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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: 'Prince of Pot' Gets Five Years in 'Cruel and Lonely
Title:Canada: 'Prince of Pot' Gets Five Years in 'Cruel and Lonely
Published On:2010-09-11
Source:Edmonton Journal (CN AB)
Fetched On:2010-09-12 03:01:34
'PRINCE OF POT' GETS FIVE YEARS IN 'CRUEL AND LONELY PLACE'

Vancouver's "Prince of Pot," Marc Emery, was sentenced in a Seattle
courtroom Friday afternoon to five years in prison by a U.S. Federal
Court.

It was the sentence Emery and his wife Jodie had been looking for
since his guilty plea in late May to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana.

"We feel that we'll probably get the sentence we were expecting,"
Jodie Emery told a rally of about 30 supporters outside the courthouse.

The crowd waved signs reading "Free Marc" and chanted their support as
passing cars honked their horns.

Emery was arrested in 2005 by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
and indicted for selling marijuana seeds online and through the mail
to customers in the U.S. On his website, Emery claims to have made $3
million a year selling seeds, and to have sold more than four million
seeds over the years.

"Jail is a cruel and lonely place and I regret that my actions have
brought me here," Emery said in a written statement to U.S. Federal
Court Judge Ricardo Martinez. "Five years is an awfully long time to
consider what I've done. I admit that I was arrogant in flouting
United States law.

"My great life's goal for 20 years now, your Honour, has been a
burning passion to end what I consider a terrible injustice that has
seen over 10 million U.S. citizens and 1.5 million Canadian citizens
brutally and unjustly punished under the marijuana prohibition laws of
our two countries.

"As a Canadian who did all my activity in Canada and used over $4
million in proceeds directed to peaceful, legal and democratic
activities in both our countries, I felt almost any honest,
transparent and peaceful activity toward repealing these prohibition
laws was legitimate."

Jodie Emery said that after the sentencing she hoped to be able to
visit Emery in jail.

She said he e-mailed her Thursday night. "He's holding up," she said.
"He's feeling all right. He's very calm and ready to accept
responsibility for what's
going to happen because he always said he'd go down as a martyr to
represent all the others who are imprisoned unjustly."

Now that he has been sentenced, Emery can apply for transfer to a
Canadian prison for the remainder of his sentence. Public Safety
Minister Vic Toews will decide if Emery will be allowed to come back
to Canada.
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