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(Vancouver) Marijuana cafe owner says cannabis laws should be done away with

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
September 1, 2004


VANCOUVER (CP) - A Vancouver cafe operator who offers marijuana on her menu says people need a crime-free method of getting the weed and she's going public to raise awareness on the issue.

"Every law to do with cannabis has to be taken off the books," said Carol Gwilt, owner of Da Kine Smoke and Beverage Shop on Vancouver's hip Commercial Drive. "There's nothing criminal about cannabis." Normally, Gwilt's customers can get a menu and select some pot before someone goes into the back to get the order.
But there was no pot on the premises Wednesday, Gwilt said. "I want to protect my assets," she said.

The store, which has been open for four months, is decorated in an Egyptian motif. Display cases contain multi-coloured glass pipes for smoking pot. Plant food sits on shelves opposite.
A plate of cookies is on the counter next to the till. Gwilt won't say if they contain marijuana or not.

"I'm just trying to be a business person," Gwilt said. "There's obviously a huge market.
"I don't consider what we're doing illegal. We want a lot of these stores. We want these across Canada." She said she gets her marijuana from the Canadian Sanctuary Society, a group formed by former B.C. Marijuana Party candidate Donald Briere to help people legally acquire marijuana for medical use.

Gwilt claims crime in the area has dropped since she opened. She said people needing medicinal marijuana should be able to get it in a non-criminal situation.And, she said, it will keep people away from pushers dealing in heroin or crack cocaine. That's something she knows about. She said her son died of a heroin overdose two years ago at age 24.

The Vancouver Police Department, which has raided other city marijuana cafes in the past, is watching Da Kine.
"This is a business that is on our radar," spokeswoman Const. Sarah Bloor said. "We're in discussion with the city and our hope is to have the (business) licence removed."

But city Coun. Jim Green said yanking Gwilt's business licence is pretty low on the city's list of priorities. "We've not had any complaints," he said. "I never heard of it (the cafe) until yesterday."
Green also noted there's a tolerance in Vancouver to these kinds of establishments.
"We're looked at as the enlightened part of Canada."

Customer Andy Kale thinks the police should worry about bigger drug problems than a marijuana cafe.
"This is a great safe inhalation site," he said. "I don't have to be bothered by crackheads."

Kale and Gwilt say the situation will also draw attention to the plight of B.C. Marijuana Party founder Marc Emery.
The activist was jailed last in August after being convicted of trafficking for passing a joint while speaking at a University of Saskatchewan political rally.

Across the street from Gwilt's store, Angela Vane runs The Spirit Within. She sells psychotropic drugs such as the vision-inducing ayahuasca or kava kava, which can produce a mild narcotic effect.
Vane agrees that street crime in the area has diminished since Da Kine opened.
Vane, who's been open for two years and gets her plant drugs from South America, wants other drugs legalized as well. "We're giving people what they need - mind medicine, body medicine," she said.
Vane expects Gwilt's store to be raided. She said two undercover police officers were in her store Tuesday night.

Gwilt, though, says she willing to discuss options with the police.
"I want to work this out," she said.

Vancouver is home to Canada's only government-sponsored safe injection site for intravenous drug users.

Signs demanding activist Emery's release cover the outside of B.C. Marijuana Party headquarters in downtown Vancouver.
Inside, the smell of pot wafts through the party's store. Piles of cut marijuana sit on desks. Next door at The New Amsterdam Cafe, about a dozen people are rolling joints.
Party spokesman Chris Bennett wouldn't be surprised if Da Kine gets raided by police. He said he hopes her large clientele stands by her when it happens. "They're definitely cracking down across the country," Bennett said, noting a cafe in Hamilton, Ont was recently raided.
Bennett said the police should not even be part of the equation.
"They're servants of public policy," he said. "They should do their job and leave policy to the public and the politicians."

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Law/Marijuana/2004/09/01/pf-612170.html
 
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I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
POT KEEPS CROPPING UP

POT KEEPS CROPPING UP

Sat, 11 Sep 2004
VANCOUVER -- A cafe that had been selling marijuana off its menu for about four months was doing a booming business before media attention and then a police raid shut it down briefly, police said yesterday. But even as police were releasing details of the raid the night before,(Thursday), Da Kine Smoke and Beverage Shop was doing a roaring trade yesterday morning.

Dozens of people filled the store, buying grams of pot over the counter. In the back room, gram bags were filled from football-sized bags of marijuana. A large box filled with marijuana cookies sat to one side.

During the raid, officers seized $63,000, another $1,700 US, nine kilograms of marijuana, some hashish and 300 cookies baked with hash or marijuana, Acting Deputy Chief Bob Rolls told a news conference.

A one 90-minute period during their surveillance, police saw 230 customers. They estimate the cafe was doing about $30,000 a day, Rolls said.

Seven staff and one customer were taken into custody Thursday night. There were 33 people in the cafe at the time it was raided.

"Charges have been recommended and are currently before Crown counsel," Rolls said.

Carol Gwilt, owner of the shop on Vancouver's hip Commercial Drive, was quoted widely last week as saying she was just trying to be a "business person" filling a "huge market."

She said she didn't consider what she was doing illegal. Gwilt was in jail as the store's till rang steadily yesterday.

A staffer named Michael - he wouldn't give his last name - said 7,000 people had signed up as members of the Canadian Sanctuary Society to allow them to buy pot at the store.

Outside the store yesterday, customers openly smoked pot while a police car sat up the street.

"When the SWAT team and the boys came in, they came in with their faces covered in balaclavas. They had automatic weapons and guns," said Don, another store employee.

He threatened lawsuits against the city

"They kidnapped our employees and forcibly confined them and held them against their will. They looted, stole and trashed our legitimate business," he said.

A customer outside sharing several joints with people called the police action "overkill." He handed around photos of police wearing balaclavas in the Thursday raid.

A police spokesman said last week the cafe was "on our radar," but she also said police had not received any complaints and had limited resources to deal with an issue no one at that time had mentioned as a problem.

Even Vancouver city councillors were nonplussed at hearing the news.

Coun. Jim Green noted there is a tolerance in Vancouver for these kinds of establishments.

When dozens of officers swooped down on the cafe Thursday night, it outraged hundreds of people in the Commercial Drive neighbourhood, who filled the street that was festively dressed to look like a scene from Brooklyn for a movie shoot.

Filming had to be shut down for the raid.

Many screamed at the officers to go home and defiantly smoked joints as police manning barricades videotaped the crowd.

Police received three CrimeStoppers complaints.

A Vancouver city licensing hearing had been scheduled for Sept. 15 but was put over to Oct. 6 after Da Kine hired a lawyer.

A panel of three councillors will decide what to do with the cafe's licence. It had been licensed to offer limited food service and sell books, gifts and clothing. http://www.mapinc.org/topics/kine+cafe
 
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I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
Da Kine

Da Kine

Special Report by Richard Cowan

After saying both publicly and privately that they did not have the resources to close Da Kine Smoke and Beverage, the Vancouver Police raided the cannabis shop...with a massive show of force.

A dozen or so narks with their guns drawn and wearing balaclava masks charged into Da Kine around six o’clock. They were backed-up on the street by dozens of uniformed police, who turned out to be needed for crowd control. I counted more than ten squad cars, five or so unmarked cars, two paddy wagons, four motor cycles, traffic wardens, and other city staffers.

In the process, they closed down a block of busy Commercial Drive for about four hours. Closing the street had the effect of shutting down a major part of the east side’s electric bus system at the evening rush hour when people are coming home from work. It also closed all of the other businesses on the long block, and delayed a major movie shoot, at enormous cost to the producers – and to Vancouver’s reputation as a good place to do location shoots.

These ferocious drug warriors succeeded in arresting Da Kine owner Carol Gwilt, and five other members of her staff. (None of the clients were arrested.) T’was a great victory. Yeah.

Things started going badly for the narks almost immediately. A very hostile crowd quickly gathered, jeering the police and openly smoking cannabis, even while the police videotaped them – and were taped and photographed in turn by the people.

The Vancouver Sun, whose inflammatory reporting probably helped egg the police into going over the top, reported that the crowd cheered and sang along as a store across the street started playing Bob Marley very loudly. (“I shot the sheriff” cannot be the sort of background music that narks enjoy.)

What is going on here?

The raid was a bit of surprise because the police had repeatedly said that they were going to leave it up to the City Council to decide, but the dramatic nature of the raid was really shocking in the Vancouver context. There is speculation that the raid was so overdone precisely to make cannabis prohibition look both stupid and futile. If that was not the plan, it still succeeded in doing just that.

But it did not succeed in closing Da Kine!

http://www.marijuananews.com/news.php3?sid=764
 

bartender187

Bakin in da Sun
Veteran
OMG.... a good friend was in vancouver, most likely at one of the few coffee shops in the city when that raid happen.

bartender187

I wonder if he heard about it...
 

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
Gonna give her a fair trial then hang her

Gonna give her a fair trial then hang her

WebPosted Sep 17 2004
VANCOUVER - New charges have been laid against the owner of the Da Kine Smoke and Beverage Shop, the Commercial Drive pot cafe recently raided by police.

Carol Gwilt was in court on Friday, facing a charge of possession for the purpose of trafficking after police pulled her over in a car on Thursday.

Police spokesperson Const. Sarah Bloor says officers found more than six kilograms of marijuana and more than $10,000 in cash in the vehicle.

"We hope that this definitely will dismantle their operation," says Bloor.

"We make it very clear that this is still an illegal drug trafficking, criminal enterprise that continues at the Da Kine cafe. It's no small compassion club."


September 20, 2004:
The owner of a cafe that had been selling marijuana on its menu will spend at least a few more days in jail after a judge said he won't decide until Wednesday whether to grant her bail.

Carol Gwilt was arrested for the second time last week and accused of breaching earlier bail conditions.

She did not speak at her bail hearing Monday, but her ex-husband attended the hearing and said his former wife feels strongly about the issue of medical marijuana.

"She has a lot to say for herself," said Rick Gwilt.

"Hopefully she'll get the chance to say it...I believe she's fighting for all the right reasons....She's the kind of person who stands up for other people."

Gwilt had been arrested earlier this month on charges of trafficking and possession of the proceeds of crime involving the sale of marijuana at the Da Kine Cafe.

When she was re-arrested, police also picked up and charged Michael Boudreau, a volunteer employee at Da Kine, with trafficking.

"I believe (the cafe) is a wonderful uplifting environment, and I believe it has benefited Vancouver and B.C," he said on the way out of the bail hearing Monday.

"We were benefiting society by bringing everything into one centralized location, in a clean and safe environment and educating our customers on what they were using in terms of cannabis."

Boudreau said now that the cafe isn't selling pot any longer, those customers have been forced to go back to the drug dealers on the streets.

He said the difference between selling pot in a store and buying it on the streets is education and said he and the other cafe employees are educators, not drug traffickers.

The cafe stopped selling marijuana last Friday.

A publication ban was placed on releasing any information connected to Gwilt's bail hearing.

Vancouver city hall will reviewing the cafe's operating licence next month.

Police raided the shop on Vancouver's funky Commercial Drive on Sept. 9 and Gwilt and seven employees were charged with possessing marijuana for the purpose of trafficking.

During the raid, police said they seized $63,000, another $1,700 US, nine kilograms of marijuana, some hashish and 300 cookies baked with hash or marijuana.

Police estimated the cafe was doing about $30,000 per day in business, a figure denied by store operators.

Terri Theodore
Canadian Press
VANCOUVER (CP) --
 
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I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
Vancouver pot cafe closes doors for good

Vancouver pot cafe closes doors for good

CTV.ca News Staff Oct 06/2004

The controversial Vancouver cafe that had been openly selling marijuana has surrendered its business licence and closed its doors for good.

The owners of Da Kine cafe were scheduled to appear at a hearing Wednesday, where three city councillors would hear arguments for and against keeping the cafe open. But the city of Vancouver says the operators have surrendered the licence and closed the premises.

It's expected the scheduled hearing will be cancelled.

Gwilt's lawyer Jason Gratl said his client surrendered her business licence "with great sadness and regret,'' adding that Da Kine "was a project she believed in.''

The Da Kine cafe garnered national attention last month when it was raided by police, following media reports highlighting the pot sales.

Owner carol Gwilt and seven other employees were charged after police seized $63,000, another $1,700 US, nine kilograms of marijuana, some hashish and 300 cookies baked with hash or marijuana.

Gwilt was released on bail with a promise to the court she would meet certain conditions, including staying away from marijuana.

A week later police stopped Gwilt's vehicle and arrested her again on allegations of marijuana possession and breaching her bail conditions.

http://vancouver.cbc.ca/regional/servlet/View?filename=bc_dakine20041006
 
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BuzzBob

aka Buzz'dBob
Veteran
icon9.gif
-- 'tis a sad day...
 

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
Source: Globe and Mail, Canada - Sep 16, 2006
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060916.BCGWILT16/TPStory/National

Owner of marijuana café sent to jail
Woman sentenced to 17-month term for drug trafficking


VANCOUVER --
With the sun streaming through the atrium windows of the B.C. Supreme Court building in downtown Vancouver, Carol Gwilt embraced a half-dozen supporters yesterday before walking inside to be sentenced for trafficking in marijuana.

A little over an hour later, in a windowless courtroom, the former owner of the Da Kine café was prevented by a court sheriff from even shaking the hand of a friend as she was led from the prisoner's box to be transported to jail to serve a 17-month sentence.

Madam Justice Catherine Wedge imposed the sentence after she accepted a joint submission from the Crown and the defence. Ms. Gwilt has 15 months remaining in her sentence as a result of credit for time served in 2004 before she was granted bail.

Ms. Gwilt, 39, was also required to forfeit $60,000 that was seized in a Sept. 9, 2004, police raid of the east Vancouver café and another $11,000 found during her second arrest a week later. The café was closed after the raid.
 
canada power is conservative now. things are going to change. too bad. i saw it after their last election. its still better than the states
 

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