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Binky
10-04-2005, 02:31 PM
Marijuana refugee faces deportation


An odd twist is that Steven Tuck donated seeds
to start Canada's medical pot program


Ian Mulgrew
Vancouver Sun

Steven Tuck, one of a number of high-profile American medical marijuana refugees, is hoping an 11th-hour appeal to the Federal Court will halt his Immigration Canada-ordered return to the U.S.

The wiry, loquacious 38-year-old says he deserves protection from pot-production charges in California because he donated thousands of pot seeds to Health Canada's fledgling medical marijuana program when he entered the country half a decade ago.

Severe injuries during his military service left Tuck with chronic pain for which he takes a variety of medication that leaves him constantly nauseous. He smokes marijuana to relieve the nausea, much as AIDS or cancer treatments use the drug.

Tuck's case is important because he is one of hundreds -- perhaps thousands, according to some lawyers -- of U.S. citizens who have fled to Canada along what is known as the Underground Marijuana Railroad.

It's a hegira not unlike the exodus of the Vietnam-era draft-dodgers, triggered by harsh, mandatory U.S. federal prison sentences for pot offences.

But Tuck's situation is also unique.

Aside from his odd relationship with Ottawa, in the last year he also tangled with Eastern European drug dealers in wilderness confrontations that included drive-by shootings last summer on the rugged banks of Ashlu Creek, about an hour from Squamish.

A well-known activist with the B.C. Compassion Society, the city's medical pot dispensary, Tuck had his refugee claim denied last year and he was ordered out of the country.

He asked for a review, however, on the grounds that he faced cruel and unusual treatment at the hands of Uncle Sam because he faces pot-growing charges in California.

Citizenship and Immigration Canada concluded there is no such risk and told Tuck to report to the Canada Border Services Agency in Surrey Thursday to be surrendered to U.S. authorities.

"My need for medical cannabis is the central point in my seeking the protection of Canada -- I might not survive due process if I were deprived of cannabis while being held on bail awaiting trial," Tuck said. "I was advised by my attorney to flee for my life."

The department added that Tuck should be sent back because there is no expert evidence to support his medical claims: "Whether this pain and condition requires treatment with marijuana has not been established by the applicant, beyond his personal assertions."

It found his seed donation to Health Canada irrelevant.

"I offered voluminous medical records from the United States, but that was not acceptable," Tuck said.

I think it's a curious tale.

Here's a guy being told he must return to California for growing medical pot but whose seeds Ottawa was willing to accept, even though -- dare I say it -- they were one of the so-called fruits of his allegedly illicit labours.

"The government of Canada is complicit with me if anything," Tuck complained. "These seeds were accepted by Canada in order to start its medical cannabis production, but the government of Canada is now willing to have me die because I am denied access to the medicine they were willing to break international law to obtain."

Tuck spent the past few years prospecting at the head of Howe Sound for a small private mining firm.

Ironically, he discovered a large outdoor pot plantation on land covered by the mining lease.

But because of his history, when he reported it, the RCMP initially targeted him rather than the real culprits -- who embarked on a campaign of intimidation to oust the miners that included drive-by fusillades and extensive vandalism.

Aside from the constant harassment from the criminals, Tuck was arrested and jailed by the Squamish RCMP, who suspected he was behind the grow-op.

He says the Mounties threatened to take him to the border and hand him over to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and only the intervention of friends and his lawyer led to his release.

In August, the RCMP seized 1,300 plants and arrested two armed men unconnected to the mining company at the isolated, secluded pot plantation Tuck had identified.

Tuck's down to hoping the Federal Court gives him an ear.

http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/news/westcoastnews/story.html?id=83818532-373d-48a9-86d3-3d77ed7e329d

claude_zachary420
10-04-2005, 07:23 PM
U cannot deal with the american government using passive resistance. That never works on a country that only understands swift and blinding violence. ~An American

Marco Renda
10-04-2005, 10:14 PM
Is that why HEALTH CANADAS mj SUCKS because they are using TUCKS genetics! I have heard alot of stories about TUCK and his antics when he lived in California. A well respected caregiver has told me to stay as far away from TUCK as I possibly can.

Take Care and Peace
Marco