Anti-sealing advocate Paul Watson used a brimming bag of change to bail out two members of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society on Monday, freeing the arrested activists on a $10,000 bond paid partly in toonies.
Watson posted the bail at the Cape Breton courthouse Monday afternoon, freeing the chief officer and captain of the Farley Mowat, who are accused of steering the ship too close to the seal hunt.
They were arrested on Saturday in the Gulf of St. Lawrence after Mounties armed with submachine-guns stormed the vessel, which was also seized.
Watson says the Canadian government committed an act of piracy, saying Mounties boarded the Mowat in international waters.
He said he chose a bag of toonies for part of the payment because that is how pirates prefer to be paid, and said the bond money came from author Farley Mowat himself.
"We look at this as ransom and we're paying it in dubloons," he said.
The RCMP maintains the boarding was a routine operation taken against a ship that was in violation of the law and that the vessel was in Canadian waters when it was boarded.
They have accused the Mowat of coming within 900 metres of the hunt, an offence under federal regulations unless an observer's permit has been issued.
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