Pubdate: Thu, 02 Jul 2015 Source: Metro (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/vancouver Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3775 Author: Matt Kieltyka Page: 3 A CHAOTIC CANNABIS DAY AMID ARRESTS, POLITICKING Advocates Accuse Police of Being Too Aggressive Arrests and political haggling cast a dark cloud over the annual Cannabis Day event outside the Vancouver Art Gallery on Wednesday. The protest and marijuana festival faced official opposition this year from the City of Vancouver, which ordered organizers to cease advertising the festivities and insisted the unsanctioned event required permits to exist. A new wrench was thrown in the works Wednesday morning when vendors arrived to the north plaza of the art gallery and discovered the city, within the last two days, fenced off the entire area. Under the watchful eye of police and city officials, the protest site relocated south of the gallery on Robson Street, but it wasn't long before chaos erupted when police moved in to arrest a man allegedly selling marijuana to youth. "When the VPD observed someone overtly selling marijuana, including to young people, officers asked him to stop and warned that it may lead to him being arrested," said Vancouver police spokesman Const. Brian Montague in a statement. "He refused and told police he intended to openly sell to anyone despite police requests and warnings. The man was arrested, and officers were immediately confronted and swarmed." Pot advocate Eric Einarson said that as soon as a large contingent of police officers moved in on the man, he and about a dozen fellow protesters joined the fray and attempted to prevent the arrest using a technique called "hug power." With the protesters holding on tight to each other, police used physical force to separate them, and Montague confirmed pepper spray was used on at least one person. "Police were very organized and violent," said Einarson. "They were very determined, very aggressive. There was definitely pepper spray. (Cannabis Day) is something that's happened 19 years here without violence and without an issue. For (police) to do something like this is absolutely unbelievable." The man arrested may face potential trafficking charges, police say. Three other people were also arrested. The arrests come at a bad time for organizer Jodie Emery, who had been fighting with the city to keep the event going in the lead-up to the protest. She accused police of using "aggression on peaceful people." "Now the city is going to tell everyone how so expensive it was to enforce today, whereas there's never been a problem before," she said. "Any disorganization today is 100 per cent the fault of the city." A couple hours after the incident, Emery's husband, well-known activist Marc Emery, addressed hundreds of people gathered at the event to denounce the arrests and rally the crowd. Deputy city manager Sadhu Johnston told Metro earlier in the day that the city doesn't support the event because it had become too big for the space (which competes with other, sanctioned Canada Day festivities) and, with commercial vendors selling marijuana and pot-related paraphernalia, could no longer be considered a protest. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom