News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: North Vancouver Gardener Loses Home Over Grow-Op |
Title: | CN BC: North Vancouver Gardener Loses Home Over Grow-Op |
Published On: | 2007-04-25 |
Source: | Province, The (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-17 04:32:00 |
NORTH VANCOUVER GARDENER LOSES HOME OVER GROW-OP
A woman with a green thumb -- featured in Gardens West magazine for
growing clematis that enveloped her small two-storey house in North
Vancouver -- was growing more than the flowering vine.
Judy Ann Craig lost her home when it was seized in a ruling by the
B.C. Court of Appeal yesterday after she was busted for growing
marijuana inside the house.
Craig was originally given a year's conditional sentence, a $100,000
fine and a $15,000 victim surcharge after pleading guilty two years
ago to production of a controlled substance by Provincial Court Judge
Judith Gedye.
Federal Crown prosecutors won an appeal to have the $567,000 house in
the Lonsdale area forfeited to the government as proceeds of crime
under federal drug laws.
Craig's lawyer, Howard Rubin, argued the law was designed to deal with
organized crime, not an "independent" entrepreneur like Craig, but the
appeal judges disagreed.
The 54-year-old former realtor grew more than $100,000 worth of
marijuana in her 1,000-square-foot home from 1998 until her 2003
arrest, court heard.
Craig, who told court she used her earnings to improve her garden and
posed for a 2002 gardening article, said customers included friends
sick with AIDS as well as tradespeople and professionals.
Her accountant had even filed tax returns, claiming 70 per cent of the
house for business use, $30,000 in startup costs, plus the cost of
hired help for trimming, cloning and transplanting. Craig now faces a
$250,000 bill for unpaid taxes.
A woman with a green thumb -- featured in Gardens West magazine for
growing clematis that enveloped her small two-storey house in North
Vancouver -- was growing more than the flowering vine.
Judy Ann Craig lost her home when it was seized in a ruling by the
B.C. Court of Appeal yesterday after she was busted for growing
marijuana inside the house.
Craig was originally given a year's conditional sentence, a $100,000
fine and a $15,000 victim surcharge after pleading guilty two years
ago to production of a controlled substance by Provincial Court Judge
Judith Gedye.
Federal Crown prosecutors won an appeal to have the $567,000 house in
the Lonsdale area forfeited to the government as proceeds of crime
under federal drug laws.
Craig's lawyer, Howard Rubin, argued the law was designed to deal with
organized crime, not an "independent" entrepreneur like Craig, but the
appeal judges disagreed.
The 54-year-old former realtor grew more than $100,000 worth of
marijuana in her 1,000-square-foot home from 1998 until her 2003
arrest, court heard.
Craig, who told court she used her earnings to improve her garden and
posed for a 2002 gardening article, said customers included friends
sick with AIDS as well as tradespeople and professionals.
Her accountant had even filed tax returns, claiming 70 per cent of the
house for business use, $30,000 in startup costs, plus the cost of
hired help for trimming, cloning and transplanting. Craig now faces a
$250,000 bill for unpaid taxes.
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