Source: The Toronto Star (Canada) Contact: Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Pubdate: Saturday, June 27, 1998 Author: Thomas Walkom AGITATING FOR AN END TO POT LAWS MARIJUANA GROWERS even have their own lobbyist, in the forrn of transplanted Ontario libertarian Marc Emery. He is the man Vancouver dopers love and the RCMP loves to hate. Constable Vince Arsenault, of the Surrey drug squad, refers to Emery as part of the "dark side" - pro-pot forces that constantly agitate in the media to have marijuana legalized. Indeed, the former London, Ont., bookseller has long been crusading against the state. A one-time candidate for the right-wing Freedom Party of Ontario, Emery made a point of flouting Sunday shopping laws in the late '80s and anti-obscenity laws in the early '90s. In 1991, he was convicted for selling obscene, anti-women rap music tapes. The same year. he openly sold what is called illegal drug literature - magazines and comic books that promoted pot smoking. Setting off for India in 1992, he ended up two years later in Vancouver, still interested in both libertarianism and marijuana. That's where he started up Hemp B.C., a store selling marijuana literature, and the next-door Cannabis Cafe. Customers and staff routinely smoke marijuana in Hemp B.C. - even when the RCMP drug squad comes visiting. ("We don't bother arresting," explains an RCMP officer. "For simple possession, it's not worth it.") The Cannabis Cafe, Emery says, mixes marijuana and hashish oil in its food but doesn't sell dope. Prospective pot buyers, he says, have to go to the Cross-town Cafe across the street to buy. Now facing 15 drug-related charges (including one for assaulting a police officer), Emery has passed over legal ownership of his cafe and store to another transplanted Ontarian, former Toronto resident Shelley Frances. Frances, a single mother who has lived in B.C. for four years, prefers to call herself Sister Icee. Emery now concentrates on his marljuana seed business. From his apartment in downtown Vancouver, he and his assistants field calls from around the world. A packet of 10 marijuana seeds can range from $20 to $375. On the day The Star visits, Andrew from Vancouver Island is clutching a bag of marijuana buds while two assistants man the phones. "Marc," yells one, "the guy from Australia's on the phone again and I can barely understand him. I think he's asking about an order he gave." Emery slips behind a computer and punches in a command. "I don't see any record here," he says. "Let me talk to him" After a few minutes, Emery hangs up. "He sent the order to B.C. Hemp," he explains. "It's okay. Give Icee a call and ask her to pass it along." Emery is very jolly about his crusade against marijuana laws. He insists on selling seeds because he says they don't contain enough THC, the mood-altering ingredient in marijuana, to qualify as a banned substance. The crown, it appears, disagrees, since one charge he faces is for trafficking in marijuana seeds. Emery says he is a good corporate citizen. "I've paid more than $1 million in income taxes (from his marijuana operations) between 1994 and 1998," he says. And he takes personal credit for revitalizing, through B.C. Hemp and the Cannabis Cafe, one block of Vancouver's sleazy downtown east side. His one regret is that he had to change the name of the magazine he founded, Cannabis Canada, to Cannabis Culture. "We have a lot of sales in the U.S.," he explains. "And the Americans won't buy anything with the word Canada in it." - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake