Free Marc Emery

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Marc Emery’s US Federal Prison blog #14: Letter to Jodie

submitted by on September 13, 2010
Dearest Jodie: I so loved our two visits this weekend. And what a momentous weekend it was! We got the sentencing done, and it went as we expected, and my application to be transferred back into the Canadian corrections system was delivered to the Canadian Consulate in Seattle. It will be on the Minister of Public Safety Vic Toews’ desk late next week. The Marc Emery Support Day comes at just the right time this Saturday, September 18.
 
Please emphasize to anyone that they don’t have to join a rally if there isn’t one nearby; it’s preferable that they simply make a few legible signs and hold them up at their nearest busy intersection, baseball or football stadium or well-frequented place for 2-3 hours after noon. "Google ‘Prince of Pot’ Marc Emery – political prisoner – Return Him to Canada" for Americans, and "Repatriate Marc Emery Back to Canada, Vic Toews!" for Canadians. That will help me immensely.

(Other rally signs and suggestions are found here and here.)

 

You were amazing this week, my love, doing dozens of interviews in so much media, including CNN, CBC, Canadian Press, the Seattle area news, and so many Canadian radio, TV, and newspapers. The email copies I received were over 20 different reports, and you’ve told me there were over 350 news results on Google about it. I know you were nervous beforehand but, as always, you got so much done and said. It was great seeing you in court and then visiting with me afterward.

I’ve received emails from close friends assuming I’m sad or dejected but I am not! I’m excited to be moving on. We have huge support to have me transferred back to Canada! We have dozens of elected politicians signing a joint letter to Vic Toews urging my repatriation, including MPs, Mayors, Councillors, MLAs, and Senators. Toews has received over a thousand letters so far since August 1st and I know he will get several hundred more. We must urge everyone to send in a letter to him urging my immediate approval of my transfer under the treaty that obligates the Canadian government to bring me back. As you know, I qualify under the criteria established in the Treaty for the Transfer of International Offenders between Canada and the United States – I’m not part of organized crime, I’m not a threat to national security, no victims object to my return (as there are no victims), and I’m not going to reoffend.

The Judge recommended my transfer request be honoured, and though it is not legally binding, it is of moral suasion to both governments. The District Attorney said they would make no objection. The State Department is the only body remaining to make a decision from the US. My application for transfer will be submitted as soon as I get to my designated US prison, which I hope is Lompoc FCI just north of Santa Barbara, in California. I chose Lompoc because it has email, is relatively easy for you to get there to visit me, has good weather to be in the "yard" daily, and has 2-man cells, similar to what I am used to here at the FDC. I expect to pack-out of here sometime in late October, and be at my designated FCI by late November. Then my application gets done. It’s costly, but I hope you can raise the money to pay for our treaty transfer specialist that we hired to help get my US application approval. I know I already suck up nearly $1,000 a month for commissary, phone, email and newspaper subscriptions, and you spend much more than that visiting me, but you will need to find $4,000 to pay for the treaty transfer specialist that I want hired. We need someone knowledgeable with the US application process and this woman is reputed to be very good at assisting a successful application. Please ask around and get donations and see who can help.

Of course it’s possible I’ll get sent to TAFT Correctional Institution (CI) in California, or Dalby in Texas, or McRae in Georgia, or a CI in Pennsylvania, Mississippi, or New Mexico – private prisons that specialize in deportable and "criminal aliens", as I am considered. The problem with places like these is that they are very much more difficult for you to access to visit and most don’t have email.

I won’t really even know where I’m going to end up until I actually get there, and there will be days or even weeks when you won’t hear from me while I am on the road and getting in-taken at FDC’s on the way to my final designation prison. It will be very difficult and trying for both of us, but we must get along in the process to reach my goal of being home in Canada on full parole by Christmas, 2011. That’s the point I’ll have served over 20 months of my sentence, and 20 months is 1/3 of the 60-month sentence; in Canada, for first time, non-violent offenders, that qualifies me for full parole. I have to get approval from the US and Canada for that to happen, but it is the hope that keeps me optimistic.

In the meantime, I have been very prolific this past week. I wrote my latest piece for SKUNK Magazine, I finished my chapter on life in federal prison for Barry Cooper’s new book, I made many corrections for my auto-biographical stories that are soon to show up on my soon-to-be-made www.marcemery.ca website, where my life story, my best work for Cannabis Culture, my best political writing, my best interviews, videos, and documentaries will be. I wrote up my speech to the Judge that I delivered in court, and made sure that the “Principle of Pot” documentary is going to be manufactured into DVDs in a few weeks so they will be available in October. I hope Cliff Maynard’s roach-paper art portrait of us will be available in quality prints in a few weeks (it’s not online yet, but you saw the original at Seattle Hempfest). I love that portrait. His art is so great, made with thousands of pieces of roach papers! He’s a genius, and I’m so pleased we were the first to give him coverage in our second-last issue of Cannabis Culture!

My friend Paul McKeever has a great blog post coming out that talks about my sentencing and quotes a fair bit of a conversation I had with him on email about this discussion going on about my letter to the judge where I said I won’t be engaging in civil disobedience any longer, and not advocating it. I hope the 28 arrests on behalf of the movement, and 22 jailings – including this very long one of at least 20 months and 40 more on parole in Canada and possibly 4 years to go here in the USA if my transfers are not approved – are sufficient in the eyes of my supporters to consider that I have "paid my dues". My example of successful civil disobedience, from illegally opening my bookstore on Sundays and seeing that law overturned, to illegally selling marijuana books and magazines and seeing that law overturned too, still exists and people know that I have used civil disobedience before. I just don’t need to do it again.

I was sincere to Judge Martinez too. I would not write anything insincere, even if I consider my incarceration an injustice, which of course it is. The vast part of my speech to the judge, and much of my letter to him, I spoke with pride of my many achievements I had accomplished: US ballot initiatives funded, Supreme Court challenges funded, the Global Marijuana Marches, BC Marijuana Party campaigns, the Iboga Therapy House, the overturning of Canada’s censorship of marijuana magazines, books, literature; financing the court cases that established Canadian federal medical marijuana law; and much more. It’s a staggering catalog of success and activism and I never said I regretted any of it.

At the end of my letter to the judge, I said I would not longer be civilly disobedient, but this is a practical matter. Once back in Canada, if I am released at 20 months under current Canadian law, I’m on parole for 40 months more. If I break the law, any laws, I can get sent back to prison for all or part of that 40 months. There are no circumstances that I am willing to cross that legal threshold for.

Now, as a corollary to the statement I won’t break the law, I certainly won’t advocate to others what I won’t do myself. Secondly, in order to get my transfer to Canada into the Canadian Corrections system, and ultimately release on parole, I’m promising the Public Safety Minister Toews I won’t break the law, so I can’t go back on my word to him either. My word is always good, whether it’s to a prison official, a judge, the Minister, my customers, my wife, or my supporters.

In order to travel to the United States, there’s a period of 4 years of supervised release after the 60 months of prison/parole is completed. So if I’m in the United States anytime to the year 2019, I have to honour these sentencing mandates. It would appear after I’m deported back to Canada, upon my release on parole or afterward, I may be eligible for travel in the United States, which is excellent as I am dearly wanting to speak to my American supporters in speeches and appearances. But again, breaking the law in that period can result in my immediate imprisonment. So public bong hitting, smoking pot in public, and, because I can be urine tested anytime in that 9 years in the US (and for the 60 months in Canada), no smoking pot at all, all these previously common activities are not going to be available to me for some time, likely until pot becomes legal, which I hope is soon.

If my critics – and I understand, Jodie, that there are so-called supporters on Facebook and elsewhere anguishing over my statement to the judge that there will be no further law-breaking from me – and naysayers want to honour me, then it is incumbent on them to end prohibition where they live. Until then, they are free (until they are not) to use civil disobedience if they choose that path, but I am bound up by my promises, which are necessary, not to break the law or recommend that course of action. If this criticism comes from people who themselves are too timid to do what they expect me to do, I find this hypocritical. Others, like my good friend Chris Goodwin, do not travel to the US, because he already has a criminal record and has no hope of traveling to the US. Chris is a fine activist, but there may also come a time when, because he has two children and employees who depend on him, civil disobedience may be unavailable to him as a practical option. For people like you, Jodie, oh sweet wonderful wife, you cannot disobey laws for the simple matter you need to be able to travel to the US to visit me, and you must set an example for others that your method of working in the current political environment can influence and cause change towards a just society. Others simply cannot use civil disobedience if it jeopardizes their ability to travel to the US or their employment prospects.

I did admit I was arrogant to the judge. I admitted I regret breaking the law, but that is because I dislike jail and I greatly miss you, my dear, more than anything else in this world, and you and I know how heartbreaking our separation is. I never renounced any of the results of my action; I never said I regret selling seeds. I didn’t concede I harmed anyone. I said in my speech to the judge – which will soon be available when you receive the court transcript – that prohibition harms individuals, nations, and harms even respect for the rule of law by diminishing the integrity of our Constitutions. A criminal, when being contrite, may say "I regret harming you" or "I am sorry for the damage I did". I did not do that. I was proud of the results, and I indicated so. I was regretful of my punishment and promised not to offend again, but these are practical admissions, and as it turned out, the last paragraph of my letter to the judge was what he said he needed to agree to the 5-year sentence and wish me well, rather than rejecting the sincerity of my plea and ordering me to trial, which was his alternative.

One comment I found interesting on the Facebook discussions, which are being relayed to me from my friends, was someone who said having to confess and apologize to the judge of a court where tyranny is being justified “is like a rapist demanding his victim say ‘I love you’ during the outrage". I like the metaphor, I’m not sure it’s exactly accurate, but it makes one think.

Another point I’d like to make, Jodie, is that throughout my letter and speech to the judge, I never referred to my actions as criminal conduct. I always referred to them as civil disobedience. Can you imagine how a court would react if any other defendant went in and referred to their conduct as ‘civil disobedience’? Oh Nelly, that would make a judge explode! But Judge Martinez didn’t react adversely where I used that term. He clearly had some sympathy for my predicament, wished me well, admitted 5 years is a long, long time, conceded the drug war was gravely flawed, but said, in final, my conduct was "criminal" and a sentencing judgment was no place to determine the validity of prohibition.

My lawyer brought up Karen Tandy’s statement about my politics being the true motivation for the DEA prosecution, and spoke of my original prosecutor John McKay’s recent admission in the Seattle Times that the cannabis prohibition is "dangerous" and "endangers the lives of his brave colleagues in policing" and is "futile".

My judge understood my point of view, my intent, and that’s all I can ask for, along with his recommendation to the Low Security FCI Lompoc and my transfer to Canada as soon as possible. After all, I’ve already agreed to plead guilty to a criminal violation of US law, and my promise to him is I won’t break the law again, and since my actions that broke those laws were based on a philosophy (civil disobedience), I renounce that philosophy for my future conduct, and as a corollary of that, I won’t advocate anyone else emulate that philosophy. The judge accepted that promise as accepting responsibility and I think it serves both the purposes of maintaining my integrity and the integrity of the court to have this exact resolution. I didn’t renounce all other human action by me for the cause of liberty, and I didn’t condemn civil disobedience; I simply promised I wouldn’t do it or advocate it, for reasons that are obvious, rational and consistent. I will still be giving my greatest effort to the cause of ending prohibition, but these will be lawful methods, speaking, elections, writing, etc.

I want to be by your side, my great Mrs. Emery, and this is how I must do that. We have such a great future together, meeting our people and bringing our World Liberation Tour to our supporters in Canada, the United States, Europe, New Zealand, Australia, India, and elsewhere once I am out amongst them. We’ll have my book Overgrowing The World, My Life as Prince of Pot deluxe hardcover out upon my release and we’ll tour Canada to promote it and impart our knowledge and wisdom with our people as soon as we can. In the meantime, you and I are as busy as ever promoting the movement, our activity for the cause of human freedom has never been greater, and this week was a great example of our ability to bring the injustice of prohibition to millions. Let us hope our supporters feel that way too and reward us with their contribution to my liberation back to Canada this Saturday, September 18th.

I’m very proud and humbled to have such a loving, devoted, capable and intelligent wife who gives her all for me and our cause of freedom for the cannabis culture. You are an amazing woman and I am so honoured you call yourself Mrs. Marc Emery.

Your grateful husband,
Your bowed but hardly defeated Prince,
Marc

My Husband Shouldn’t Be in A US Jail

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Re: A Notable Defector In The War On Pot, Sept. 10.

Chris Selley claims my husband Marc Emery sold seeds to Americans for profit, but Marc was never selling seeds for personal gain. His purpose was to finance drug policy reform, and he was tremendously successful at it. The Drug Enforcement Administration made clear that they targeted Marc as “the founder of a marijuana legalization group” due to his money being “channelled to marijuana legalization groups active in the U.S. and Canada” and his arrest was “a significant blow to the marijuana legalization movement.”

There are seed sellers in Canada, Europe and even the United States who are not arrested and certainly don’t get five years in U.S. federal prison. Marc never set foot in the States and he paid income tax to Revenue Canada as a “marijuana seed vendor.” Marc should not have been extradited to a foreign country and the excessive, unjust punishment in the U.S. federal prison system he will endure — he should have been dealt with in his home country, where the activities took place.

Marc needs to be brought home to serve his time here in Canada.

Jodie Emery, Vancouver.

LTE By Loretta Nall, Published in the National Post

submitted by on
By: Loretta Nall, National Post
 
While I agree with most of Chris Selley’s column, I take exception to his assertion: “However asinine, the law’s the law.”
 
I live in Alabama, where it used to be legal to own a slave and illegal to help a slave gain freedom. We also had Jim Crow laws that prevented blacks and poor whites from taking part in the political process. None of those laws were just and, everyone who had the courage to break them were true heroes, as is [marijuana activist] Marc Emery.
 
Just because something is against the law doesn’t mean it’s bad and just because something is legal doesn’t mean it’s good, as former Alabama laws so clearly demonstrate.
 
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “One has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.” Marc Emery clearly has the moral high ground on this issue.
 
Loretta Nall, Alexander City, Ala.

Marc Emery’s Former Prosecutor Denounces Pot Prohibition

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By: Marijuana Policy Project, Opposing Views
 
Last week, a federal judge in Seattle sentenced prominent Canadian marijuana activist Marc Emery to five years in U.S. prison, after Emery pleaded guilty in May to one count of conspiracy to manufacture marijuana.
 
For years, Emery ran a marijuana seed-selling business, the profits from which he donated almost entirely to marijuana policy reform efforts. For that reason, his prosecution by U.S. law enforcement has been viewed by many as purely political, a charge officials have since denied.
 
But in 2005, then DEA-head Karen Tandy touted Emery’s arrest as “a significant blow” to the movement to end marijuana prohibition, saying “hundreds of thousands of dollars of Emery’s illicit profits are known to have been channeled to marijuana legalization groups active in the United States and Canada. Drug legalization lobbyists now have one less pot of money to rely on.” Such a statement should provide some insight into why U.S. officials have spent so many resources targeting (even extraditing) Emery over the years.
 
But of course that’s old news, and not surprising. Instead, what really raised some eyebrows was this op-ed written earlier this month by John McKay, the former U.S. attorney who first indicted Emery in 2005. Writing in the Seattle Times, McKay now says that marijuana prohibition is a failure, is based on “false medical assumptions,” and that a new, science-based approach toward marijuana policy is desperately needed:
 
As Emery’s prosecutor and a former federal law-enforcement official, however, I’m not afraid to say out loud what most of my former colleagues know is true: Our marijuana policy is dangerous and wrong and should be changed through the legislative process to better protect the public safety. […] We should give serious consideration to heavy regulation and taxation of the marijuana industry.
 
 
How’s that for evidence of the changing political atmosphere surrounding marijuana policy?
 
 

Marc Emery Sentenced To 5 Years In U.S. Prison

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By: Joe Klare, The 420 Times
 
  As we reported the other day, Marc Emery was due to be sentenced Friday in the United States for his seed selling activities in Canada. And sentenced he was, receiving the expected 5 years in U.S. prison.  
 
The goal now for friends of Marc everywhere is to petition the United States and Canadian governments to get Marc moved to Canada – his home country and the scene of his “crimes” – to serve his sentence.  
 
Emery’s wife, Jodie Emery, said in an interview that her husband is holding up, but his fight is not over.
 
She said right after court adjourned on Friday, his lawyer went to the Canadian consulate in Seattle to submit the paperwork to have Emery transferred back to Canada to serve his sentence here.
 
The arrangement requires the consent from Public Safety Minister Vic Toews and Jodie Emery conceded she’s not hopeful the Tory government will act quickly.
 
  Marc told the court that he was “overzealous” and “arrogant” in his flouting of U.S. laws, and that may be true to some extent. But it was Marc’s arrogance that matched the arrogance of our governments and their freedom-crushing laws.  
 
Above all we must make sure Marc Emery continues to be a beacon of inspiration to the cannabis law reform movement. We cannot let his sacrifices be made in vain.  

Marc Emery Gets Five Years in Prison

submitted by on
By: Joseph Klare, High Times
 
The "Prince of Pot," Marc Emery, has been sentenced to five years in United States prison under the terms of his plea agreement.
 
Marc was given his sentence in a federal courthouse in Seattle, WA on Friday. Arrested by Vancouver police in 2005 at the behest of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Marc was accused by U.S. authorities of being one of the foremost drug dealers in the world because of his pot seed-selling business.
 
After years of fighting extradition from his home country of Canada, Marc relented last year so that his co-defendants would not be charged in the United States. Marc’s supporters are now trying to get him moved to Canada so that he may serve his sentence closer to home.
 

From ‘Prince of Pot’ to ‘Prince of Prison’: Marc Emery begins serving U.S. sentence

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By Damian Inwood, The Province
 
SEATTLE — Vancouver’s Marc Emery has gone from “Prince of Pot” to prison pauper with a five-year U.S. prison sentence for mailing marijuana seeds south of the border.
 
The 52-year-old cannabis activist spent part of the first night of his sentence holding hands with his wife Jodie, during a two-hour Seattle jail visit Saturday.
 
“He gets very emotional when he thinks of being away from me for so long,” Jodie, 25, said.
 
“He said that when he comes back to Canada, if he’s not allowed smoke cannabis, he won’t, and he doesn’t care. He doesn’t miss it — he just misses me and wants to get home.”
 
Emery was slapped with the five-year jail sentence in a plea-bargain deal after fighting for more than five years to avoid a U.S. prison term.
 
Jodie said her husband was pleased that District Court Judge Ricardo Martinez agreed to a defence recommendation that Emery be transferred to a prison in Canada to serve his sentence.
 
“His application for transfer was dropped off at the Canadian consulate, so that will soon be at (federal) Public Safety Minister Vic Toews’ desk and he can approve it almost immediately,” she said.
 
“Marc will likely be moved to a different institution somewhere in the U.S. in four to six weeks. He’ll still be called the ‘Prince of Pot’ but some people have joked about him being the ‘Prince of Prison’ and things like that.”
 
Until he is moved to Canada, Emery hopes to serve his time at a minimum-security prison in Lompoc, Calif., but he could also be sent to a jail in Mississippi, Georgia, North Carolina, Texas or New Mexico.
 
If Emery does get a treaty transfer to Canada, he could be on day parole as early as next summer and full parole by November 2011, said Jodie.
 
She said her husband will pass the time behind bars writing an autobiography and working on a Canadian voters’ guide to the federal election.
 
Jodie said she has been able to visit Emery twice a week.
 
When Emery was sentenced in Seattle Friday, he got a tongue-lashing from U.S. Attorney Todd Greenberg.
 
“This is a very serious sentence for a very serious crime,” said Greenberg. “At the time of this investigation, Mr. Emery was the largest distributor of marijuana seeds in North America.”
 
He said Emery sold millions of marijuana seeds which were grown into millions of plants in the U.S. Emery sold the seeds by mail order and telephone to anyone who placed an order, “regardless of their age, regardless of their criminal association and criminal past,” Greenberg added.
 
 

‘Prince of Pot’ Marc Emery Sentenced To Five Years in US Prison

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CANNABIS CULTURE – Marc Emery, well-known Canadian marijuana activist and founder of Cannabis Culture Magazine, was sentenced by a federal judge to five years behind bars in a US prison on September 10th.

Targeted by the DEA for his political activism and his efforts to fund marijuana legalization groups, our good friend Marc finally learned his fate this afternoon in a Seattle courtroom: a five year sentence for selling marijuana seeds, in accord with a plea deal arranged with US prosecutors.

 
The sentencing was short; government prosecutor Todd Greenberg and Marc’s attorney Richard Troberman made brief remarks before Marc himself was allowed to make a final statement to the court.
 
Judge Ricardo S. Martinez seemed sympathetic in handing the activist his sentence, but implied that his hands were largely tied by the conditions of the plea agreement. As the judge noted during the proceedings, delivering a shorter sentence would allow government prosecutors to pull out of the deal, leaving Marc vulnerable to a trial and longer punishment. Judge Martinez recommended that Marc be moved to the Federal Correctional Institution in Lompoc California, as per his wishes, and made an informal recommendation to the Justice Department that a Treaty Transfer be approved to send Marc back to Canada to serve his sentence.
 
A group of about 40 supporters held signs, shouted chants and sounded off to American and Canadian media about what they see as a disgraceful affront to justice and Canadian sovereignty – the imprisonment of a peaceful political activist and dedicated advocate and fundraiser for drug policy reform.
 
Marc’s wife Jodie, a Green Party director-at-large and accomplished cannabis activist in her own right, condemned the treatment of her husband and other victims of the Drug War. Speaking with reporters after the sentencing Jodie said that today’s sentencing provoked "a mix of emotions".
 
"Marc’s deal has dragged on since 2005 and it’s good to have it over with," she said, "but to face the 5-year sentence ahead…that’s quite a long road to look down."
 
The following stories and videos appeared online in the hours after Marc’s sentencing.

Part 2:

Part 3:

Canada’s prince of pot sentenced to five years in jail

submitted by on September 10, 2010
By Ian Mulgrew, Vancouver Sun
 
SEATTLE, Wash. — Sentenced to five years behind bars, Canada’s Prince of Pot Marc Emery was led off to an American penitentiary Friday repenting his seed-selling sins and professing love for his wife.
 
"I love you Jodie!" he mouthed silently to her as he was led away.
 
There may be a place for and time for a debate over the legalization of marijuana the judge told him, but this is not the time or the place — marijuana is illegal.
 
In a beige prisoner’s jumpsuit, Emery sat throughout the 15-minute hearing with his hands folded under his chin.
 
His wife Jodie Emery sat stoically the public gallery with about 40 supporters, press and undercover law-enforcement officers.
 
Seeds traced to grow houses in every region of the U.S. were linked to Emery according to the prosecution, and the original DEA press release called Emery one of the "most wanted international drug trafficking organizational targets — one of only 46 in the world and the only one from Canada."
 
Judge Ricardo Martinez, of the western Washington district court, told the 52-year-old Vancouver businessman that he had grown up along the Canadian border and was saddened by what illegal drugs have done to both countries.
 
"I regret the example we set," Emery told him, "and I won’t be doing that again.
 
"I’d like to point out though that it made it sound like I’m a bad guy . . . but I had very good intentions and wanted to be considered a proper participant in our society. I do believe that these prohibition laws create a lot of problems and create organized crime."
 
It was a sad emotional end to a 30-year public career by the staunch libertarian most Canadians considered a benign and charismatic political prankster.
 
The U.S. prosecutors said he was the "largest [pot seed] distributor in North America and at least the largest into the United States . . . .no doubt he sold millions of marijuana seeds that produced millions of marijuana plants in the U.S."
 
Outside the federal courthouse, a small group protested his sentence.
 
Emery said he now realizes that some of the methods he chose to fund his efforts to repeal the marijuana prohibition were "ill-conceived and ultimately destructive."
 
In a letter given to the judge prior to sentencing, Emery said he was "over-zealous and reckless" and "acted arrogantly in violation of U.S. federal law.
 
"I regret not choosing other methods — legal ones — to achieve my goals of peaceful political reform."
 
It sounded as sincere as Galileo’s confession.
 
Emery has been a political activist for three decades — fighting Sunday business-closing laws in Ontario, Canada’s national ban on drug literature and, of course, the marijuana prohibition.
 
A Canadian citizen and president of the B.C. Marijuana Party, Emery has run for office several times.
 
In furtherance of his goal of legalizing cannabis, for many years he sold marijuana seeds around the world through catalogue sales.
 
"This was not a business that operated underground, or even in the shadows," Richard Troberman, Emery’s lawyer told the court.
 
"On the contrary, Marc openly operated his seed distribution business ("Marc Emery Direct") from a storefront in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, as well as over the internet; through telephone sales; direct mail sales; and though other media outlets. Revenue Canada gladly accepted taxes on all of his sales, which were duly reported to the appropriate taxing authorities. Virtually all of the profits from the business went to funding lawful efforts to legalize marijuana in Canada and the United States through the political process."
 
Crown counsel in Canada refused to prosecute Emery but under the former Republican presidency the U.S. ramped up its war on drugs and targeted Emery because of his political profile.
 
"The Attorney General’s true motive — which was to silence Mr. Emery’s political activity — could not be more clear," Troberman said.
 
Emery was indicted in Seattle on May 26, 2005 for conspiracy to manufacture marijuana and arrested in Halifax on an extradition warrant a few days later.
 
He was held in custody from Aug. 2 through Aug. 5, 2005. Emery remained free until Sept. 2009 when a tentative plea bargain was reached and he surrendered himself into custody Sept. 28.
 
He remained imprisoned in Canada until Nov. 18, when he was released to await the Justice Minister’s final determination of his extradition.
 
On May 10, Emery was told the minister had refused his last-ditch appeal and went back into jail.
 
He was transported to the U.S. May 20 and has remained imprisoned since.
 
Emery admitted selling more then 4 million seeds, 75 per cent to U.S. customers.
 
He asked to be housed in the federal correctional institution at Lompoc, Calif., so he can continue to be visited by his wife. The judge recommended that.
 
After his sentencing, Emery’s lawyers delivered a request to the Canadian consul for a prison transfer to Canada.
 
His B.C. lawyer Kirk Tousaw said that if all went well, Emery could be serving his time in a Canadian institution within a year.
 
"I received hundreds of letters and emails, most of them favourable to you," Judge Martinez said.
 
"One in crayon," he quipped, "others quite well written, very thoughtful, making some very interesting points. I know five years is a long time. I wish you the best."
 

Pot activist Marc Emery gets 5 years in U.S. jail

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CTV.ca News Staff
 
Canadian pot activist Marc Emerey has been sentenced to five years in a U.S. prison for selling marijuana seeds south of the border.
 
The 52-year-old Vancouver resident learned his fate on Friday afternoon in a U.S. district court in Seattle.
 
His sentence also includes four years of "supervised release" following his prison term, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office said in a statement that described Emery as the largest marijuana seeds vendor in the U.S. when he was indicted in 2005.
 
"There is no question your actions were illegal and criminal and your actions ensured that others broke the law and suffered the consequences," U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez told Emery in his sentencing decision.
 
Emery signed a plea agreement stating that he and two associates, Michelle Rainey and Gregory Keith Williams, ran a business distributing marijuana seeds. Rainey, 39, and Williams, 54, both worked for Emery’s company. They were each sentenced to two years of probation on conspiracy to manufacture marijuana charges last year in a Seattle court.
 
The U.S. Attorney’s office said that three-quarters of the seeds that Emery’s company sold between 1995 and 2005 wound up in the United States, where it is illegal to sell the seeds. It also charged that seeds from Emery’s company were linked to illegal marijuana-growing operations "protected by guns and booby traps."
 
"Marc Emery decided that U.S. laws did not apply to him, but he was wrong," U.S. attorney Jenny A. Durkan said in a statement. "He sold to anyone who would pay him — with no regard for the age or criminal activities of his customers."
 
In May, Justice Minister Rob Nicholson ordered that Emery be extradited to the U.S., after a five-year legal battle over Emery’s business.
 
More to come…