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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Pot Activist Wanted In The U.S.
Title:CN BC: Pot Activist Wanted In The U.S.
Published On:2005-07-30
Source:Regina Leader-Post (CN SN)
Fetched On:2008-08-20 01:04:46
POT ACTIVIST WANTED IN THE U.S.

VANCOUVER (CP) -- Well-known Canadian pot activist Marc Emery and two others
should be extradited to the United States to face several marijuana charges,
says information contained in a search warrant sought by the United States
and granted by a B.C. court.

The raid on Emery's pot paraphernalia store in downtown Vancouver began in
the late morning and involved several uniformed and plainclothes city police
officers.

The police presented a search warrant, issued by Associate Chief Justice
Patrick Dohm of B.C. Supreme Court, that said the U.S. made its request
under a treaty that deals with matters under the Mutual Legal Assistance in
Criminal Matters Act.

The U.S. alleges Emery -- described in the search warrant as the Prince of
Pot -- Gregory Keith Williams and Michelle Rainey-Fenkarek conspired to
manufacture marijuana, to distribute marijuana seeds and conspired to engage
in money laundering.

Emery, who is also leader of the B.C. Marijuana party, was not at the store
when it was raided but U.S. justice officials said he was arrested earlier
Friday in Halifax by the RCMP.

Williams and Rainey-Fenkarek were arrested by police in Vancouver, Jeff
Sullivan, chief of the criminal division of the U.S. Attorney's Office, told
a news conference in Seattle.

In Vancouver, Const. Howard Chow was asked to explain at a news conference
why city police didn't arrest and charge Emery without needing a U.S.
request.

"This is information that came to us (from the U.S.) about a year ago and
investigations take time," said Chow.

Chow acknowledged that Emery's operation has been known to city police for
several years.

"You can't expect to fly under the radar without being held accountable.
Distribution of pot is illegal in the U.S. as it is here in Canada."

Chow reiterated that it was information from the U.S., not its own officers,
that prompted the execution of the search warrant.

The U.S. wants the trio extradited on the charges after they were indicted
by a federal grand jury in May following an 18-month investigation by
American police into the sale of marijuana seeds on the Internet and by
mail, said Sullivan.

Rod Benson, the special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Agency in
Seattle, told the news conference that Emery showed "overwhelming arrogance
and abuse of the rule of law," which he said "will no longer be on display
or tolerated."

"The message here is clear," he said, "those engaged in the cultivation, and
trafficking of illegal drugs will eventually pay a steep price.
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