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Thread: The BC 3 Should not be Extradited...

  1. #1
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    Thumbs up The BC 3 Should not be Extradited...

    Pubdate: Mon, 31 Mar 2008
    Source: National Post (Canada)
    Webpage: http://www.nationalpost.com/opinion/story.html?id=411251
    Copyright: 2008 Southam Inc.
    Contact: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/
    Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286
    Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery

    MARC EMERY SHOULD NOT BE EXTRADITED

    This editorial board has more than once presented its strongest moral
    case for the Canadian government to block the extradition of Marc
    Emery, the West Coast marijuana advocate who faces a possible life
    sentence south of the border for operating a mail-order seed business
    out of his Vancouver headquarters. It is our view that the
    differences in the two countries' handling of seed vendors make
    extraditing Emery a shameful abdication of judgment by the Canadian
    authorities. Others have argued that (after a fair trial) he deserves
    whatever punishment the Americans choose to slap him with. Some take
    this view because they regard marijuana as dangerous and destructive,
    others because the result of Emery's open goading of the Americans
    was quite foreseeable and they find it hard to sympathize.

    But now there is a fresh wrinkle in the proceedings, one that even
    those most hostile to Emery's cause should be able to see the
    absurdity of. Earlier this year Emery was able to arrange a plea
    bargain with U.S. prosecutors that would see him accept a 10-year
    sentence on their charges, of which he would serve half. Under the
    deal his co-accused colleagues would go free and Emery would serve
    the first 45 days of his sentence in the U.S., after which he would
    be returned to Canada to finish his stretch in a more comfortable
    Canadian prison.

    All that was needed was the agreement of Canada's department of
    justice. But last week, after a month of pessimistic media reports,
    they gave a final "No." The Americans insisted on guarantees against
    Emery being released before his five years was up, and such
    arrangements are forbidden in Canadian law, so no Canadian judge can
    order the application of such a sentence. That means Emery will have
    to go ahead with the extradition proceedings that were held over in
    the face of the plea-bargain, and face a possible life sentence down
    south. Catch-22: because Canada is too humane and liberal to apply
    the punishment that the Americans would like -- a punishment Emery
    has voluntarily agreed to -- there appears to be no option but to
    hand him over to the Americans without protection against much worse treatment!

    It is time for the Minister of Justice to exercise his prerogative
    and end an extradition farce that has become tainted with illogic as
    well as inhumanity. If we have a legitimate social interest in seeing
    Emery arrested, tried and imprisoned, why don't we do it ourselves?
    Why was he permitted to run his business freely and openly in
    Vancouver for years (a business recommended to legal users of medical
    marijuana by Health Canada) and to pay hundreds of thousands of
    dollars in federal and provincial taxes? How can a provision in the
    criminal law be taken seriously when it's applied only upon the
    urging of a foreign government?

    Canadian police, conscious of the awkwardness, are in fact starting
    to take belated and perhaps slightly shamefaced action against
    Emery's fellow seed dealers. Earlier this month the B.C. Court of
    Appeal upheld a sentence imposed on Vancouver Island vendor Daniel
    Konstantin, who owned a prizewinning mail-order business advertised
    in High Times magazine and had been caught with about three pounds of
    seeds. Prosecutors had appealed the decision of the trial judge, who
    had given Konstantin a month in jail plus probation. They thought the
    sentence should have been all of 15 months. That's how seriously
    Canadian justice takes this crime. And it is still a good deal more
    seriously than many Canadians, presumably including the 10 million
    among us who have tried marijuana at least once, would like.
    __________________________________________________ _______________________

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Hard not to agree with that. NON Of the bc3 should be extradited.
    if canada does this, i can say this with assurity. I will be leaving canada.


    Bubble man

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