News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: US Says No Break in Drug War |
Title: | CN BC: US Says No Break in Drug War |
Published On: | 2005-08-04 |
Source: | Vancouver 24hours (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-15 21:52:07 |
Emery Pot Bust
U.S. SAYS NO BREAK IN DRUG WAR
The United States will continue to pursue its war on drugs across
international boundaries, says a key U.S. player in the case of pot
activist Marc Emery.
Jeff Sullivan, chief of the criminal division with the U.S.
Attorney's Office for the Western District of Washington, tells 24
hours the U.S. needs to stem the inflow of drugs - even if it means
going to other countries to do it.
The U.S. Attorney's Office is hunting Emery for charges related to
selling marijuana seeds to American customers through his online
business, www.emeryseeds.com.
"These are not somebody growing two or three plants for their own
use," Sullivan said in an interview yesterday. "These are significant
grow-ops."
Sullivan compared the case to his country's pursuit of Colombian
"drug lords" that export cocaine to the States.
But not all Americans support their country's drug policy, according
to Bob and Rose, Texan tourists who didn't want their full names used.
"There's no reason the U.S. should come here and interfere," said
Bob, as he sipped a can of pop inside the New Amsterdam Cafe on Hastings.
"I don't see how they can prosecute [Emery]."
Both said they felt persecuted in their own country by harsh
attitudes about marijuana.
Meanwhile, next door at Emery's marijuana bookstore, Emery supporters
were working for free to raise money for his defence. Emery faces
life in prison if he's extradited to the U.S. That process, which
began with his bail hearing this week, could take up to two years.
U.S. SAYS NO BREAK IN DRUG WAR
The United States will continue to pursue its war on drugs across
international boundaries, says a key U.S. player in the case of pot
activist Marc Emery.
Jeff Sullivan, chief of the criminal division with the U.S.
Attorney's Office for the Western District of Washington, tells 24
hours the U.S. needs to stem the inflow of drugs - even if it means
going to other countries to do it.
The U.S. Attorney's Office is hunting Emery for charges related to
selling marijuana seeds to American customers through his online
business, www.emeryseeds.com.
"These are not somebody growing two or three plants for their own
use," Sullivan said in an interview yesterday. "These are significant
grow-ops."
Sullivan compared the case to his country's pursuit of Colombian
"drug lords" that export cocaine to the States.
But not all Americans support their country's drug policy, according
to Bob and Rose, Texan tourists who didn't want their full names used.
"There's no reason the U.S. should come here and interfere," said
Bob, as he sipped a can of pop inside the New Amsterdam Cafe on Hastings.
"I don't see how they can prosecute [Emery]."
Both said they felt persecuted in their own country by harsh
attitudes about marijuana.
Meanwhile, next door at Emery's marijuana bookstore, Emery supporters
were working for free to raise money for his defence. Emery faces
life in prison if he's extradited to the U.S. That process, which
began with his bail hearing this week, could take up to two years.
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