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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: OPED: Open Letter to Justice Minister Rob Nicholson
Title:Canada: OPED: Open Letter to Justice Minister Rob Nicholson
Published On:2007-12-31
Source:National Post (Canada)
Fetched On:2008-01-10 22:01:33
AN OPEN LETTER TO JUSTICE MINISTER ROB NICHOLSON

Dear Mr. Nicholson: On Jan. 21, 2008 an extradition hearing will
begin in Vancouver for Marc Emery, Canada's pre-eminent activist for
the legalization of marijuana. Marc has been charged in the U.S. with
conspiring to manufacture and distribute marijuana, and conspiring to
launder money. If convicted under U.S. law, he faces possible life
imprisonment without parole.

Should Marc be extradited to the U.S.? The Canadian court will almost
certainly say yes. It has little choice under the Extradition Act.
Marc openly admits selling marijuana seeds over the internet to
customers around the world, including the United States, for years.
His conduct would have been grounds for criminal charges here,
although Canadian authorities never chose to charge him. But that's
enough under the Act to make it mandatory for the judge to commit him
for surrender to U.S. authorities.

That's where you come in, Mr. Justice Minister. Once the court has
ruled, the Extradition Act gives you discretion to refuse to
surrender Marc if it "would be unjust or oppressive having regard to
all the relevant circumstances."

Here are some of the circumstances you might consider relevant.

From 1999 until he was arrested in 2005, Marc declared on his income
tax return that his occupation was "marijuana seed vendor." He paid
$578,000 in income taxes into federal and B.C. government coffers. He
gave Canada Revenue Agency access to his bank statements and
explained all his cash flows to them. The CRA graciously accepted his
money without ever taking any action to put a stop to all this
criminal activity.

If you believe that all Canadians benefit from taxes being collected
and governments spending that tax money (I don't, but most Canadians
do), then logically you will have to concede that Marc has been a
huge benefactor to the Canadian people.

As for the money laundering charge, maybe all Canadians should face
U.S. indictments for having conspired with Marc to transform
Americans' outlays on recreational drugs into Canadian outlays on
health care, roads, schools, etc.

Marc has helped Canadians in other ways, too. When Canada was
compelled in 2000 to legalize medical marijuana by the R. vs. Parker
decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal, confusion reigned. Although
the court had said that individuals suffering the daily pain of
illnesses such as epilepsy, glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, cancer and
AIDS could use marijuana with their doctor's approval, there was
nowhere they could legally acquire it. Authorized users who asked
Health Canada how to get their marijuana were given the suggestion
that they purchase it online from Marc Emery.

For eight years, Marc sent every federal Member of Parliament a free
subscription to his magazine, Cannabis Culture. Every issue included
a copy of his seed catalogue. Every single MP and all of their office
staff turned a blind eye to his activities, just as Canada Revenue
Agency and Health Canada had done.

The prohibition against selling marijuana seeds in Canada went
unenforced for years, but the benefits of those seed sales were
accepted unhesitatingly by Canadian authorities. It would be the
height of hypocrisy and injustice for this country to now hand over
its benefactor to a foreign government for a prosecution it declined
to pursue itself.

But there's more. Go to any internet search engine and enter
"marijuana seeds." You'll find many seed vendors still operating
without prosecution in British Columbia and other Canadian provinces.
Why is the U.S. government not seeking the extradition of these
vendors? Why just Marc and his two employees Michelle Rainey and Greg Williams?

I think the answer is obvious. The so-called "BC3" have taken a
principled, public stand against the U.S. government's war on drugs.
Marc in particular is a highly effective spokesman for his cause. He
was never in this business primarily for financial gain, and
generally kept only enough of his marijuana seed profits to live on.
Instead, he has donated over $4-million and countless hours to fund
court challenges, establish compassion clubs for medical marijuana
users, pay medical bills for activists, sponsor conferences and
protests, fund ballot initiatives, fund political campaigns and so
on. For over a decade, he has been a huge thorn in the side of
politicians and bureaucrats who disagree with him on the political
issue of legalizing marijuana.

The Extradition Act requires you, Mr. Justice Minister, to refuse to
surrender a person if the request for extradition is "made for the
purpose of prosecuting or punishing the person by reason of
their...political opinion...." Please consider Marc's long history of
idealistic activism and tell the U.S. government that you won't let
them haul this politically motivated Canadian hero off to one of their jails.
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