Pubdate: Wed, 30 Dec 2009 Source: Nelson Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Nelson Daily News Contact: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/section/nelson0303&template=letter Website: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/288 Author: Colin Payne Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/people/sam%20brown (SAM BROWN) THE SAM BROWN SAGA News Story of the Year: The tale of a young mountain biker captivated a nation and brought more international attention to the Nelson area One of the biggest stories of 2009 and perhaps one of the biggest international stories to come out of the West Kootenay in nearly a decade was the saga of the late Sam Lindsay Brown - a Nelson resident and beloved member of the local mountain bike community. In late February, Brown was arrested in a remote area of Colville National Forest by members of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency while unloading a helicopter full of marijuana. Brown had flown the allegedly stolen Bell 206 helicopter loaded with 200 kilograms of marijuana without a license from Sicamous through the mountains in the dark of night, fog and snow - into the hands of the DEA agents waiting for him on the other end. Five days after he was taken into custody at the Spokane County Jail, Brown was found dead in his solitary cell. He had made a noose out of his bed sheet and hung himself by jamming it into a light fixture designed to prevent such actions. Local CBC reporter, Bob Keating learned of the story early on and broke it to the world. "I have several really good contacts in the world of moving marijuana between here and the States," Keating explained. "I got a call even before Sam Brown went to jail in Spokane. "I realized this was a huge story right from the beginning, because you had the case of a young man allegedly flying marijuana across the line who died in an American prison - which in and of itself is a huge story. You also had the fact that this was a regular, almost scheduled flight between the two countries that had been broken up. "Plus you had the story of Sam Brown himself, which was also a remarkable and tragic story on its own." Brown's arrest and subsequent suicide were just one chapter in an elaborate sting operation set up between the RCMP and the DEA that targeted a cross-border drug smuggling operation, which brought pot across the border and brought back hard drugs like cocaine and ecstasy. In the following weeks several people were arrested in different locations on both sides of the border. Three helicopters and a total of 700 kilograms of marijuana were seized. When asked by The Nelson Daily News what he thought of his son's actions and his death, Lou Brown said his involvement in smuggling didn't come as a surprise. "I would expect it from him," Brown said three weeks after his son died. "When you're that age you're immortal. Your own life doesn't really mean anything." But Brown said his son's suicide was pretty hard to accept. "I honestly believe it was a hit from the inside, but we don't know," he said. "You kind of read between the lines and it's dirty." In the months following Sam Brown's suicide and the ensuing drug busts all over the Pacific Northwest, the story of a young, athletic daredevil who was caught in the middle of a drug war and died tragically was evidently too compelling for national media to resist. In April, investigative reporter, Jesse Hyde came to the West Kootenay to investigate Brown's story along with the underground pot industry and accompanying subcultures that exist here for a feature story in Rolling Stone Magazine. Hyde parlayed his research into a 14-page epic tale that spelled out the saga of Sam Brown to a worldwide audience in the August issue that also featured an article on the sudden death of Michael Jackson. A reporter and photographer from the Associated Press newswire also came to the area to look into the story in June. And, not to be outdone, the movie industry and CBC TV have even showed interest in Sam Brown's tale. Shortly after Hyde's story came out, he was negotiating with two different parties who wanted to buy the rights to the story to turn it into a screenplay for a movie. LINDEN MACINTYRE'S TAKE ON THE SAM BROWN STORY In mid-November, CBC's bastion of investigative journalism, The Fifth Estate did a one-hour documentary piece about Sam Brown hosted by one of Canada's top journalists, Linden MacIntyre. MacIntyre's piece took the story to a whole new level, with interviews from insiders in the marijuana industry and those who knew Brown best, as well as in-depth research into facts surrounding the case. It was not so much the cracking of an international drug smuggling ring that interested MacIntyre in the tale, but the tragic story of Sam Brown himself. "Here you had a guy who didn't think he was breaking any laws. He knew he was courting trouble, but he thought this was another extreme hobby or sport like his mountain biking," MacIntyre told The Nelson Daily News last week. "He'd never been arrested or been in trouble with the law in any serious way. So he was kind of naive about what he was doing and what the consequences might be. "He seemed completely oblivious to the possibility that he might get caught and he might have to do some serious prison time." MacIntyre spent a significant amount of time in the region researching the widely viewed story and managed to settle the debate about Brown's controversial death. "The options available to him would be to rat out a bunch of people or look at a very long time in a very difficult world," MacIntyre said. "So he just got desperate and killed himself. "That's my opinion, but it's supported by a lot of objective evidence. This autopsy report is pretty explicit and thorough. We had it peer reviewed for its professionalism and the reasons for its conclusions. It passed a pretty high bar." While he noted there were many "poisonous comments" posted on the Fifth Estate website by people who thought the story was glorifying the life of a drug smuggling criminal, MacIntyre said that's far from what was intended. "There was a lot of anger in the anonymous responses that he was a drug smuggler and a low life who deserved to die," he noted. "But we were clear that this was not a story to glamourize either the lifestyle or the practice of smuggling," MacIntyre's documentary made clear that Brown's arrest was the result of inaction by two people in the smuggling ring who could have stopped Brown from flying across the border in the first place. He hoped the piece would warn other young people considering the smuggling lifestyle that proved to be Sam Brown's end. "What we had hoped it would become was kind of a cautionary tale that might deter some other young people who figured they could pull this off," MacIntyre explained. "We came to the conclusion that there are probably a lot of Sam Browns out there; young folk who are attracted by the money. "The whole thrust of the piece was, you better be sure what you're getting into and who you're getting into it with if you're going to fool around in this business. Because when you're up against an extremely motivated law enforcement world and behind and around you, you are organically connected to some fairly tough customers. And on the far fringes of this rather peaceful practice that goes on around Nelson and the Kootenay, on the edges you've got gangs; serious cartels and criminals. You just don't want to be part of that unless you know what it's all about. "Very few of these young people either know or care what it's about; they don's see further ahead than the challenge of getting the load across and the reward of getting the money. For Sam Brown, who had everything to live for, this was the biggest mistake of his life." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom