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Seeds from Marc Emery allegedly grew government weed Marc Emery: political leader Marc Emery: political leader When incarcerated potseed activist and businessman Marc Emery finally got a bail hearing after spending several days in jail, a Canadian prosecutor told the court that American DEA agents had been buying seeds from Emery for many years, and growing them. Prosecutor Rosellina Datillo told presiding judge Patrick Dohm that evidence against Emery included purchases of thousands of Emery's marijuana seeds by undercover DEA agents. Government documents allege that DEA agents started buying seeds from Emery in 2000, grew them as evidence, and then again began buying seeds at Emery's Vancouver store and via the internet in 2004. The US government has a marijuana farm at the University of Mississippi. Marijuana grown there has been used to supply several medical patients who were lucky enough to qualify for a program that delivers hundreds of pre-rolled joints to them every month. The program was terminated to the extent that no new applicants can enter it, but government weed still flows to Elvy Musikka, Irv Rosenfeld, and a few other patients with severe medical conditions. Cannabis experts who've heard that the DEA bought Emery's seeds say it's doubtful that Emery's marijuana genetics have been grown at the government's medpot farm. "I've seen the schwag they send Elvy," one expert commented, "and I've seen the primo bud grown from even the least expensive Emery seeds. There's no comparison. Unless the government has found a way to grow garbage from good genetics, the DEA wasn't using the university farm to grow its Emery evidence crops." A National Threat: cannabis seeds? A National Threat: cannabis seeds? Of particular interest for legitimate, non-police customers of Emery Seeds is whether government investigations compromised customer identities and could lead to raids of seed buyers. Activists and drug war victims who have received donations from Emery have also been concerned that they would be affected by the government's charge that Emery was involved in "money laundering." Datillo indicated that some of the evidence that will be offered to prove money-laundering charges includes money transfers made to the US by Emery. Given that Emery donated tens of thousands of dollars to reform organizations, activists, and drug war defendants, it is possible that the DEA has tracked some of those donations. Research into money laundering laws and "proceeds of crime" laws indicate that recipients who received money from Emery are not guilty of any crime as long as they were not part of an explicit scheme to hide money for Emery, or that was later returned to Emery in a criminal arrangement. To qualify as a crime, there has to be specifically stated criminal intent from both parties. People who received money from philanthropist Emery will be reassured to know that there is no evidence in any government statement or document so far that people who received donations from Emery are under threat of being busted by the US government. The donations Emery made are so innocent and political in nature that they would inevitably portray him in a very favorable light if they were offered as evidence of crimes by federal prosecutors if he is ever put on trial. He has spent thousands funding Canadian Supreme Court challenges marijuana law challenges in which he was not the plaintiff or defendant, but rather the sponsor. He has funded placards for New York street rallies, provided sustenance for medical marijuana patients unable to defend themselves, and founded two exciting media properties that are much more about political anti-drug war education and a call to Emery's brand of libertine, Libertarian pot freedom than about marijuana as a "drug." This is how Emery spent his money, and it will be hard for the feds to twist these transactions to appear sinister. During the initial government press conference held in Seattle to announce the bust of Emery and two co-defendants, government spokespersons claimed to have traced Emery seeds to grow operations in several states, including Indiana, Florida, California, Tennessee, Montana, Virginia, Michigan, New Jersey and North Dakota. They said they intended to follow up by arresting people growing marijuana from Emery seeds. At later press conferences, officials said they had several arrested marijuana growers who would testify under oath that they'd used seeds from Emery for their illegal grow ops. At the bail hearing, Datillo said Vancouver police, postal officials, and DEA agents had been examining Emery's mail for several months prior to the July 29 raids and arrests. Datillo said the envelopes examined (many of which would presumably have come from seed customers) were not opened, but were examined only externally. However, a spokesperson for the US Western District Federal Prosecutor's Office said that people who had "done any kind of correspondence with Mr. Emery" during the span of the investigation "should realize that the investigation used postal inspectors and customs inspectors on both sides of the border" as part of the investigating team. "Law enforcement isn't going to give you a road map if you're in a criminal enterprise and one of your co-conspirators gets in trouble so you can get the heads up on how you can avoid law enforcement," said the spokesperson. "Police are not going to tell everybody who did something illegal that they are coming. They are going to say some things in open court and other things will be disclosed in closed chambers to the judge only, not to the press or to the public. They are protecting their undercover assets and confidential aspects of their investigation. You don't have to open an envelope to see what's in it. My advice to your audience is, if I had been writing to Mr. Emery about anything, not just about illegal marijuana seeds, I would be concerned." Protecting undercover assets in the Emery case definitely includes protecting the identities of the male-female undercover duo that developed a relationship with Emery and seed advisor Marijuana Man before the bust. Datillo claimed the agents received instructions about growing and smuggling marijuana seeds from Emery. The reliability and honesty of these agents is a major factor in whether Canadian judges will grant the US request to extradite Emery so he can be tried in the US, where he could face life imprisonment or the death penalty for "crimes" that are viewed as minor, seldom-enforced infractions in Canada. According to a US Justice Department Inspector General report released just before Emery was arrested, the DEA is in bed with dangerous and dishonest people that it uses to build cases against "drug criminals." Inspector General Glenn Fine says in a summary report that the DEA and federal prosecutors have engaged in scandalous behavior by using sleazy undercover operatives to bust people. The report says the DEA has at least 4100 undercover snitches operating around the world. Many of them are drawing down huge salaries. When snitches engage in violent, fraudulent or otherwise criminal behavior on and off the job, DEA agents and attorneys back them up and help them escape prosecution. Andrew Chambers is apparently typical of DEA's snitches. He received nearly $2.5 million US for providing evidence against 430 drug defendants. When defense attorneys proved that Chambers was a serial liar who repeatedly committed perjury under oath, the DEA and federal prosecutors ignored that and kept using him as an informant. Inspector General Fine found that DEA and federal prosecutors break federal laws regarding monitoring and evaluation of snitches, and that the feds have no idea how much they actually pay these people. This is relevant to Emery's plight. In 2002, British Supreme Court Justice Janice Dillon rejected a DEA extradition request based on DEA misconduct involving corrupt informants and undercover operations. The DEA wanted to extradite Canadian citizen Dave Licht to face charges relating to a cocaine deal brokered by DEA undercover agents and informants in 1999. Royal Canadian Mounted Police ("Mounties") worked with DEA in an entrapment case that saw DEA agents and informants pretending to be Colombian cocaine dealers trying to find Canadian customers. DEA operatives brought cocaine into Canada via a bi-lateral investigatory agreement similar to the mutual legal assistance treaty (MLAT) that was used to investigate Emery. Licht and other Canadians failed to take the DEA's bait, however, and the Mounties were upset that US cocaine had entered Canada as part of a botched undercover operation that looked more like an attempt to induce crime than an attempt to investigate an already-existing criminal enterprise. The Canadian government backed out of the bi-lateral deal and told the US to keep its agents out of Canada. But that didn't stop the DEA. The agency ignored Canada's wishes and sent its undercover operatives back into Canada with more cocaine, busted Licht, and then demanded that Canada extradite him to the US. "The DEA's illegal conduct is extremely offensive because of the violation of Canadian sovereignty without explanation or apology," said Justice Dillon in turning down the US request. "The conduct of a United States civilian police agent entering Canada without the knowledge or consent of Canadian authorities, in defiance of known Canadian requirements for legal conduct, with the express purpose to entice Canadians to the United States to commit criminal acts in that jurisdiction, and acting illegally to offer to sell cocaine in Canada, is shocking to the Canadian conscience. A United States police agent entered Canada without proper immigration status to carry out an illegal activity without the knowledge or consent of the RCMP and knowing that the RCMP had withdrawn consent to further involvement in the reverse-sting operation. This conduct is clearly contrary to Canada's national interests." Also contrary to Canada's national interests is what the DEA has done to Emery and his co-defendants. The man accused by the US government of being a wicked marijuana seed millionaire is now subjected to a US extradition order. His staff is working without pay, struggling to find people who will pledge their support and financial assistance to back the legal process of this now-bankrupt middle-aged man. Some kingpin. The DEA has become the lead agency for implementing harsh cannabis laws in states that have voted to legalize medical cannabis. Now, we see the DEA operating in Canada and dozens of other countries. Wherever there's a garden of illegal plants, there's a potential DEA, wondering if it can bust the garden. There's an ongoing worldwide DEA-UN program that seeks to hunt down and eliminate every plant that on the hit list: coca, cannabis, poppies, peyote, ephedra, and many other healing herbs are warred against as if they are murderers, bombers, rapers, and other criminals. The Emery bust, and the comments about Emery's "arrogance" by the US authorities smack of Karl Rove and cheap US spokesperson media gimmicks. The drug war includes use of extraordinary rendition, fungicides, herbicides, ecocides, genocides, tanks, infernos, narks, bullets, asset forfeiture, flamethrowers, napalm, MLAT's, and undercover agents to kill plants and arrest people who have run afoul of government plant regulations. The government says people use Emery seeds to conduct environmentally damaging outdoor grows, while ignoring the illegally clearcut and gutted former forest that the marijuana plants are planted in. Indeed, marijuana restores soil and the stalks of cut sinsemilla enrich the soil. The growing plant can provide shade and food for animals and birds. It can be made into food, fuel, fiber, medicine, sacrament, anointing oil, intoxicant... Emery faces life in prison or maybe even the death penalty, for helping people grow this plant? The government says Emery was the genesis of a deadly crop that kills youth after addicting them. He's a pot pied piper leading the kids into strong weed and bubblehash. He's Johnny Appleweed, wandering the Internet, spreading Haze and Northern Lights. US officials know marijuana has never killed anybody, yet they've focused most of their "anti-drug" efforts on pot people. Bombers loom, the world is torn by war, but the US government is on alert against, on a crusade against... Marc Emery? While ignoring the real killer drug (meth) that has fueled a virulent addiction epidemic that reaps lives. People are noticing the government's arrogant hypocrisy, and its excessive intrusion into private life more and more because of what happened to Emery and others who are guilty only of ignoring plant laws. Citizens held down by prohibition are restless. In Alabama, Leon Carmichael, who like Emery is charged with money laundering and drug offenses, won a case in federal court that allows him to continue to display on his website the photos of four informants and a DEA agent who helped bust him. "WANTED: Information on These Informants and Agent," the site says, and then asks people to give Carmichael's attorneys info about the agents so he can use the material to impeach the agents' testimony at trial. The site says that the site is "definitely not an attempt to harass or intimidate any informants or agents, but simply an attempt to seek information." Yet, federal prosecutors tried to squash the site, claiming it threatened witnesses and federal police. They tried to shut Carmichael up. But US District Court Judge Myron Thompson ruled in favor of Carmichael, saying that the constitution guaranteed Carmichael's right to free speech and to seek information about his accusers. Sean Bucci, a resident of Massachusetts, followed Carmichael's example by creating his www.whosarat.com website. This site is a search engine and member service allowing members to post the names, photos and identifying information of federal and local snitches and police. "Every month, nearly 100,000 Americans are arrested on drug charges," says Bucci, making it clear that his site is about information, not retribution. "There are over two million people in jail in this country because the government dedicates most of its resources to the drug war. Many defendants have no reliable way to get information about the agents that arrested them or the informants that all too often tell outright lies in an effort to get their own criminal charges or sentences reduced. Our site's extensive database will solve that problem for those who are having a hard time proving the officers or informants set to testify against them are not credible."