blais wants 
unprecedented 15-year prison sentences for Lawrence Hubert Agecoutay, 
52, and Chester Fernand Girard, 59, described as the "operating 
minds" in the operation. He's seeking eight years for Robert Stanley 
Agecoutay, 49, who played a lesser but still vital role.

"Those persons who intend to commit these offences should clearly 
understand going in that there is a real price to pay if and when 
they are discovered," Blais said. He argued having children as young 
as 10 working at the site and previous drug convictions for the men 
were aggravating factors.

The Agecoutay brothers and Girard, dressed in the same hemp suit worn 
throughout the 15-day jury trial earlier this year, still maintain 
they were growing hemp "medicine" to cure people.

"It was about stopping our people from suffering ... There was no 
criminal thought," Lawrence repeatedly told the judge. Girard said he 
had no reason to disbelieve what he was told, adding "I believe the 
Creator brought us together."

The defence pressed for conditional sentences in the community since 
the motive was altruism, not profit. "The method was flawed, but the 
goal was admirable," Lawrence's lawyer Rod Simaluk said.

With the two sides so far apart, Court of Queen's Bench Justice Frank 
Gerein reserved his decision to April 21. "I have a lot to think 
about," he added. Submissions stretched nearly five hours and 
included Girard's mini-lecture on the myriad uses for hemp.

In February, a jury convicted Girard and the Agecoutay brothers of 
marijuana production and possession for the purpose of trafficking. 
Three other men were acquitted.

A pre-dawn RCMP raid on April 21, 2005 uncovered six large 
greenhouses and four plots of lush marijuana plants near Robert's 
house on the Pasqua First Nation. The plants, just days short of 
maturity, carried a potential value up to $7.5 million if sold by the 
gram. The Crown argued documents show the growers planned for three, 
$3-million crops a year.

But the men insist it wasn't about the money. Lawrence calls himself 
an inherent, ancestral chief, who was told by the Creator to grow 
"medicine" on "sovereign" land, with its own laws. He said his 
prayers were answered when Girard, a white Ontario man with the 
know-how to grow the plants, sought adoption from the aboriginal 
group, provided seeds, and put up about $50,000 to get the job done.

Lawrence, who always carries a sacred bundle into court, has used his 
aboriginal culture, spiritualism, and treaty rights in his defence.

In a letter to the court, the Pasqua band council wrote, "The actions 
of the convicted individuals in this case have brought discredit, 
embarrassment and humiliation to our First Nation and its people." 
They want the men permanently banished from the reserve.

Pasqua Chief Elaine Chicoose wrote: "The elders believe Mr. Agecoutay 
has exploited First Nation culture," and added "we believe it is not 
the Creator's way to do what these men have done."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom