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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: BC Pot Activist Says 60 Minutes Will Show His Real Self
Title:CN BC: BC Pot Activist Says 60 Minutes Will Show His Real Self
Published On:2006-03-03
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 15:21:08
B.C. POT ACTIVIST SAYS 60 MINUTES WILL SHOW HIS REAL SELF

Vancouver - Pot crusader Marc Emery says his appearance on the news
program 60 Minutes on Sunday will be an opportunity for Americans to
see him as just an ordinary guy who regards himself as the Luke
Skywalker against their government's Darth Vader tactics.

Most people would be amused that the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration is trying to extradite him to face drug charges, Emery
said. Americans weren't forced to buy his marijuana seeds, he said.

"I think Americans are going to say that if this is the No. 1 drug
trafficking kingpin, then I want to move to Canada," he said, adding
he's fighting an evil empire similar to one in the movie Star Wars.

"I enjoy that comic-book premise of my actions, that it's this little
tiny person trying to bring justice and dignity to a whole culture in
the face of a big, monolithic, Nazified institution like the DEA."

Bob Simon, the reporter who interviewed Emery in Vancouver for the 60
Minutes piece, said the program decided to air the segment on Emery
because his case shows the enormous cultural divide between Canada
and the U.S. when it comes to smoking pot.

"Vancouver has a very permissive culture as far as smoking of
marijuana is concerned," Simon said from New York.

"You do not walk down the street in most American cities smoking a
joint, whereas in Vancouver you can do it and you will not be
punished for it," he said.

"We're not talking about the difference between the United States and
Laos. We're talking about the United States and Canada, our
proverbial friendly neighbours to the north and all that.

Simon said Emery has been punished only lightly in Canada, yet if
he's extradited to the United States, "he's going to face really hard time."

What shocked Simon the most was the pervasiveness of marijuana
grow-ops that offer huge profits for little to no risk. The reporter
joined police for two days as they busted several suburban homes in
the Vancouver area.

"I'd never seen anything like it," he said. "When you break into it,
which the police did, it's just nothing but a marijuana farm. The
science that goes into it and the extent of the plantation, that was shocking."

Emery, 48, will be facing an extradition hearing later this year.

Besides being accused of selling pot seeds to Americans through the
mail, the longtime pot activist is charged with conspiracy to
manufacture marijuana and conspiracy to engage in money laundering.

Emery, along with his co-accused Michelle Rainey-Fenkarek and Greg
Keith Williams, was arrested last July after police raided Emery's
pot paraphernalia store following an 18-month investigation by the DEA.

Emery said he sold $15 million in marijuana seeds around the world
between 1994 and 2005.

A chunk of the profits, he said, have gone to help pot activists in
other countries and several U.S. states, including Alaska, Arizona,
Nevada and Alabama, where the U.S. Marijuana party is based.

Emery, who heads the B.C. Marijuana party and is the founder of
Cannabis Culture magazine and Internet-based Pot-TV, has been
arrested 21 times in Canada.

He was mostly fined but in 2004 spent 62 days in a Saskatoon jail for
trafficking after passing a joint.

Cpl. Scott Rintoul, of the RCMP's drug squad, said he wouldn't want
Americans to think Vancouver is some kind of drug haven, although he
understands why someone would get that impression.

"I think that we, law enforcement, have been too tolerant of the
marijuana industry and perhaps should have acted sooner," Rintoul said.

"When the marijuana thing sort of hit in the '80s and the grows
continued, we were a bit naive and perhaps didn't do our job right
then to educate the public, educate the courts, educate ourselves to
the hazards."

Much of the marijuana flowing out of Canada is traded for cocaine in
the U.S., which has also caused massive problems for law enforcement, he said.
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