Prince Of Pot Prosecutor John McKay Calls For Marijuana Legalization

Posted: 04/18/2012 3:01 pm Updated: 04/20/2012 10:58 am

VANCOUVER - As a former high-profile U.S. federal prosecutor, John McKay stands behind actions that had Canada's "Prince of Pot" arrested, indicted and ultimately sentenced to five years in an American prison.

But he does agree with Marc Emery on one point: marijuana should be legal.

McKay sat side-by-side with the cannabis activist's wife, Jodie Emery, on Wednesday as he joined the growing call from British Columbia to end pot prohibition in favour of the drug's regulation and taxation.

"We do share, I think, a belief that the underlying policies are wrong," he told a public forum in Vancouver on throwing support to a coalition spearheading a public education campaign that's been growing steady momentum.

Emery's decision to sell marijuana seeds by mail to U.S. customers, including minors, was a "tremendous mistake," McKay said, and it has barred the man from gaining the platform he needs to make change.

McKay was Washington state's chief law enforcer for five years, and that's where he fully witnessed how current policy fuels gang violence through the cross-border drug trade, he said. He now teaches law at a Seattle university.

"As a person who is knowledgeable of the facts underlying our failure in marijuana prohibition, I am free now to speak out."

Since October, four former B.C. attorneys general, several Vancouver mayors and a host of police and health officers, academics and the Brazil-based Global Commission on Drug Policy have challenged provincial and federal governments to reform Canadian laws.

Jodie Emery, an advocate herself who has spoken on her husband's behalf since he went to prison in 2010, said she welcomed McKay's support.

"I don't believe my husband should be in prison, I still miss him terribly. But I understand that this law, the prohibition of marijuana, forces police to continue to arrest people and put them in prison," she said.

"When we get people who are on the frontlines, who saw the damage done, admit the policy needs to be changed, I think that's always a wonderful thing."

Speaking two days before the annual 4-20 celebration — a counterculture holiday where marijuana users gather to smoke weed — McKay said Canada's policy is out of step internationally.

He said that's harming citizens on both sides of the border.

Ballot initiatives in Washington and Colorado will ask voters in November if they agree to legalize the possession of one ounce or less of marijuana for adult use.

Tax proceeds could reach half-a-billion dollars in one state on its own. The money would be earmarked for education, treatment and to ensure it stays out of the hands of minors, McKay said.

"It would be regulated at every point of its production, its sale, its taxation, its content and the use of its proceeds," said McKay, who is co-sponsoring Initiative 502 in Washington.

Medical marijuana is legally permitted in 16 states and the District of Columbia, while 14 states are moving to decriminalize pot possession in some form.

He rejected arguments that the U.S. government would take punitive action against Canada for reforming its laws.

"There's been talk that somehow there would be retaliation by the United States if there were regulation and taxation scheme here. Hardly," he said. "The same debate, perhaps further along, is occurring south of the border."

A spokeswoman for Conservative Justice Minister Rob Nicholson has repeatedly said the federal government has no intention to decriminalize or legalize marijuana. B.C. Premier Christy Clark has previously said she is deferring to the feds.

Geoff Plant, who was B.C. attorney general from 2001 to 2005, said he believes the campaign is building momentum starting in city neighbourhoods that will eventually reach Ottawa.

He doesn't expect pot to be legalized under the current Conservative regime.

"But I think there's a realistic chance it could be within the term of office of the next prime minister of Canada," he said. "That's a target that I think has an aura of reality about it that I think we should commit to."

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VANCOUVER - As a former high-profile U.S. federal prosecutor, John McKay stands behind actions that had Canada's "Prince of Pot" arrested, indicted and ultimately sentenced to five years in an America...
VANCOUVER - As a former high-profile U.S. federal prosecutor, John McKay stands behind actions that had Canada's "Prince of Pot" arrested, indicted and ultimately sentenced to five years in an America...
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04:05 PM on 04/19/2012
Been talking about making weed legal since the mid 1970s. All those Liberal governments and no results and now its Harpers fault
01:55 PM on 04/19/2012
Here go learn something. http://youtu.be/6jO_ncXj7RE

In the U.S. alone:
every year 400,000 people die from cigarettes, and they're legal.
every year 50,000 people die from alcohol, and it's legal.
every year 10,000 people die from FDA approved prescription drugs.
every year 1000-3000 people die from caffeine related symptoms, and it's perfectly legal FOR ALL AGES?

Yet, NOBODY, I repeat NOBODY has EVER died from Marijuana use in the history of the WORLD. You can't find any cases, ANYWHERE.

...b...but... it's a g..gateway drug... right? if you do it, then you're going to move on to heroin, and crack and meth right?
No actually. Less than 1 in 100 marijuana users use cocaine, and even less use meth or heroin. Just because hard drug users used Marijuana before they used their hard drugs doesn't mean it's the cause of their hard drug use. And I'D BET that before the hard drug users tried marijuana, they tried alcohol first, which would make alcohol the gateway drug wouldn't it? No wait, they actually tried water first. Since 100% of drug addicts use water, water must be the biggest gateway drug of all!

(see how this logic doesn't make sense?)

http://www.alternet.org/story/153870?page=entire
11:27 AM on 04/19/2012
The Conservative Government doesn't represent the majority of Canadians, they only represent their outdated ideology and closed minds. The only people who are terrified of Marijuana are uneducated about the facts, or misinformed by our government. Doctors, lawyers and police officers agree it should be decriminalized, as do the majority of law-abiding Canadians AND Americans. But the Conservative agenda wins again over the rights and freedoms of a nation of people.
05:00 AM on 04/19/2012
Well they are always looking for new ways to tax us. I thought they were pushing for us to quit smoking? LMAO
01:38 AM on 04/19/2012
Okay I admit it... Even though I have been profiting from the illegality of marijuana for many many years... I have to tell you all what apparently many of you still have yet to have figured out...

I have been pushing to keep marijuana illegal by any means possible (writing in to the gov't, writing in to comment blogs, etc.) for many years now... For myself, as well many of my underground business partners, the continued prohibition has been the biggest windfall imaginable... That being said, I honestly believe that the system is so entrenched, I can literally tell you that I continue to profit from illegal marijuana (with the only thing to stop me being the legalization of it), but it simply will not happen... what a joke... the gov'ts of today have their heads further up their butts then that of those in-charge during the alcohol prohibition era. After all, do we not realize that it was the gangsters that promoted alcohol to remain illegal at that time also ... come on, we do know this don't we???

Do we really have to make up such silly stories to try and get such simplistic points across??? Yes it has come to sillyness...
12:42 AM on 04/19/2012
It's about time this started to get a bit more publicity. Prohibition is a huge infringement on our personal freedoms, and it generates crime and violence. All because the government is too proud to admit they were wrong, and because then they wouldn't be able to justify their shiny new prisons, and the ever growing police state. It's sickening that they can just shrug off the lives destroyed by this because it's profitable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Anthony Hohol
Revealing the Multiplicity of Perspevtive
11:35 PM on 04/18/2012
Laws against the use and distribution of pot benefit no one except organized crime (discounting your friendly neighborhood chronic dealer selling quarters and eights of course from his sofa while watching TV) Anyone who wants to smoke pot smokes it. It's that simple. It is a consumer driven product no different than anything from cigarettes to fast food. Prohibition simply does not work and has done far more damage and cost far more money than one could ever realize. Enough. Let it God. A lot of People like to get stoned. Get over it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JackHoffman
Pundit
10:02 PM on 04/18/2012
Freedom? What freedom? Grow a sac you effing politicians and get off our backs.
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zeotrope
per ardua
01:10 PM on 04/19/2012
You notice how many politicians are for decriminalization after they are out of office. It would be nice to see them do something while in power but they do seem to lack intestinal fortitude. They definitely don't understand the concept of "freedom".
10:00 PM on 04/18/2012
Re: ""As a person who is knowledgeable of the facts underlying our failure in marijuana prohibition, I am free now to speak out."

Yeah, but he was "knowledgeable of the fact" about marijuana back when he prosecuted Emery and sent him to jail. I call this "now" business rank hypocrisy and not a wee bit opportunistic. He should have spoken out back THEN.

Stop ruining people's lives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gravescanada
07:59 AM on 04/19/2012
He was a Prosecutor, doing his job...enforcing laws that were on the books.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PiperSniper
08:50 AM on 04/19/2012
Still, he could have said the laws were wonky regardless of having to enforce them.
09:10 AM on 04/19/2012
Which, as I said, ruin people's lives. The pot laws are irrational, harmful and largely unenforcable. It's only selective cases that are pursued with the vigour that sent Emery to a US prison. For selling SEEDS, no less!

A blot on justice if ever there were one.
09:47 PM on 04/18/2012
Oh yeah, Harper your toast!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PiperSniper
08:50 AM on 04/19/2012
What? Do you serve him breakfast?
09:44 PM on 04/18/2012
Government has no business in our minds or how we decide to alter them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
09:43 PM on 04/18/2012
Funny how that works. While you are collecting a paycheck, destroying peoples lives doesn't seem to matter. Once you are free from that, common sense kicks in. Weird, huh? Pot isn't the problem, money is.
10:01 PM on 04/18/2012
I miss my "Perceptive" badges. Faved instead.
11:17 PM on 04/18/2012
how does pot destroy peoples lives?
compro01
Conservatism : Policy-based evidence making
11:55 PM on 04/18/2012
He was saying that being arrested and tossed in prison for having some pot will destroy lives nicely, not that pot itself does.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
01:29 AM on 04/19/2012
What I am saying is, that in pursuit of the almighty dollar, people will do things that go against the interests of themselves and society. That money is the root of the problem, in fact just about every problem I can think of, not pot itself. Or any drug for that matter.
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BCLobbyist
www.mgcltd.ca
09:25 PM on 04/18/2012
Marijuana prohibition primarily benefits organised crime. If marijuana had been made legal in the 80s crystal meth, crack cocaine and pharma drug abuse would likely be no where near as rampant as it is now (especially in the the U.S.of A) Canadian politicians need to find the courage to stand up to US intimidation and have a made in Canada drug policy that actually reflects Canadian voters' concerns and priorities.
09:12 PM on 04/18/2012
This is an incredible account of what would have been considered fantasy a few years ago - warriors on the front line of the war on drugs admitting defeat (or more appropriately, that we've been engaged in a misguided enterprise from the beginning).

And at this very juncture, we have a fundamentalist Christian Prime Minister who, out of a deeply-held moral position, can't, and won't, change his approach to marijuana. If the war has been a failure so far, as he admitted in Chile, then what he left unsaid is that we will likely double down on our approach. We've now got the minimum-sentence provisions in new legislation, and those new jails should be filled in no time.

Great international leadership, Canada, right along with announcement of lessened environmental regulations.

And this at a time when every other country is "seeing the light" and making progress to a more enlightened policy.

Only three and a half more years....
10:18 PM on 04/18/2012
well said
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mad Hatter 1
08:37 PM on 04/18/2012
The times are...A'CHANGING'