Pot activist Emery cuts deal for jail sentence with U.S.

CBC News

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Sep 26, 2006
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Vancouver-based marijuana activist Marc Emery says his lawyers have cut a deal with U.S. prosecutors that would see him soon serving a minimum of five years in jail.
Marc Emery, nicknamed the Prince of Pot, said Monday that he has struck a deal with U.S. prosecutors to serve jail time in Canada.
(CBC)
In July 2005, U.S. drug enforcement officials asked that Emery be extradited so he could face charges that he, Greg Williams and Michelle Rainey distributed millions of cannabis seeds to American customers at an annual profit of $3 million.
If Emery and his friends were extradited and found guilty in the U.S., they would each face a minimum 10-year sentence, with a chance of life in prison for the charges of conspiracy to grow marijuana, sell seeds and money laundering.
He said the Americans were demanding he serve a 10-year sentence, with at least five years in prison.
He said he has agreed to serve at least five years in jail in Canada, if it means his two friends facing the same charges can remain free.
If the federal government accepts the proposal, Emery said he could be behind bars in the U.S. within 60 days.
But although Emery said he would accept the plea bargain to keep his friends from prison, he's adamant he did nothing wrong.
He said he remains bitter that after paying more than $500,000 in income tax from his business, Canadian officials who knew what he was doing have abandoned him.
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