News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Pot 'Prince' Favours Jail Time In Canada |
Title: | CN BC: Pot 'Prince' Favours Jail Time In Canada |
Published On: | 2008-01-15 |
Source: | National Post (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-15 18:19:41 |
POT 'PRINCE' FAVOURS JAIL TIME IN CANADA
VANCOUVER - Marc Emery, Vancouver's self-styled Prince of Pot, has
tentatively agreed to a five-year prison term in a plea bargain over
U.S. money laundering and marijuana seed-selling charges.
Facing an extradition hearing Jan. 21 and the all-but-certain
prospect of delivery to U.S. authorities, Mr. Emery has cut a deal
with U.S. prosecutors to serve his sentence in Canada.
He also hopes it will save his two co-accused --Michelle Rainey and
Greg Williams --from prison time.
The three were arrested in August, 2005, at the request of the United
States and charged, even though none had ventured south of the
border. Since then, they have been awaiting the extradition hearing.
With the proceedings about to begin, Mr. Emery says his lawyer
brokered the best deal possible.
If accepted by the courts in both countries, Mr. Emery said he will
not be eligible for Canada's lenient parole rules.
"Basically it promises that I would serve five years in custody on a
10-year sentence in Canada and ... this will prevent my co-accused
Greg and Michelle, who suffers from Chron's disease and would not do
so well in jail, it prevents them from going to jail. And it will
allow me to be in a Canadian prison, for the most part, which is
probably preferable for me. At least that's how it was sold to me,"
he said in an interview with Global News yesterday.
"I'm going to do more time than many violent, repeat offenders," he
said in a Canwest News Service interview.
"There isn't a single victim in my case, no one who can stand up and
say, 'I was hurt by Marc Emery.' No one."
The last time Mr. Emery was convicted in Canada of selling pot seeds,
in 1998, he was given a $2,000 fine.
"I've been belligerent toward the United States. I'm very clear in my
political aims. We want to overthrow the U.S. government, we want to
thwart the U.S. justice department's war on drugs," he said
yesterday. "We want to have the DEA abolished."
From 1998 until his arrest, Mr. Emery even paid provincial and
federal taxes as a "marijuana seed vendor" totalling nearly $600,000.
VANCOUVER - Marc Emery, Vancouver's self-styled Prince of Pot, has
tentatively agreed to a five-year prison term in a plea bargain over
U.S. money laundering and marijuana seed-selling charges.
Facing an extradition hearing Jan. 21 and the all-but-certain
prospect of delivery to U.S. authorities, Mr. Emery has cut a deal
with U.S. prosecutors to serve his sentence in Canada.
He also hopes it will save his two co-accused --Michelle Rainey and
Greg Williams --from prison time.
The three were arrested in August, 2005, at the request of the United
States and charged, even though none had ventured south of the
border. Since then, they have been awaiting the extradition hearing.
With the proceedings about to begin, Mr. Emery says his lawyer
brokered the best deal possible.
If accepted by the courts in both countries, Mr. Emery said he will
not be eligible for Canada's lenient parole rules.
"Basically it promises that I would serve five years in custody on a
10-year sentence in Canada and ... this will prevent my co-accused
Greg and Michelle, who suffers from Chron's disease and would not do
so well in jail, it prevents them from going to jail. And it will
allow me to be in a Canadian prison, for the most part, which is
probably preferable for me. At least that's how it was sold to me,"
he said in an interview with Global News yesterday.
"I'm going to do more time than many violent, repeat offenders," he
said in a Canwest News Service interview.
"There isn't a single victim in my case, no one who can stand up and
say, 'I was hurt by Marc Emery.' No one."
The last time Mr. Emery was convicted in Canada of selling pot seeds,
in 1998, he was given a $2,000 fine.
"I've been belligerent toward the United States. I'm very clear in my
political aims. We want to overthrow the U.S. government, we want to
thwart the U.S. justice department's war on drugs," he said
yesterday. "We want to have the DEA abolished."
From 1998 until his arrest, Mr. Emery even paid provincial and
federal taxes as a "marijuana seed vendor" totalling nearly $600,000.
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