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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Column: Canadian Sovereignty At Issue In War On Pot
Title:CN BC: Column: Canadian Sovereignty At Issue In War On Pot
Published On:2006-03-01
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-08-18 19:32:46
CANADIAN SOVEREIGNTY AT ISSUE IN WAR ON POT GROWERS

Domestic Prosecution Of Quebec Seed Producer Raises Questions About
Extradition Case Of B.C.'S Prince Of Pot

The RCMP have launched an offensive against Canadian marijuana
growers and seed producers that has sent shock waves over the
Internet and across B.C., which is home to at least 40 companies that
sell seeds and cuttings via mail order.

The Mounties announced Tuesday that members of the newly formed
Marihuana Grow Operations Enforcement Team concluded their first
major operation, shutting down a Montreal-based, cannabis seed-selling company.

They revealed there were seven such teams across the country,
established in 2004 to target pot growers and halt the burgeoning
domestic production, the annual harvest of which is said to be larger
than wheat.

Locally the B.C. Marijuana Party and pot activists were outraged, but
mostly they seemed scared -- Canada hasn't targeted seed sellers
before and these offences can carry 10-year prison terms.

What galls them though is that the Montreal group is charged with
exactly the same crime for which Marc Emery and two of his employees
are battling extradition to the U.S.

Prince of pot Emery and his employees operated openly in Canada for a
decade and were not charged by local cops but now face American
charges that carry much stiffer sentences.

Kirk Tousaw, lawyer for the party and a member of the legal team
involved in the extradition fight, said he wanted to know why the
Mounties were prepared to domestically prosecute a Quebec-based seed
producer but stepped aside so the U.S. could indict Emery.

"Why on earth are Montreal-based seed sales any different from
Vancouver-based seed sales?" he asked.

"Yet, in one case, the accused face extradition to the U.S. and, in
the other, the prosecution will occur in Canada under Canadian laws."

Emery also wanted to know why he was not charged under our laws and
is being forced to face Uncle Sam.

"In Vancouver, the police are a tool of the Americans while in
Quebec, international marijuana seed sales are apparently a matter
for Canadian justice, not extradition," he said.

"What happened to Canadian sovereignty?"

Emery said newly installed Conservative Justice Minister Vic Toews
should "immediately begin criminal proceedings against the B.C. Three
in Vancouver and to prosecute us here. No other course of action
preserves Canadian sovereignty."

One of his co-accused, Michelle Rainey, vice-president of the B.C.
Marijuana Party and a registered legal medical marijuana user, also
questioned the motivation behind these prosecutions.

"As political activists, we are being subjected to extradition and
the over-zealousness of the U.S drug war, yet people who are not
politically active and who are accused of doing virtually the same
thing in Quebec are entitled to Canadian justice," she pointed out.

"It makes no sense and is completely unfair."

Rainey also thought the timing of the arrests was suspicious -- the
day before the anniversary of the four tragic RCMP deaths in Alberta,
killings the RCMP tried to link to marijuana although the murderer
was a long-term, well-known psychopath.

"It seems like a political decision and part of their ongoing
campaign to prejudice Canadians against marijuana policy reform," she fumed.

Hard to disagree.

The Montreal operation culminated in the seizure of 200,000 cannabis
seeds and the arrest of seven persons.

Richard Hratch Baghdadlian, 38, is named ringleader -- he operated
Heaven's Stairway, a mail-order company supplying North American and
European customers with top-quality marijuana seeds.

Like Emery, Baghdadlian was using the Internet.

The police allege Heaven's Stairway was processing dozens of orders a
day, each averaging about $100 a pop between March 12, 1998, and Jan. 31, 2006.

In the raids, they seized the seeds, more than $183,362 US and
$14,000 Cdn in cash and postal money orders, three one-kilogram gold
bricks, a Harley-Davidson motorcycle and a Mazda RX8.

But not only were the RCMP out to bust the principals involved in the
seed-selling, they also targeted customers.

The RCMP said in their press release that at least 272 orders have
been intercepted and those who have purchased seeds should expect a
visit by the local constabulary.

At a time when the country is debating changing these laws, I think
the RCMP ramping up enforcement like this is a blatant attempt to
influence public policy that should be denounced.

Police are to enforce public policy, not forge it.

And let's get real here, there is no source of good quality marijuana
seeds for this country's medical exemptees except these grey-market
pot seed producers. If they want to grow their own, as the government
says they can, where else can they go?

In Canada, selling marijuana seeds has been rarely prosecuted and the
Crown refused to approve charges against Emery although he was openly
retailing pot seeds from his Hastings Street office. In fact, the
government was directing medical patients to Emery's website. It will
be interesting to see how this is all viewed by the U.S. television
news magazine 60 Minutes -- Emery and his extradition fight are
featured this Sunday.
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