Pubdate: Tue, 22 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 PRISON TIME FOR GROW-OP Convicted in Saskatchewan's largest marijuana grow-op bust, three men headed off to prison Monday chanting songs and professing their innocence -- despite a judge rejecting their claims that the Creator made them do it. "It's an injustice. This should never have happened," Lawrence Hubert Agecoutay said as he left Regina's Court of Queen's Bench to serve a six-year sentence. The 52-year-old Regina man, who conceived of and managed the operation, has already filed an appeal. Chester Fernand Girard -- the Ontario gardener who provided know-how, seeds and seed money to grow the 6,000 plants -- was equally defiant. "It's industrial hemp. It's the only thing that can save the planet," the 59-year-old shouted. With credit for the equivalent of six months of pre-trial custody, his sentence was reduced to 51/2 years. Robert Stanley Agecoutay, Lawrence's 49-year-old brother and follower, was sentenced to 31/2 years after also receiving six months' credit for pre-trial custody. In February, a jury convicted the trio of unlawfully producing marijuana and possession of the drug for the purpose of trafficking. Three other men were acquitted. Crown prosecutor Darrell Blais had sought unprecedented prison sentences of 15 years and a higher period of parole ineligibility. Justice Frank Gerein rejected both in favour of terms in line with those imposed for similar cases in the past. "It's a fair sentence for Saskatchewan. Clearly, the judge didn't buy the altruistic argument that we've been making," Lawrence's lawyer, Rod Simaluk, said. Gerein soundly rejected Lawrence's testimony that they were growing the plants on sovereign First Nations land (immune from Canada's drug laws), at the request of the Creator, to make medicine for their people. "When I weigh everything, I have absolutely no doubt that the accused were engaged in the production of a very large amount of marijuana for the express purpose of obtaining a large sum of money," the judge said in his 28-page decision. All three have previous convictions for drug crimes. According to an RCMP expert, the plants seized during an Aug. 21, 2005, raid near Robert's house on the Pasqua First Nation carried a potential value between $2.5 million and $7.5 million. The nearly mature plants were growing in six massive greenhouses and four outside plots. Gerein noted a key document seized set out expected yields and the splitting of an anticipated $3-million profit. "Upwards of $100,000 was invested in the operation. Several people who worked as labourers were expecting to be paid. Various expenses could be met only through the sale of a lucrative commodity. Hemp and medicine would not provide that, but marijuana would," Gerein wrote. He also noted Robert had hidden documents in a ceiling tile; the road to the site was obstructed; the greenhouses were concealed in coulees: and Lawrence had falsified documents to get two workers to the site. Gerein also considered the use of children as workers, and the increasing "use and abuse" of marijuana. Girard's lawyer Drew Hitchcock hopes the case sparks some thought on "reasonable drug policy. "The judge and the lawyers have to work with the law that Parliament gives, but I don't see how arresting guys who are sitting on the ground praying to the Creator with a SWAT team (making arrests) is really a sane drug policy." Lawrence, the only one among the three to testify, always carries a multi-coloured sacred bundle holding ceremonial pipes into the prisoner's dock. He identifies himself as Chief Ka-Nee-Ka-Neet, a hereditary, ancestral chief of the Anishinabe Nation of Turtle Island, encompassing all of North America. The elected chief of the Pasqua First Nation, Elaine Chicoose, has denounced the grow-op activities. After the sentencing, Lawrence passed his eldest son the sacred bundle. "Stay strong, Dad," shouted the son, who identified himself as Kenewpit Agecoutay, as his handcuffed father left for prison. "Be strong for me. Get a hold of everybody. Let them know what happened," his father replied. Although the penalties were less than half those sought by the prosecution, they still came as a blow to the Agecoutays' sister Debra, a mainstay during the three-week trial. "They're still going away for a long time. It's not right. They weren't out to harm anybody," she insisted. "Aren't there any real Indians out there anymore who care about their land, their sovereignty? Or are they just a bunch of sell-outs?" she added. The Agecoutays' use of culture and religion in their defence has drawn criticism from Pasqua's chief and council, some elders, and the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek