because he sought the spot light.Why did the cameras come to him?
Then there really isn't any injustice is there?
He got exactly what he wanted.
Do you think he left home every morning with 6 joints for personal use, the size of the one in the OP. That looks to be almost an ounce by itself. (legal limit) If he weighed the pot before he rolled it he was aware of legal issues.Why did the cameras come to him?
You can try and divy up the blame all you want. At the end of the day, the media didn't force him to break US laws.So then media created the Marc Emery that sits in Seattle doing time just as much as Marc Emery created Marc Emery.
Discretion, is always the better part of valour.Too bad others are afraid to take the opportunity and stand up for what they believe in.
I don't think so, but you're free to think that.That's like saying there is justice in how easily we can take jabs at Harpo. There's no justice if people still vote for him.
So then media created the Marc Emery that sits in Seattle doing time just as much as Marc Emery created Marc Emery.
Too bad others are afraid to take the opportunity and stand up for what they believe in.
Do you think he left home every morning with 6 joints for personal use, the size of the one in the OP. That looks to be almost an ounce by itself. (legal limit) If he weighed the pot before he rolled it he was aware of legal issues.
I wonder if they have him working in a state tourism call centre doing slave labour to buy ichiban and KD to eat?He's in Oklahoma now or Georgia I think.
(b) the conduct of the person, had it occurred in Canada, would have constituted an offence that is punishable in Canada,
No they aren't.Extradition laws are for people who broke the law in one country and then fled to another country.
Extradition, is a principle.Since its legal to sell seeds in Canada, Canada had no obligation to cooperate with the US extradition request, even if Emery had been selling seeds in the US and fled to Canada. But lets be clear. Emery's activities did not violate Canadian law.
Money Laundering is illegal in Canada EAO.There are generally four requirements for a crime to qualify for extradition.
You can keep ignoring the money laundering charge if you like.A legal opinion regarding Emery's case:
Professor Alan Young on the Mark Emery Case
Basically its a judgment call.
Canada is not obligated to respect the US extradition request if the action is legal in Canada. Possession of marijuana seeds is illegal, but not commonly enforced.
Canada is not obligated to respect the US extradition request if the US penalty is unduly harsh compared to Canadian law. "Is 10 years to life" unduly harsh relative to a not commonly enforced law, which when enforced results in a small fine?
Read Emery's link at Cannabis Culture. He declared all income and paid all his taxes.
Gladly...Link please
Emery agrees to 5 years in Canadian prisonMarc Emery, Vancouver's self-styled Prince of Pot, has tentatively agreed to a five-year prison term in a plea bargain over U.S. money laundering and marijuana seed-selling charges.
Along with two other B.C. residents, Emery, 47, has been indicted by a U.S. grand jury on charges of conspiring to manufacture and distribute marijuana seeds and to engage in money laundering. The RCMP and local police who arrested him last weekend were acting on a request by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, in accordance with a mutual legal assistance treaty.
Don't know, but obviously it met the standard. Then again, he also plead guilty to it, too.What were the circumstances of the money laundering?
Doesn't set precedent in a Canadian Court.If he is doing time for that, it is more than anyone from Wichovia got and they did billions of dollar of real drug money laundering.