Judge orders Tobique First Nation couple not to participate in cannabis-related ventures - Action News
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New Brunswick

Judge orders Tobique First Nation couple not to participate in cannabis-related ventures

Gerald Bear and Tina Sappier-Bear of the Tobique First Nation have been ordered not to participate in any cannabis-related ventures while they serve their unsupervised probation.

Gerald Bear and Tina Sappier-Bear were charged after raid on Tribal ReLeaf dispensary 2 years ago

Gerald Bear, former manager of the a cannabis dispensary on Tobique First Nation, pleaded guilty to a trafficking charge after RCMP raided the dispensary and were blockaded by protesting community members. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

Gerald Bear and Tina Sappier-Bear of Tobique First Nation have been ordered not to participate in any cannabis-related ventures while they serve their unsupervised probation.

The husband and wife were sentenced Wednesday in Woodstock provincial court for possession of cannabis not exceeding three kilograms, an amended charge they pleaded guilty to after five trafficking charges against them were withdrawn.

They were charged after an RCMP raid at the Tribal ReLeaf dispensary on Tobique First Nation in 2017.

Tribal ReLeaf was owned in part by the band when the raid took place.

Tina Sappier-Bear received a conditional discharge on a charge of possession of cannabis. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

In September 2017, the RCMPserved notice of enforcement because Tribal ReLeaf was selling cannabis without Health Canada authorization.

While there, the officer saw several vials and jars filled with cannabis flowers.

He advisedTina Sappier-Bear and then-director of operations Gerald Bear they had 14 days to cease operations. But the dispensary's doors stayed open.

On Oct. 5, 2017, officers collectedall the cannabis and some electronics from the dispensary. Community members gathered around the dispensary, andsome broadcast the raid live on social media.

Community members then formed a blockade and stopped the officers from leaving for hours.

The officers were eventually able to leave, peacefully and with the cannabis.RCMP had found 5,000 grams of bud, 342 edibles, such as cookies and lollipops, and 180 grams of shatter, a concentrated form of cannabis extract.

Tribal ReLeaf is now called Tribal. Ithas been operating consistently since the raid. And since the Tobique dispensary opened, others have popped up on some other reserves, including Oromocto and St. Mary's First Nation.

Not a typical case

Judge Brian C. McLean spent more than 30 minutesexplaining his sentencing decision, sayingmultiple times that this was in no way a typical case in drug trafficking.

During a sentence hearing held in February, the court heard thecouple thought that they were legally sound in selling cannabis on Tobique First Nation.

The couple said they were employees of Tribal ReLeaf which was operated by Tobique First Nation. (Edwin Hunter/CBC)

Their lawyercited band approval documents, and said they were only employees of the dispensary at the time of the raid.

McLean told the courthe considered all of this before handing Tina Sappier-Bear a conditional discharge, with six months unsupervised probation.

Gerald Bear was given a suspended sentence, with 12 months unsupervised probation.

After serving the terms of probation, Sappier-Bear will not have a criminal record.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said Gerald Bear and Tina Sappier-Bear would not have criminal records after their probation. In fact, this only applies to Sappier-Bear.
    Sep 05, 2019 10:35 AM AT

With files from Shane Fowler