In an August 5, 2005, article for the Seattle Post Intelligencer, columnist Joel Connely quoted D.E.A. administrator Karen Tandy on the arrest of Canadian marijuana activist Marc Emery:
“Today’s arrest of Mark (sic) Scott Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture magazine and the founder of a marijuana legalization group, is a significant blow not only to the marijuana trafficking trade in the U.S. and Canada, but also to the marijuana legalization movement.”
“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.”
But according to US attorney Todd Greenberg, this arrest was not supposed to about Mr. Emery’s politics, “The focus of this case is on the drug trafficking of Marc Emery. It is not about his political activities, nor his campaigns for office. Nor is it focused on his magazine.”
Mr. Emery has been selling marijuana seeds over the Internet since 1994. For over a decade Emery Seeds has operated out in the open, in the full view of the Canadian authorities and was considered to be the largest marijuana seed distributor in the world.
Mr. Emery is also a well known political activist in the fight against marijuana prohibition. The media calls him “The Prince of Pot.” He is the leader of the BC Marijuana Party, the publisher of Cannabis Culture magazine and the host of The Prince of Pot on POT-TV, which he also owns.
According to Special Agent in Charge Rodney G. Benson of the D.E.A., “The tentacles of the Mark Emery criminal enterprise reached out across North America to include all 50 United States and Canada,” he said in a July 29, 2005 D.E.A. news release, “Mr. Emery utilized the Internet to sell his marijuana seeds throughout this country to customers no matter their age. He directed his business with efficiency, was motivated by greed, and will now be prosecuted for this illegal activity.”
Selling pot seeds is not considered to be an “arrestable” offense in Canada.
At a news conference held after Mr. Emery was granted bail, Mr. Emery’s lawyer, John Conroy said, “For nine years he’s been doing this quite openly. They’ve known about it, the local authorities haven’t done anything about it.” Mr Conroy also said that Mr. Emery has long had tacit permission from Canadian authorities to sell seeds, adding that even Health Canada has told people who have been prescribed medical marijuana to buy seeds on the Internet.
The US Marijuana Party has called for the Resignation of D.E.A. Administrator Karen Tandy. Loretta Nall, President of the U.S. Marijuana Party writes in an August 5, 2005 blog entry , “Tandy needs to clarify her remarks and state publicly that the DEA is not targeting protected political activity. If she cannot or will not do that, she should resign. Targeting political opponents is not Tandy’s job.”
Ms. Nall’s article opens with the words, “Please distribute far and wide.”
I now pass this news along in the blogosphere, hoping that this story will spread far and wide.
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DEA targeting free speech
It’s not the marijuana that really worries the DEA. It’s the freedom of speech bit. Free speech is a threat to the huge War on Drugs bureaucracy that provides their paychecks. Damn the First Amendment!
Very interesting.
Isn’t it?
Regardless of your views with regard to our marijuana laws, it’s creepy when the head of the DEA oversteps her authority to enforce US drug policy in order to quash a political movement that is so obviously unpopular with the DEA.
Will america ever stop invading countries and treating the world like its personal property? Mark Emery is someone I have met and I do not like him as a person, but he should be safe from foriegn forces in his own country. Emery provides a valuable service to Canadians and citizens of other countries. Get out of Iraq! Get out of Venezuala! Get out of Columbia! Get out of Canada! Karen Tandy’s comments are telling when she states the arrest is a blow to the legalization movement. If we legalized marijuana, would Karen be able to find a real job? Something the actually contributed to the betterment of society?
Indeed, a horrible injustice has been dealt to Mr. Emery, so horrible that a number of his enemies are even outraged by his arrest. But some forces within the Canadian government have been complicit because they helped to facilitate the DEA invasion. However, I am waiting to see whether Canada will grant the American extradition request.
Personally, I think that most of our current drug warriors should be re-purposed to fight terrorists because the methods they already know and employ would be most effective if they were used against terrorism.
interesting topic will keep my eye on it
as a dea its very fasinating
Tobacco and alcohol is more dangerous and addictive than marijuana will ever be, so when it boils down to it what do you think the real reason is for it being illegal, when tobacco and alcohol is not? Because government can’t put a tax on it?
Wow, this entry is from 2005.
The war on drugs continues for both social and economic reasons. Socially, it is simply a matter of tradition and human nature is usually resistant to change. Economically, it really has little to nothing to do with taxation or competition — its easy to slap a tax on anything and the above-ground market is already competing with the underground one. Rather it is a matter of stability.
Imagine the economic impact of the bottom falling out of just the marijuana market. If it is legalized, pot will suddenly go from hundreds of dollars per ounce, to only a few dollars per ounce. Now multiply that by the size of the market, which is estimated to be anywhere from 15 to 50 million consumers, served by around 50 to 200 thousand growers, importers, distributors, and retailers.
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