Pubdate: Tue, 03 Oct 2017 Source: Niagara Falls Review, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Niagara Falls Review Contact: http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/letters Website: http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2907 Author: John Law Page: A1 POT ADVOCATE BACK IN FALLS Grow Up Expo features Jodie Emery as speaker at convention focused on impending legalization of marijuana next July Jodie Emery laughs when reminded of her last visit to Niagara Falls seven years ago. It started with a trip to MP Rob Nicholson's office on St. Paul Avenue for a protest. It ended waiting for two members of her group to be released from the Niagara Regional Police station on Morrison Street after they were arrested. Emery and several pro-marijuana advocates were hoping to speak with Nicholson, Canada's justice minister at the time, about the extradition of her husband Marc, who was facing five years in a U.S. federal prison for selling mail-order pot seeds across the border. As one member of the group attempted to follow a police officer into Nicholson's office, he was arrested. When the rest of the group arrived and gathered in the parking lot, another arrest followed. "It definitely escalated much faster than we hoped for or expected," recalls Emery, on the line from Toronto this week. She says many Canadians were "shocked" at her husband's extradition, as she made the rounds to different political offices raising awareness. "I remember the headlines weren't really about pot or seeds, it was about our sovereignty. And the idea a Canadian citizen could be charged in a foreign country for a crime in a foreign country, even though they never went there. It still shocks me." Marc Emery served four-and-a-half years in U.S. prison, during which time his wife became a key public figure in the cannabis legalization movement. Much has changed as she returns to Niagara Falls this week for the Grow Up Cannabis Conference & Expo at the Scotiabank Convention Centre. The two-day conference Oct. 6 and 7 will feature more than 90 speakers and dozens of exhibitors, focused on the impending legalization of marijuana next July, allowing Canadians to grow up to four cannabis plants per household. Ontario's Liberal government will sell legalized marijuana in 80 LCBO - -controlled stores. It will rise to 150 stores by 2020. In addition to Emery the conference will feature CW HEMP founder Jesse Stanley, Ample Organics president John Prentice and keynote speaker Mandy McKnight, an advocate for access to medical marijuana after watching the effects on her son, who suffers seizures as a result of Dravet syndrome. The landscape may have changed, but legalization is hardly the end of the battle for Emery. She and her husband are still facing drug trafficking, conspiracy and possession charges after police raided their chain of Cannabis Culture locations across Canada earlier this year. Even with legalization looming, the charges hang over the Emerys. "We've literally devoted our lives to legalization, and now the legalization law will exclude us," she says. "And then we see all these people who fought against it all these premiers, politicians, now they all run these marijuana companies. "They're making millions and we're facing prison with big legal fees. A lot of people say that's the price of activism, though. You wanted to be the ones on the frontline, you're taking the bullets to make way for everybody else. I accept that, for sure, but it'd be nice not to be called a criminal and not have a criminal record." It will be the Emerys' fight henceforth, dropping the legal baggage of past offenses associated with something that is finally legal. She knows it won't be easy. "There's no amnesty, no pardons, no apology. Everyone who's criminalized will remain a criminal in the eyes of the law, unjustly. "It's great to see it grow we wanted to see the industry growing and be bigger, that's part of our goal. But it's really unjust to continue criminalizing people, especially those who suffered to make these changes possible. I'm not saying Marc and I should be at the front of the line, but it'd be really nice to get in the line!" Emery, 32, has been an editor at Cannabis Culture magazine since 2005. She married Marc Emery - dubbed the 'Prince of Pot' - in 2006, and has been a vocal pot proponent since. She ran as a candidate for the BC Green Party in a 2009 election (coming in third), and made an unsuccessful bid in 2015 for the Liberal Party nomination for Vancouver East. She can't see a day she isn't fighting for cannabis rights in some form - "we've had decades of misinformation and fear" - but there are plenty of other issues she intends to tackle. One idea she's fond of: Working with children of incarcerated parents. "A lot of kids have parents in jail who aren't necessarily bad people," she says. "But these people are growing up with a stigma and a shame. "When Marc was in a U.S. prison, what sticks out to me the most is the kids I saw visiting their family members. I'd like to work on criminal justice in the communities. Anyway, I can get to that once they stop arresting people for pot, I guess." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt