Posts Tagged ‘oaksterdam’
Probably everybody who is reading this blog has seen the Kony 2012 video that went viral, amassing 28 million hits in its first day. When we say “viral” we think of something spreading instantaneously over a wide swath of demographics. However, some things spread more like cancers. They dont necessarily infect a large swath of people but when they do they have profound effects. It is especially important for our government to consider this spread when it trys to engineer social behavior. A good example is when the government started a program forcing welfare fathers to work, inadvertantly promoting single parent families. See you babe! Government programs have unanticipated impacts all the time.
I have mentioned that when Dennis Peron’s dispensary, the first in the world, was shut down in San Francisco more dispensaries exponentially metastasized in its place. so what is going to happen with Richard Lee’s dispensary now that it has been shut down (although the school has vowed to remain open)?
There are a few early indications. Oakland has approved operating permits for four new dispensaries and more underground Measure Z Clubs are operating all over the city. Now rather than a center hub it is more of an independent network system. You can close down one source or several sources but they cant close the network, it is too large. The risk is relatively low, with so many dispensaries the chance of any single dispensary being harassed is relatively low.
If I were writing a press release for the Cannabis Medical Dispensary Association which cannot be reached because it does not exist it would go something like this:
The unfair and unwarranted destruction of the Blue Sky Dispensary by the federal government was despicable, however, it remains ineffectual not one medical marijuana patient is without medicine because of this raid. The government faces a losing choice whether or not it prosecutes Lee. By taking Lee out the government created a big hole in the forest, its fertile soil and its well seeded. So we would like to congratulate the Federal Government for helping out industry grow.
But, getting back to that metastasis, Lee has trained hundreds of people as employees or interns who will now be able to go out and use their entrepreneurial training to open up their own cannabusinesses.
So to all my readers, go forth and prosper. Happy 420!
On this Easter I sit here thinking about the parable of Jesus’ dying and then rising from the dead to save his people. It is a common story woven throughout the fabric of our religions and beliefs across the world. Regardless of your religion or thoughts on Easter, the story is a valuable one. Jesus was persecuted for his beliefs to the point they actually killed him, but the inherent good of the universe could not be stopped; and three days later Jesus arose from the dead. Why is this an important story? Because it is meant to teach us that no matter how much the evils of this world can seem to overtake us and bring down our spirits that our existence and purpose transcend the secular world, and that the spirit and powers of the universe trump those who would use their powers to try and overcome what is good and right in the world.
Now I am not saying Richard is comparable to Jesus in any way, of course. That would be silly. But the story of the crucifixion and the rising from the dead is an important story for our community to understand in this current cannabis climate; and what happened to Richard Lee this week parallels the injustices that Jesus faced in his day and age. The reason Jesus was arrested was that chief priests and pharisees saw him as a threat to their self-proclaimed authority. That is right. Jesus and I are both convicted felons, so that helps me to feel better. But can you see how Jesus, like Richard and thousands of other people being persecuted for cannabis, was convicted and tried because his thoughts and sermons threatened the core power structure of the time. Richard also has posed a threat to the current power structure by succeeding in changing the dialogue and showing the world that not only is cannabis safe, enjoyable and helpful, but it is also a positive benefit for our society.
Cannabis itself poses a huge threat to the power structure of this country and world because it opens people’s minds up and gives them the ability to think more clearly for themselves. Prohibition of cannabis is one of the biggest lies that our society has ever told, and we have ruined millions of lives as a result of these deceptions. Richard’s work has made it much harder for these oppressors to carry on with their lies and their profitable drug war. Richard’s Oaksterdam University has trained over 4,000 people to understand, love, and respect cannabis. Those 4,000 folks are taking their knowledge and passing that on to others, and thus a wildfire has been created. It has been so awesome to watch. I remember when Rich came up with the genius of Oaksterdam U, in a small room on 15th St. It was more of a publicity stunt that was meant to show the world that the cannabis industry was legit; but what was born was one of the greatest ideas that cannabis reform has ever known. Oaksterdam has brought cannabis WAY out of the closet and into the living rooms of middle America. Which is why when armed gunmen stormed the OU castle the other day over a hundred of this industry’s brightest and best came out to defend her honor. We did not have militarized forces, but we had our voice and our presence. At the end of the day, while the thugs made off with plants and evidence, we came away the victors- and we have Richard Lee to thank for that.
How did we win you might say? Read the paper. Watch the news. Google Oaksterdam right now. Almost EVERY story is slanted in the favor of the cannabis community and seems to question the validity of our Nation’s continued failed war on cannabis. Because Richard pioneered so many aspects of this industry, he is a difficult target for them to understand. He is more than a weedhead. He is more than a patient. He is more than an activist. He is more than a businessman. He is more than a leader. He is more than your run-of-the-mill weedlebrity. He is a fucking cannabis icon. Richard Lee is a real life cannabis hero and I am glad to know him.
What I love about Richard Lee is that regardless of the topic or the strength of the opposition, he ALWAYS tells the fucking truth. That is rare in this day and age. Most people can blow in the wind for one reason or another; but not Richard. He will not bullshit you and he will not sugar coat things. He understands the value of an honest dialogue and is not afraid to have the tough conversations. I have a hell of a lot of respect for the way Richard goes about his business. There is a cool and calming confidence that I have always admired from afar and have worked to emulate. Richard has always been a powerhouse in cannabis reform, and there are many times when we have not seen eye-to-eye on things, but I have always respected his opinion because I knew it was well-thought and researched. I knew that Richard had done his homework. Regardless of where we personally sit regarding a particular issue you can be guaranteed Richard knows his shit.
His vision and implementation has been astonishing to watch in the place we all now know as Oaksterdam. Richard Lee is the Mayor of Oaksterdam, whether he wants the job or not. No one has done more to revitalize an entire section of a major city than Rich, his crew, and the other many soldiers who put their asses on the line and made this part of Oakland more legendary than Amsterdam. His effort to legalize cannabis through Prop. 19 was a paradigm shift in the way our community views cannabis. People know that it is just a matter of time before we cross that threshold the victors and the drug war criminals are held responsible for their actions.
So maybe we should dub what happened this week GOOD MONDAY, and we will also have a divine resurrection on whatever the cannabis equivalent of three days is (stoner time). While our community is down and a little out right now, we are bigger than the evils of this government that clings to power in an effort to control a large portion of our society that enjoys a safe, effective and helpful plant. The first Monday of April every year I will now observe GOOD MONDAY, the day the evil bastards crossed the line so far that they changed the world and helped us to win the battle for cannabis freedom. We are in the final days of this prohibition and they know it. We know it. The whole fucking world knows it. The toothpaste is out of the tube and it will be nearly impossible to put back. You can thank Richard Lee for getting a hell of a lot of the toothpaste out of that tube.
The bastards tried to crucify cannabis users on GOOD MONDAY. We rose up to meet them and let the world know that they cannot kick in the door of one of our most cherished institutions without a fight, and without having to answer for their actions. They have lost the battle. I would say 95% of the stories of the Oaksterdam raid have called bullshit on the continued waste of resources by the Feds and have praised OU’s work.
The school shooting and murder of 7 innocent people in Oakland that day at a different college juxtaposed the injustice for the world to see. Why are we chasing weedheads around and not focusing on real issues, like illegal guns? The world has just about had it with the dumb bullshit and the wasteful policies that are cannabis prohibition. The raid of Richard Lee and his historic institution is a huge black eye of the Federal policy of interfering with regulated medical cannabis. It shows that our priorities in this country are all fucked up. While hundreds of heavily armed federal zealots performed a military style raid on a man and a school that have hurt no one and have helped so many, so many died at the hands of gun violence that day across town, and the world watched in disgust. Once again, Richard Lee was leading the charge and educating the world on why cannabis prohibition is not working.
So MANY THANKS to Richard Lee and I look forward to fighting in the trenches with him until we end this fucking prohibition once and for all.
Here is a message and call to action from Richard himself:
Dear Friend,On Monday, April 2, my school — Oaksterdam University in Oakland — was raided by the DEA, IRS, and US Marshals. Oaksterdam provides training to the medical cannabis industry, and is fully compliant with state and local law.President Obama promised at the beginning of his administration to respect state medical marijuana laws. He has broken this promise time and time again — and the consequences have been devastating.This was a senseless act of intimidation. But I’ve been an activist far too long to become intimidated — and with the majority of Americans and common sense on our side, I know this is a fight we can win.With our government trillions in debt, why is our government using taxpayer dollars to come after me, Oaksterdam, and the thousands of patients who need medical marijuana just to get through the day?Tell President Obama and the DEA: Enough is enough. Keep your campaign promise, and stop the raids on the medical cannabis industry!Thanks for your support,
Richard Lee
Courtesy of Oakland North
After a federal raid in early April on Oaksterdam University, an education center located in downtown Oakland that trains students to work in the marijuana industry, founder Richard Lee has decided to step down as head of the institution. His successor will be former executive chancellor Dale Sky Jones, which will officially be announced on Wednesday morning.
“It is safe to say that I will be taking over the lead position at Oaksterdam University to ensure that the institution will go on,” Jones told Oakland North in an interview.
Oaksterdam University, the first cannabis college in the United States, was founded in 2007. Ever since visiting the cannabis college in Amsterdam, Lee had wanted to open a trade school for the cannabis industry in the US. Medical marijuana has been legal in California since the 1996 passage of Proposition 215, although it remains illegal under federal law. Lee, who has been working to end cannabis prohibition for over 20 years now, put his idea into practice by creating a school with a curriculum that focuses on the entire cannabis trade, offering classes such as Legal Issues, Politics, Cooking, Concentrates, and Horticulture.
“I started the university to promote the cannabis industry and to create jobs in this industry that pay taxes,” said Lee. “The other reason was to teach people who want to get involved in the cannabis industry and politics but did not know anything about it.” In 2008, a satellite school was launched in Los Angles and classes were also held in Michigan in May, 2009. (Both locations are now closed due to financial shortfalls.)
Lee, who moved to Oakland in 1997, played a huge part in passing Oakland’s Measure Z, making private sales, cultivation, and possession of cannabis local law enforcement’s lowest priority. He was also a supporter of Proposition 19, a failed 2010 ballot initiative to control, tax, and regulate recreational marijuana use in California. Even though Proposition 19 did not pass, Lee considers the effort, which he helped finance, a success. “It was successful in moving the legalization debate forward,” he said. “One of our main goals was to get people to talk about this issue. And it just was on the agenda with the presidents down in South America. Columbia and Guatemala have come out for legalization of cannabis now.”
Read the rest of the interview with Lee and Jones by Anne-Sophie Braendlin at Oakland North.
You can read Oakland North’s complete coverage of marijuana-related issues in Oakland here.
Connect with Oakland North on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter.
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Medical marijuana advocates on Tuesday vowed to reopen a San Francisco-area college devoted to cannabis cultivation and known as the “Princeton of Pot” a day after federal agents shut down the school in a raid.
Hundreds of protesters rallied in front of San Francisco’s City Hall, some on crutches and in wheelchairs and smoking hand-rolled joints. The demonstrators carried signs that said, “Cannabis is medicine; let states regulate” and chanting “Feds off my meds.”
Monday’s raid on Oaksterdam University, which offers courses on growing and dispensing of marijuana, turned the Oakland-based school into the latest flashpoint between federal law enforcement and medical cannabis advocates in states where pot has been decriminalized for medicinal purposes.
Federal authorities also searched the home of veteranmedical marijuana activist and Oaksterdam founder Richard Lee, as well as a nearby medical marijuana dispensary he runs.
Lee, confined to a wheelchair by a spinal injury, was a leading proponent behind a failed California ballot initiative in 2010 that would have legalized possession and cultivation of small amounts of marijuana in the state for recreational use.
“In a wheelchair, he’s a threat,” Wayne Justmann, an adviser for medical pot supply shops, said facetiously as he spoke to Reuters at the rally. “He’s a guy who’s helped so many people.”
Rather than targeting Lee, Justmann added, “Go after that guy who killed seven and injured three.” He was referring to the former student of a private, Christian college who killed seven people and wounded three others in a shooting rampage on Monday.
Lee himself said he worried that he might be prosecuted.
“They can indict me any day,” he said, recounting how he was awakened by federal agents armed with assault rifles appearing at his Oakland apartment with a search warrant. “They can arrest me any day.” Agents briefly detained but did not arrest Lee.
The school was closed after agents searched it, but it will reopen Wednesday, Lee’s lawyer, Laurence Jeffrey Lichter said.
Although marijuana remains classified as an illegal narcotic under federal law, 16 states and the District of Columbia have enacted some sort of legalized medical-cannabis statutes, according to the Drug Policy Alliance.
In those states, including California, the U.S. government has sought in recent months to shut down storefront dispensaries and greenhouses deemed by federal investigators to be drug-trafficking fronts, as well as those that are located close to schools and parks.
The Obama administration has said it would not single out individual patients who possess or grow their own marijuana in states with medical pot statutes. But federal prosecutors have warned they will continue to go after operations that support for-profit, illegal drug dealing under the guise of medical pot.
Federal action has led to dozens of medical marijuana dispensaries being shut down in California, but so far no one has been charged with criminal activity in connection with the crackdown, Lichter said.
by John Hoeffel, Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES – Richard Lee, whose bid to legalize marijuana in California brought him international attention, plans to give up ownership of his Oakland-based marijuana businesses after a federal raid this week seized many of their assets, including plants, bank accounts, records and computers.
“I’ve been doing this for a long time. Over 20 years. … I kind of feel like I’ve done my time,” Lee said Thursday. “It’s time for others to take over.”
Lee said he would remain an outspoken marijuana advocate. “I believe that cannabis prohibition is unjust and counterproductive,” he said. “What I’ve done is ethical, and I tried to use the resources that I had to do everything I could to change the laws.”
In some of his most extensive comments since the raid, Lee acknowledged that he was worried he could face major federal drug charges. It’s a risk he has lived with for many years, first as an underground pot grower and then as the leader of a serious legalization effort, which drew vigorous opposition from the federal government.
“I never wanted to be the quote unquote leader of the legalization movement,” he said in a telephone interview. “I saw myself as just one small soldier in a big war. But I look at it as a battlefield promotion.”
Lee’s Oaksterdam University, the first marijuana trade school in the nation, remains open, although its classes have been scaled back. Lee’s dispensary is also open. He plans to transfer the businesses to new operators. But he will shut down his marijuana nursery because his stock of mother plants, which he had nurtured for years, was confiscated.
The former rock-band roadie is one of the highest-profile marijuana activists in the nation, if not the world. His school drew wide-eyed media coverage after it opened in 2007, helping him promote his vision that marijuana could be a legitimate business.
A paraplegic who uses a wheelchair, Lee, 49, became the telegenic spokesman for ending pot prohibition after he spent more than $1.5 million trying to pass Proposition 19 to legalize the drug in 2010.
He is a well-known and highly regarded figure in Oakland, where city officials praise his businesses for resuscitating a shabby downtown area embarrassingly close to City Hall.
Lee was detained during Monday’s raid by the Internal Revenue Service and the Drug Enforcement Administration, but not arrested. His allies had feared he would be arrested in 2010, when he spoke frequently, candidly and enthusiastically about his pot ventures.
On Thursday, Lee suggested that, if he is charged, it could become another watershed event in the march toward legalization by turning more Americans against the drug war. ”In some ways, I see the possible prosecution of myself as another Proposition 19,” he said.
Federal penalties for growing marijuana increase with the number of plants. More than 60,000 can bring the death penalty, Lee noted. He said he did not know how many plants were seized. “We didn’t have 60,000 plants on site, but they can add up …,” he said.
Lee said his operations had been audited by the IRS, but he did not know what triggered the raid and seizures. “The company is bankrupt,” he said, suggesting that employees, who could lose jobs, and Oakland, which could lose revenues from taxes on marijuana, were also victims.
Until he knows whether he has to mount a legal defense, Lee said, he plans to work on a book and a television series about his career. “I think the nationwide coverage of the raid shows that there is a story here that a lot of people would like to see and like to hear about,” he said.
Lee also said he would consider helping legalization efforts in other states: “This may free me up to be able to go campaign.”
He noted that Oaksterdam University has trained about 15,000 marijuana experts and activists who are now at work around the country, suggesting that he has marshaled an army for the legalization fight. “We are getting very close to a tipping point on this issue,” he said.
On the April 5 episode of NORML SHOW LIVE we spoke live with Richard Lee, founder of Oaksterdam University. Click this link to hear the interview.
Richard told me he’s doing as well as can be expected when federal agents violate your home and business. He tells us the nature of the federal warrants that were served Monday in early morning raids.
Richard was “treated well” by the authorities – “they didn’t even break anything,” he told us – and he was not arrested, though that possibility still exists.
Most remarkably, Richard expressed an optimistic view that these actions will galvanize the public opinion even more in our favor for ending this tragic medical marijuana crackdown.
Richard reminded us that juries cannot be punished for their verdicts and urged everyone to work hard to get on jury duty so we can begin to dismantle the prosecution of prohibition.
In closing, he lamented the IRS tax charges being used against him and others in the cannabis industry. ”They can’t have it both ways,” he complained about the government’s claim he owes taxes on something that is illegal. ”No taxation without legalization!”
Join with Richard Lee and NORML in demanding an end to federal raids. Make President Obama keep his campaign pledge to not devote federal resources to prosecuting medical marijuana providers that are in compliance with state law.

Even in the midst of a sweeping crackdown, there were people who said “I will start to worry when they start raiding Oaksterdam.” Well, start to worry because yesterday, April 2nd, hundreds of heavily armed Federal agents stormed the home and businesses of Oaksterdam founder, Richard Lee. This raid has sent shockwaves throughout an already terrified medical cannabis industry, and has brought many to the fateful decision of “Fight or Flight.” I will take FIGHT over flight any day, so I responded to the scene shortly after 8 am for what was to be an eventful day full of passion and excitement. If the Feds wanted a fight, they had come to the right spot.
Throughout the morning bands of local activists descended on to Broadway and 16th Streets in “The O” to defend the honor of patients and providers,and to show support for those being held by the Feds. Richard was detained at his home, while some staff was held in Oaksterdam University. The dumbass Feds had taken over part of the adjacent parking lot and had created a police line around the front of the building that stretched down the side of the building. It did not seem like they were entirely prepared for the response they received as several relentless activist and dedicated supporters peppered agents with questioning accusations, insults, and shame. These assholes know deep in their heart that this is all bullshit, and most of them did not look thrilled to be assigned shit patrol to hang out on the street with assholes like myself blurting obscenities and accusing them of betraying their fellow citizens.
But let’s be frank….THESE ASSHOLES ARE WAR CRIMINALS. When a bunch of “just following orders” grown-ass men and women pack the van armed to the hilt to suppress States Rights and to interfere with the basic human right of a person to feel better, they take responsibility for their own karma and fate. There is no pussy-footing on this one. The assholes decided that it was in the best interest of their paycheck and their desire to feed their families to trample the rights of thousands of patents and to ruin the lives of other families. They are lousy rank and file foot soldiers in a failed war on our own citizens, and their very presence embodies everything that is wrong with this fucking world.
As I stood on the street full of potholes, crumbling infrastructure, and abandoned buildings in a City where gun violence is rampant and dangerous drug violence is the norm, not the exception, I watched our Government pour hundreds of thousands of dollars in valuable resources down the drain busting people for gardening and activism. It was enough to make me hang my head in my hands an truly question the morals and values of our society. Here I was face to face with the assholes who just 4 years ago stormed my own home and tossed my kids’ rooms in the name of the war on drugs. All of those emotions come right back in that moment. When I am that close to tyranny it is difficult for me to keep my emotions in check, so I may have said some shit that was difficult for the faint of heart to absorb; but they will hopefully never understand the emotion and anger that creates those feelings. I stood there in awe of the sheer firepower these assholes brought out to bust a weed school and a dispensary. It was WAY over the top and was a clear sign that we do indeed live in a police state, where at any moment hundreds of armed thugs can show up in force to decimate your human rights and enforce bad laws that make zero sense in the moral code of what is right.
Hours of angry screaming and yelling for justice on a street corner fell on deaf ears. The bullies did what they were going to do, and could care less about the will of the people or the fact that cannabis has hurt none and helped many. It was as if we were in some alternate universe where other citizens did not matter, as they only existed to continue to feed the ever-growing machine of Federal overreach into the civil liberties of us all. It was scary to know that, in all reality, at the end of the day, there was very little we could do to change the course of history. Not for a lack of trying though….it was a colorful day of activism and it was almost cathartic being able to scream in the face of the assholes who ruined my life just a few years back.
Many awesome activists came out in support of Oaksterdam and medical cannabis. Some losers just showed up to do their normal “Look at me. I am important” press interviews; but for the most part the tried and true masters of the universe were there to take action aginst these thugs and to let them know that the whole world was indeed watching.
At about 9:30 am OPD arrived on scene to tell me that I could not use my bullhorn without a permit, but shortly thereafter we were able to secure a permit and continue our amplified sound. Right about that same time about a dozen riot gear wearing OPD thugs showed up to help the Feds escape with their bounty from Oaksterdam. We did our best to make it as difficult as possible, with several activist putting their body in harm’s way to try and slow down the inevitable trampling of our rights and the stealing of Oaksterdam’s property.
Shortly after they ran away like bitches from the University we all caught word that several agents were still located inside of the dispensary of 17th Street. Dozens of activists trapped the agents inside, and I screamed on the bullhorn, “We have you surrounded, War Criminals! Come out with your hands up.” They did not. Instead they called for reinforcements and the assholes who ran away had to come back and rescue them. They decided to storm the castle, pushing and shoving anyone in their way to save their brothers in arms. Longtime cannabis warrior, Hozay decided to push back and was tackled, assaulted and arrested by the Feds. Danielle Schummaker was also arrested, as she defied orders from the oppressors.
Video of the may-lay…
At the end of the day I sat under the large Oak tree at Oakland City Hall with my head in my hands and my heart bleeding for justice. I shed a brief tear of emotion, as it was hard for me to believe that we were still here fighting this same battle again. I understood clearly that the world was not a safe or reasonable place to live any more. These armed thugs took away my ability to trust that things would someday be alright. It is clear now to me that the reality is that unless our society rises above the madness and ends this insane war on drugs, we may all be doomed to lives where chaos, deception and fear rule the day. That can make it hard to get up in the morning, but alas, I do. And like a good warrior, I put one foot in front of the motherfucking other and march towards cannabis freedom, regardless if I am outgunned or not. I would rather die knowing I stood for what was right and just, rather than live a life where I terrorized my own community in the name of following orders.
So while we lost the day and could not stop that long arm of the law from violating the rights of our community, I still believe that we WILL win the war in the long run.
In the words of the great Bill Hicks:
“George Bush says ‘we are losing the war on drugs’. Well you know what that implies? There’s a war going on, and people on drugs are winning it! Well what does that tell you about drugs? Some smart, creative motherfuckers on that side.”
Yes, Bill…smart, creative motherfuckers indeed…
Photos and story by Angela Bacca
APRIL 2, 2012- At 8am the DEA took Richard Lee, the iconic wheelchair-bound founder of Oaksterdam University and the man behind California’s failed 2010 legalization initiative into custody and raided two of the buildings affiliated with his college. It is also being rumored that Todd McCormick, the man behind the first THC Expo in Los Angeles, also had his Oakland home raided and is in custody.
By 8:15 Oakland Americans for Safe Access (ASA) sent out messages to thousands in the Bay Area through their local raid alert system encouraging them to come down to the main campus at 1600 Broadway to protest and show support.
Officers gave the press conflicting messages about whether would be a press conference and who would be making comment to the press. All public officers from the IRS and DEA are refusing to comment, saying the investigation is sealed. It is unclear if Oakland Police were notified about the raid, however it is clear that they were not participants.
“If the Federal Government has extra resources to spend in Oakland they should be using them to get illegal guns off our streets,” said Jason Overman the Communications Director for Councilwoman Rebecca Kaplan. Kaplan was a mayoral candidate in the last election cycle and an outspoken supporter of Oakland’s cannabis industry.
Supporters from the community and other cannabusinesses in Oakland quickly came to support Oaksterdam and show their disapproval.
“In ten years the public has become more educated but the federal government hasn’t,” said Jane Klein co-owner of Quick Trading Company, an Oakland-based company that has been publishing marijuana books since the 70s. in 2002, Klein’s Oakland home was raided in a similar show of force by the DEA and her husband, cannabis-writer Ed Rosenthal, was arrested and put on trial. He was famously sentenced to a day in jail with credit for time served.
by 9:30am the crowd had more than tripled. Attempts by officers to exit the adjacent parking lot were met with crowds of angry protestors surrounding them, their vehicles and preventing their exit. As the crowd slung insults at the officers, rumors spread throughout the crowd. It is being assumed that no employees of Oaksterdam University were in the building at the time of the raid and there is fear among alumni that student records may be a DEA target as well as cash and marijuana.
Local business owners were confused and amazed by the strong show of force on the local campus. “There are so many adverse factors, like crime, here in Oakland. We should not be disposing of good businesses [like Oaksterdam], we should be encouraging them,” said Rosanna, an employee at the pizza shop on the corner, which has a good relationship with the school and its students.
UPDATES: 3:00pm
Around 1pm, the crowd, which had grown to a few hundred, followed officers to 17th and Webster where they were raiding Coffee Shop Blue Sky, the former home of the Oaksterdam Dispensary. Blue Sky has been closed since the move but still under Oaksterdam ownership.
The crowd surrounded the door, which had been blocked off from the inside by sheets to prevent the public from seeing the action inside. Bella Eiko, a media promoter from Occupy Oakland was able to move her iPad up to a break in the sheets and display to the crowd the officers inside. The officers all wore medical masks covering their mouths and noses.
“Since you aren’t smoking in there you can take your masks off!” someone in the crowd yelled. A group of about 5 US Marshalls pushed their way into the crowd amid loud boos to get to the door. “Get the fuck out of Oakland!” another crowd member yelled. As the situation heated up, glass from the storefront exterior shattered. Many in the crowd believe the police smashed it from inside, as the glass fell out to the street on a few protestors.
“This system has got to die, HELLA HELLA OCCUPY!” many in the crowd chanted, a direct reference to the riots in the same part of Oakland in late 2011 surrounding the eviction of the Occupy Oakland camp.
The situation quickly devolved into chaos as officers gathered on street corners were swarmed by the mob. A van pulled up and parked in the intersection of Franklin and 17th and officers exited brandishing batons. Another officer moved through the crowd with a rifle strapped to his chest and his hand on the trigger.
Protestors followed DEA agents as they tried to flee the scene in cars. Four protestors were arrested and others were rumored to have been run over by DEA vehicles. Officers walked three blocks away with protestors behind them and jumped in the back of two pickup trucks to get away from the crowd.
Protestors then moved to City Hall, a block away, the site of the Oakland Occupation. An impromptu press conference was held by marijuana supporters in anticipation of the formal conference, to be held at 6pm at the Oakland Police Headquarters.
The conference, led by local cannabis union leader Dan Rush of the UFCW featured Steve D’Angelo of Harborside Health Center and Weed Wars fame, Dale Skye Jones, chancellor of Oaksterdam University and husband of activist Jeff Jones, California NORML Director Dale Gieringer, Mickey Martin, ASA Director Steph Sherer, Chris Conrad and Mikki Norris of the West Coast Leaf, Jane Klein, wife of Ed Rosenthal who was raided in a similar fashion exactly 10 years ago in Oakland and Rob Raich, ex-husband of famous patient Angel Raich.
“This is the new Jim Crow… revolutions do not happen in reverse, we will win,” said Dale Skye Jones, infant son Jackson Jones in tow.
“This attack was not just on Richard Lee, it was on us all,” said Steve D’Angelo “at the same time Federal agents were twiddling their thumbs here at Oaksterdam, five others lost their lives here at an Oakland University.” D’Angelo is referring to the shooting that happened simultaneous with the raid at Oikos University in Oakland, where seven are now confirmed dead.
“This whole thing is backwards, at Oaksterdam University we pride ourselves in teaching our students to follow the law,” said Chris Conrad, instructor at Oaksterdam and cannabis expert witness on criminal cases, “Nixon couldn’t stop us, Reagan couldn’t stop us, Bush Senior couldn’t stop us, Clinton couldn’t stop us, Bush Junior couldn’t stop us and I’ll be damned if–”
“Obama’s gonna stop us!” the crowd finished for him.
6:00pm
A press conference scheduled for 6pm at Oakland Police Headquarters was diverted to instead discuss the shootings at Oikos academy. Oakland Police say they have no plans to discuss the raid and that it did not involve their department.
San Francisco ASA had previously planned a protest tomorrow in front of San Francisco City Hall, protestors from today’s events in Oakland plan on joining the protest.
by Kevin Fagan, SFGate.com
Once again, Oakland is barreling into the pot frontier on its own.
Federal officials have forced the shutdown of more than 200 medical marijuana dispensaries throughout California since fall, and the state Supreme Court agreed last week to hear a case that could throw the industry into chaos – but is that discouraging the city of Oaksterdam?
Hardly.
Oakland officials are planning to issue permits for four new dispensaries in early February, doubling the number the city has already granted. The four existing cannabis shops and other pot businesses bring in about $1 million a year in fees and taxes to the deficit-hammered city, and officials are so eager for the extra cash promised by four new outlets they’re practically willing to nail in the shelves themselves.
“Look, there is always the potential for a challenge from the U.S. attorney, but at the same time we have to recognize that this kind of thing (pot sales) is happening illegally anyway – so why shouldn’t we manage it and make money from it that can help our city?” said City Councilman Ignacio De La Fuente, who chairs the council’s economic development committee.
“We can be naive and avoid the issue,” he said. “But the reality is that if we go ahead and issue the permits and make sure they (the dispensaries) are managed well, follow the rules and don’t become a nuisance to their neighbors, that is in the public’s interest.”
Risky time
Oakland’s likely expansion comes as federal prosecutors are leaning hard on pot operations to close.
The U.S. attorney in San Francisco, Melinda Haag, and her three counterparts in the state said in October that they would aggressively prosecute many marijuana dispensaries as profit-making criminal enterprises. Since then, three dispensaries in San Francisco, one in Marin County and 50 in the city of Sacramento have closed under pressure, along with about 150 others throughout California.
Last week, the San Francisco Department of Public Health took the extra step of suspending its dispensary-permit program, freezing the number of pot shops in town at 24 while city officials reassess legal issues surrounding dispensaries.
There are now about 1,000 dispensaries in the state, most of which have permits. Those without permits are usually small but still pay local taxes and fees.
Court ruling looms
Haag and her fellow prosecutors said they weren’t going after patients and caregivers operating in accordance with a California law allowing marijuana cultivation and sale for medical purposes, although the federal government considers even that use illegal. Her concern, she said, is pot stores that are going beyond medical use or operating near schools or playgrounds.
“People are using the cover of medical marijuana to make extraordinary amounts of money,” Haag said in October. “None is immune from action by the federal government.”
California tax authorities estimate annual retail sales of medical marijuana at more than $1 billion. The state collects about $100 million a year in taxes on those sales.
Adding to the pressure is the California Supreme Court’s decision Wednesday to review a Long Beach case in which an appeals court ruled that local regulations authorizing pot sales are pre-empted by federal law. The high court is expected to take up to a year to issue a decision, and if it upholds the lower court’s ruling, medical marijuana will be in legal limbo.
Haag’s office declined to comment on the pending dispensary expansion in Oakland. However, with the state’s first cannabis university and a widely recognized cannabis-oriented district, Oaksterdam, within its borders, the city is always guaranteed to draw scrutiny.
Oakland’s attitude: full steam ahead.
Decision next month
Cannabis Warrior Mickey Martin: So last week Oakland named the top ten finalists for their medical cannabis RFPA permitting process and the names at the top of the list read like they were scored according to campaign contributions, no doubt. The odd part is there are some very well connected people with a hell of a lot to lose near the top of the list, and it begs to wonder if any are having second thoughts after the onslaught of news regarding asset forfeiture and criminal charges relating to the recent crackdown of the medical cannabis industry. I have to wonder why some of these rich folks and ex-city officials would risk their fortunes and careers to sell weed in Oakland? Add to that the attention of the Weed Wars, and it would seem that there is a magnifying glass on Oakland cannabis these days, and all of these folks are bound to end up on front street as contenders to be the next Stevie-D in Oakland’s wild world of medical cannabis.
It is one thing to submit an application, and use your finances and connections to push your application through the City. It is an entirely different thing to open the doors and actually break Federal law and risk decades in prison to run a retail store that happens to sell cannabis. It is a sticky-wicket for sure and the jury is still out in Oakland, but we are just weeks away from the City choosing the final four. After that these folks will either have to shit or get off the pot. It is time to break Federal law and risk everything in a game we in the industry like to call “Who wants to not be a millionaire but risk everything for a non-profit salary?” I know my place in the world. I am an outlaw. I will work in the medical cannabis industry through thick and thin and will stand in the face of agression to fight for what I believe in. But even I, after armed gunmen stormed my castle and decimated my life with fear and threats of decades in prison, am weary about being out front on a major project in this day and age with all that is happening. So it begs to wonder if all of the folks who committed to opening a state of the art dispensary in Oakland, investing heavily in an unknown market, and risking their freedom and fortune, actually have the juice to pull it off. We shall see….
So here is a breakdown of the top ten applicants so far, their locations, and their board members as reported on the City of Oakland website:
1.) Oakland Community Collective- (2101 Broadway): The Board consists of some well-known faces in medical cannabis, most notably Salwa Ibrahim of Oaksterdam (General manager) who has helped Richard Lee to be a success in his ventures for many years. Also involved is Derek Peterson (CFO), the owner of GrowOp Technologies and former partner of Dhar Mann at WeGrow. Also listed on the Board is Latanya Linzie (Member Manager), and administrator at Oaksterdam University. It would seem that this group is well aware of the risks going in, but Derek Peterson recently had a child and there has to be some concern there. As with any of us who have kids in this industry, as people like Bryan Epis sit in prison today serving out decade long prison terms watching their kids grow up in a prison visiting room, it is a big commitment to make and a big risk to take by any measure. I can vouch firsthand that this is always a factor in weighing one’s decision to sell cannabis openly in this legal and political climate.
Their facility is an old bank building on Broadway directly across from the Paramount. It is a nice building, but is listed as outside of the preferred “allowable area” on the City’s map.
2.) G8 Medical Alliance, Inc.- (7o Hegenberger Loop): The most telling thing about this Board of Directors is not who IS on it, but who is not. The location is owned by the family of Dhar Mann called Mann Edge Properties. It is the same building where WeGrow once was and Dhar Mann has stated his desire to have an Oakland permit in the press repeatedly; but he is not listed as a Board Member on this project for some reason. Why? Is this a shadow Board of Directors? Are we supposed to believe that somehow this organization has no ties to self-proclaimed “potrepeneur” Dhar Mann, while renting his space and being headed by folks who have been directly involved with him for years? I am not falling for it, and believe the Oakland City Council should investigate this relationship further, as it is obvious they are being bamboozled.
The Board is supposedly headed by Toni Mims-Cochran, a local attorney who seems to work with eviction law a lot and has represented Dhar Mann in the past. Normally lawyers steer clear of sitting on Boards of dispensaries because any legal action can result in them losing their State Bar credentials. Also on the Board is former City Council member and attorney Leo Bazille, who was also University Chancelor for Dhar Mann’s now defunct wannabe Oaksterdam called Unicann. Also on the Board in Ekundayo Sowumni, listed as the President of Ackland Realty in Oakland, as well as Joel Elliott who I believe is with Priority Focus Security Group, LLC out of Oakland. Another Board member, which shows clearly that this is indeed a Dhar mann project, is Ariana Patino who is listed as a real estate agent for Mann Edge properties and is Dhar’s assistant. Another member listed is Aaron Goodwin, which is famed sports agent and local Oaklander Aaron Goodwin who was once shot by Oakland police, and is apparently best friends with Oakland City Councilperson Desley Brooks, who also is a “big fan” of Dhar Mann you might say. If you look up www.re-electbrooks.com the registrant is… who else? Dhar Mann. Was this disclosed as a campaign contribution?
The biq question is, “Why are all of these people willing to stand out front and catch the arrows for Dhar Mann?” It is a huge risk to take and it is obvious that the entire Board is just a front for the Dhar Mann WeGrow empire.
The building, as noted, is the old WeGrow location that did not make it. It is located just a stone’s throw from Lighthouse Community Charter school, which begs to wonder how they too expect to overcome the wrath of Melinda Haag and her strict no schools or playgrounds policy. Does the family owned MannEdge Properties know that they could possibly lose this building, like has recently happened in Fairfax and other parts of the state? Who knows? What is obvious is that something is rotten in Oakland if they cannot see through the shadow Board of this organization and their obvious links to Mann who is mysteriously missing from the application.
3.) Tidewater Patients Group- (4709 Tidewater Ave.): This is another one of those situations that begs to wonder what is actually going on. It is well-known that Terra Linda Development President, Carlos Plazola, is directly involved with this project, yet he is not listed as a Board member. Instead, a real estate agent named Bill Koziol is listed as the President of Tidewater Patients Group. Alexis Parle is listed as the managing member, who is unknown. Also listed as Board members are David Koziol (unconfirmed: google shows this name at Marin Monument a cemetery stone maker from San Rafael), Jay Dodson found as the owner of Mestizo Construction (who coincidentally is co-listed on several projects with Terra Linda Development), and Michael Stewart who conveniently sits on the Board of the Oakland Builder’s Alliance with Carlos Plazola). So what it seems we have here is another group seemingly unfamiliar with the medical cannabis industry looking to risk all of those bold credentials at a shot of fame and fortune in the outlaw world of medical marijuana. God Bless them…..If I had all of that to risk, chances are I would stick with what I know and not gamble on this unknown industry, but heck, what do I know anyway?
The facility is down on the industrial Tidewater Avenue, off of High Street and the 880. It is not a very desirable area for patients to travel to for their medicine and the building is listed as a warehouse facility. Good thing all those developers are on board to make it happen. It is just mysterious why there is a most definite connection to Mr. Plazola here, but no mention of him in the application.
4.) AMCD, Inc.- (578 W. Grand Avenue): This is a group that once had a permit in Oakland and blew it for illegally dispensing in Oakland and failing to meet building codes. Their permit was then awarded to Steve D’Angelo and Harborside and the rest is history. When they were open, vendors were outraged as they seemingly owed every grower in the movement and refused to pay them. People literally used to throw eggs at their place repeatedly. Also, when turning in his application, Executive Director Carl Anderson did not have his check with just minutes before the 4 pm deadline, so it is questionable how he was able to get to a bank and get a cashiers check issued and turned into the city on time. An exception had to have been made and I know more than one organization that will be appealing based on this should they be granted a permit.
As stated, the Executive Director is listed as Carl Anderson and his son Forrest is also listed on the Board. These folks already have a bad reputation in the industry, but have spent the years since being shut down greasing the wheels at City Hall and enlisting anyone and everyone on their Board to legitimize their efforts. Chairman of their Board is Minnie Watson, also on the original Board of the organization when it was shut down by the city. Their Vice President is Geri Murphy, a licensed psychologist who is risking her career to dispense medical cannabis. Also listed is George Iaconis, a person who has operated his own security company for 30 years and is now venturing into the industry (although he is not listed on their website). David King is listed as an information officer and from his experience with Cisco systems is managing the IT aspects of the operation. Rounding it out is Kisha Jackson, the California Director of the NAACP, who is entering the outlaw world of medical cannabis as the “Executive Spokesperson.” Who IS listed on their website as a Board Member and who I believe took their test, but is not mentioned on the application as such, is Hank Levy CPA, who has several clients in the industry.
Their location is the same location they previously operated out of at 578 West Grand. It is not in the preferred allowable zone of the city, likely because of its proximity to New Day Pre-School and Learning Center just a few blocks away. Word is that they were so sure of their getting this permit that they have already built out the entire facility. They are so sure that they will get it that they do not even have to bother to turn in their check on time. Must be nice.
5.) Agramed- (1820 Embacadero): Agramed’s sole listed Board member is Jeffrey Wilcox, who gained recognition in the industry for putting forward the “mega-grow” program that was interfered with by the Federal government in writing the first of many letters to municipalities warning of their desire to be involved in cannabis business. More info on that can be found in my article entitled “Why is Jeff Wilcox such a prick?” What is crazy is that Jeff Wilcox is continuing to pursue this permit as a sole incorporator, and is risking quite a vast fortune that he made when selling his construction company. He has three teenage children, who he claims are his reason for getting into this business, but it is unclear if they are aware of the great risk their dad is taking with the family fortune and property. It is people like Jeff Wilcox, with so much to lose, that would make a seemingly huge target for Federtal enforcement. If he is running a dispensary out of a property he owns then it is a slam dunk for asset forfeiture if they press criminal charges ever. Besides him being such a gigantic asshole, it begs to wonder why he is attempting to enter an industry with so many questions in order to make a measly non-profit salary.
His location is a plot of land near Harborside at 1820 Embarcadero, which should be interesting should he get the permit. It is literally right next door. It is also near Beacon Day School and is not in the preferred allowable zone as listed on the City’s mapping. It begs to wonder why a person with zero experience in dispensing cannabis would want to take such bold risks with his freedom and property, but I suppose some people get a Camaro for their mid-life crisis and others get a dispensary.
6.) East Bay Conscious Collective- (1155 3rd St.): This is a group spearheaded by members of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, the drag queen nuns charity group. How fun would it be to have these folks running a dispensary in Oakland? Yay! Edward Huser, aka Sister Barbi Mitzvah, is listed on the application as the CFO. He is joined by Eric Wesson (manager) and Nick Davis (manager). Board Members John Anderson and Jon David Petras (owner of Cafe Flore in San Francisco) are also listed on the city’s website.
Their facility is on 3rd and Adeline near the Port of Oakland in the same building as Nellie’s Soul Food. The space is a two story office building and is in the allowable zone.
7.) South Bay Apothecary Collective- (9821 Kitty Lane): Why ever would a group applying in Oakland use the name of their San Jose location called “South Bay Apothecary Collective” in the East Bay? But that is their call. Their facility in San Jose is a quiet one amongst 100+ and it would seem they are looking for greener pastures in Oakland. Their Director is listed as Johnny Nguyen and Steve Vinhm is listed as their manager. Kiet Tran is listed as in charge of “collective development.” The group’s person of service on the Secretary of State website is Vanessa Quan. This group is not very active in the cannabis scene overall, and even though they have been in business since November of 2009 (right after the Ogden memo), they have made little impact in the industry. Most asked had never heard of them.
Their facility is located off of 98th Ave on the Kitty Lane and seems to be in an allowable zone. They do not currently test their medicine in San Jose, so it will be interesting to see what they wrote in their application for testing in Oakland. If they list that they will be testing medicine it begs to wonder why they do not do that now? The facility is a 6000 sq. ft. warehouse building, that will need to be built out, so if nothing else they are well-financed. I looked at this building for a grow site for a client and the landlord was not interested in a cannabis business. I wonder if they purchased the site?

8.) Magnolia Wellness Inc.- (3421 Telegraph Ave.): This is a group who has made its name providing medicine to patients in the Sacramento area since 2009. They won best booth at last year’s HT medical cup in San Francisco and were listed as the “Best Compassion” program by Sacramento News and Review’s Best of Sacramento 2011. Executive Director David Spradlin is originally from the East Bay. He is joined by local Oakland business owner Harold Rogers, and Community organizer Eli Austin. Steep Hill CEO AnnaRae Grabstein is also an advisor on the Board.
Their facility is located at 34th and Telegraph in a mixed use commercial building. It is located near Grove Shafter park, as a sensitive use. Grove Shafter is a rundown park under the freeway interchange and is home to a lof of criminal activity. The group hopes to turn a large portion of it in to a community garden that provides food to the community according to their director. Magnolia Wellness is one of the most popular collectives in the Sacramento area and it will beg to see if they can bring that reputation for quality and compassion to Oakland.
9.) Abatin Wellness Center of Oakland- (8440 Enterprise Way): This is the project of my friend and yours, TV Celebrity Montel Williams. He is the only one listed on the application, which is odd because I do not believe he is a resident of California. He is also saying he is a resident of DC in order to get a dispensary there. What is also odd is that he is listed as a “consultant” to the Abatin Group in Sacramento, as they renamed another collective; and on this Abatin Wellness he is listed as the President. Huh? So he is not the President in Sac but is in Oakland? And it begs to wonder why his partner in Sacramento, well-known activist Aundre Speciale, is not listed on the Oakland application either? Also it is reported that Americans for Safe Access Director Don Duncan took the test for him, which is supposed to be done by a “member applicant” according to the City’s RFPA request and ordinance, yet Montel is the only one listed as an applicant.
The facility is down off of Hegenberger and was a former landscaping company. It is in the allowable zone, which begs to wonder why their application is ranked so low?
10.) Green Light District- (721 98th Ave.): Listed as “co-owners,” Brian Basillo and Jaysen Jacinto are the main applicants. The person of service for their corporation is Timothy Flaherty, a lawyer from Pleasant Hill and planning commissioner there. According to the google Jacincto seems to work or have worked with Telekenex and is in the telecommunications game. There are several listings for Brian Basillo, but there is a local one who used to work for AT&T.
Their facility seems to be a house on 98th Avenue, but it is hard to tell on Google maps. This address was reportedly a house for sale for $185,000 at one time according to a real estate website.
So there we have it folks…..the TOP 10 Candidates for opening a dispensary in Oakland. Read them and weep. It is amazing to me that after all that has happened that there are even 10 people left in the race. There is a lot of heat out there, and the unsurity of this industry is at an all time high. It is clear that some of these big wheels are willing to risk it all, and I can appreciate that. As I go over the list and understand how these applicants have given (or not given) to many City officials causes and campaigns, it is hard for me not to think things are rigged. What is clear is that if some of these applicants (or shadow applicant organizations) do indeed get the permit, there could be a lot of investigation and questioning of the entire application process. Only time will tell. Maybe all of them will throw up their hands and walk away, as the Feds continue to escalate the war on providers and their property. I wonder if some of these folks understand the risks involved and know clearly what the potential hazards of having a leading role in a cannabis dispensing organization really are. As a person who had his life turned upside down and was threatened with decades in prison just for making medicated foods, I know firsthand the real dangers of being in the cannabis industry. It is just hopeful that the leadership for all of these organizations has taken the time to explain the situation and has been honest with everyone involved. Anything less would just be sad.
So in about a month there will be public hearings, which should be exciting for sure. From here on out it is a pants-off dance-off and it is anyone’s guess who will actually open a dispensary in Oakland next year. The only thing for certain is that whoever gets the permits better bring their A-game because the competition level will surely be at an all time high….
California 90420 is a new documentary film from New Coast Productions and Catchphrase Entertainment. The film chronicles the life of several of California’s “420-somethings” including a 21 year-old pixie-like party girl named Ix, mother and cancer patient Amber, and Dale Sky Clare an educator and activist behind the 2010 Prop 19 campaign in California. Digging deep into California’s pot culture, California 90420 (see trailer below) is not the usual political screed with the same old oft-repeated facts about hemp and marihuana viewers are used to seeing, rather it is a thoughtful document of a moment in time and a growing American sub-culture.
Dean Shull was the director of California, 90420. He also produced and edited the film along with Steve Roberts. Producing and writing was Colin Goldman. Dean is President of Catchphrase Entertainment and was one of the producers that brought the indy comedy hit, ‘Waiting…” to the screen starring Ryan Reynolds and Justin Long. Colin was a former writer for Disney and penned a few direct to DVD titles including, Mickey’s Twice Upon A Christmas, Lion King 1 1/2, and Return to Neverland). Colin and Steve have co-penned a feature screenplay about autism titled, PO which they hope to shoot in North Carolina in 2012.
WLN: What was the cinematic hook that pulled you into the project? Is it pot activism or the human stories involved that was the first attraction? Was it the availability of the Prop 19 campaign as a narrative through-line?
DS: Before I came onboard my producing partners, Steve Roberts and Colin Goldman were working on selling a TV pitch called “Cannabis College”, but TV was not quite ready for “Weed College”. Colin saw some footage from a character driven documentary I was working on called “Fanboy and the Fellowship of the Saberers”, revealing Sci Fi/Comic culture, and asked if I could do something similar but on people in the world of weed. I think the hook at that time was tracking the journeys of four people going to a real weed college, which later became “The story of 420 Somethings.” We had originally planned to wrap before the election, but then wanting a stronger finish and needing a fourth character with a clearly defined ending, we decided to track Dale Sky Clare and her quest to “legalize it”!
WLN: How long did the shoot take front to back?
DS: Hmmm, It was several years or more. We were based out of Los Angeles, and none of our subjects lived there, so we would travel by car or plane to Oakland, Orange County, or Mendocino to shoot. Then, we would cut together what we had and find that neither our characters nor their stories had much of an arc. Our subjects had things planned that we were hoping to track, like confronting their parents, or inventing things to sell in the collectives, and they were not happening. Then, the surgery was canceled for Amber the character representing our medical storyline, and we were so happy for Amber that she didn’t have to have surgery, but our story was becoming less dramatic. We decided to extend the shoot, and include the election and by letting the project simmer we eventually came out with a much stronger film, including a new dramatic arc for our medical patient and a tough to capture coming of age story of an incredibly funny 21 year old named “Ix”.
WLN: Ix is obviously a charismatic young woman (Shades of Holden Caufield) and Amber’s story of surviving cancer is powerful in a more fundamental way… how did you select subjects? Were they all, in some way, connected to Oaksterdam U?
DS: Mostly through word of mouth and the internet, we looked at ~420 people, many of which we would put on tape, sometimes if they had trackable goals we would follow them for several days, most of the candidates were presently attending or wanted to soon go to Oaksterdam University, which was acting as an anchor point for our story.
WLN: How do you balance a subject such as the cannabis culture when there are very real risk of alienating a huge chunk of the audience who will dismiss the film as “drug movie” or who will only see it through the prism of stoner cliche?
DS: The film was intended to be the human stories of four people first and foremost, and a glimpse into the sort of wild west world of weed that is existing in California. We had seen many other documentaries that focused on informational material such as the history of hemp, and other news style stories, so since that ground had been covered, we thought we would approach it more like a traditional narrative, and have our subjects be the backbone of the film.
SR: 90420 is not just another “pot doc” its a character driven documentary about people that live in the marijuana culture rather than a movie about marijuana.
WLN: Do you see the film as the documenting of a social/cultural moment or do you see it as fundamentally a political film?
DS: Though politically controversial, It is definitely more of a capturing of a social cultural landscape though human story. You always hear the election results, but don’t always get to see the volunteers faces passionately cheering on their campaign. Hopefully people will be able to look back at this film in 100 years with some organic popcorn and get a good laugh at how things were in 2010.
WLN: The photography in the film is great and at times beautiful. What kind of camera did you use? Lenses? You seem to favor a kind of swing shift and long lens approach.
DS: Thank you. The subject matter of this film, and multiple subjects, immediately brought to mind how a mixed media approach might make for an interesting tapestry. Instead of the clinical procedural look of news specials, we wanted to have some grungy footage look like 16mm and others crisp HD, for some reason, it makes it feel like more of a journey, but that is personal preference. We shot on several different types of camera’s from the stunt performing HD Go Pro to the cinematic RED One. Much of the film was shot on Canon 5Ds and 7Ds with a smaller depth of field than we would normally allow, letting the shots get a little ‘smokey’. Other camera’s used were a few types Sony HD cams, Panasonic HVX200, JVC Pro Series using the Cinevate rail systems, with a flip lens adapter, and additional Nikon, Canon, and Zeiss glass.
WLN: Have you received any heat for the proximity of children to marijuana portrayed in the film?
DS: No. In fact, one of our subjects, Dale, purposefully had her press conference in front of a playground just to bring up the subject and address it head on. There was a little kid, about 13 years old that saw us interviewing a potential subject in an alley, he came up to us and tried to sell us his weed, but quickly biked away when I lifted my camera and tried to get him to be in the documentary.
SR: For some, especially “up north”, marijuana has been part of their culture and family for generations, and they farm it like corn, aside form having to watch for helicopters or vet a documentary crew they think might be cops.
WLN: The tone shift towards the end of the second act is very extreme from Ix and John’s Mendo adventure to the very real matter of a mother with cancer, the intractability of the political situation as it related to Prop 19. How hard was that to pull off? Is it a move that gives a story-teller/filmmaker some worry or did you always feel the narrative locked in by pre-planning or dictated organically by events/subjects?
DS: When you finish shooting you have all of these pieces that can become scenes, each one is like a song, some light hearted and funny, some serious, others sad. Unfortunately we had to introduce our medical story later in the film, Amber wasn’t able to attend the college, and it was hard to have the tonal jump from someone with a life threatening disease to the antics of recreational use. So as best we could, we at least replicated the sometimes subliminal story markers of a traditional narrative. We intro our characters, state their goals, and track them as best we could. Our Act II midpoint of departure is the graduation / trip to Medocino and the fact the Prop 19 gets on the ballot. Then our second act turn is the complication with Dale’s campaign and Amber’s medical condition, and the ending, well even I was surprised by some of it.
WLN: Why the decision after the end character cards to do the lengthy coda with Ix? Was the resolution (or complication) of her story included in such detail in order to leave a certain thesis with the audience? Or is it just such a compelling story and she such a compelling character that you felt the audience would want to know about her shift in priorities?
DS: It’s interesting, what happens in that scene might be the biggest surprise of the film. It also allows us to have other scenes reverberate such as her silly stories of partying and hooking up, or her commenting in tears about always wanting to be the person that will drop everything for a friend. We felt that she had the biggest “arc” with her coming of age story, and it deserved an extra scene.
SR: As one person said after our screening, “The one character that needed to change, did. Perfect ending.”
WLN: What did you take away as a filmmaker from the creation of this film? While the POV is certainly objective how much of yourselves as filmmakers ended up on the screen or threaded through the narrative… if any.
DS: We tried to keep our opinions at bay. I think it is inevitable that something gets in there that will really influence our views as filmmakers, like a music cue for example. But when you are making a low budget film, you don’t always have a lot of music to choose from, yet I have to say we were very lucky to marry some of this music to the video. Much thanks to all of our musical contributors. Hopefully we will have some of the tracks available for free on our site. I better get to work on that right now!
WLN: Well many thanks to both of you. I enjoyed the film a great deal and I am sure our readers will as well.
SR: Thanks for the interview, Chad; and for being in our movie. California, 90420 will be available for download for $8.99 by December 10th. (You can find more info HERE.) We will also be selling hemp printed movie posters which many people are already framing and calling collector’s items; and eventually 90420 branded hemp shirts. DVD should be available for sale on our website and Amazon before Christmas. Greenest Holidays to you and yours!
Editors note: Chad Nance was also interviewed for and appears in this film.
Cannabis consumers are about 13% of the population (a fair chunk) and most are not the super wealthy aristocrats that have come to be thought of as the one percent (1%). Maybe their kids smoke herb, but it is generally frowned upon at the Country Club. But for the most part those who use cannabis tend to be just regular folks like you and me….The 99%. Many of our cannabis concerns parallel the concerns of the larger Occupy 99% movement that we see becoming a powerful voice in the National dialogue. As a movement, we should embrace this cultural revolution and help to call for change in the systems and a renewed democratic republic.
Believe Wall Street, and more specifically their lobbying groups, are 100% responsible for the lack of progress we have seen in reforming cannabis laws. Big Pharma, Big Tobacco, and Big Booze all work to keep prohibition alive and they continue to use their political influence to bribe politicians and scare them into believing they will never be re-elected if they vote for cannabis reform. It is Wall Street’s bottom line that is directly responsible for the drug war. A great deal of our prison system is owned by Wall Street. They are the one’s directly benefiting from us imprisoning 25% of the World’s population while only having 5% of the global population. It is absurd. They have established this huge, mostly privately owned, Wall St. prison complex that they must continue to fill to keep profitable, so to them the drug war makes sense. To our 13% of the 99% it means being a criminal.
It is only a matter of time before people say enough. I have a great thought; maybe we can just turn some of the prisons into indoor cannabis farms. That would be ideal. The simple fact is that we cannot afford to keep feeding the beast of the prison system by imprisoning people (minorities at a much higher rate) for cannabis and other drugs. We are creating a whole generation and society of prisoners and convicts, and the madness has got to stop; and that begins with getting Wall St. money out of Government so that lawmakers can be free to make more educated decisions based on scientific fact and common sense, and not special interest money.
Another way the Occupy call for income equality affects cannabis is that the Feds are denying tens of thousands of people jobs, as their baseless policies attempt to shut down our movement. They are trying to squeeze out the movement and push the entire cannabis industry back to the black market. They are forcing people who use medical cannabis to access their medicine in a Wal-Mart parking lot instead of a clean, well-lit and tax-paying business. It is a damn shame.
And THE BANKS! The banks refuse to give our community accounts because of the Feds outdated and archaic position on medical cannabis. Many large collectives and patient groups depend on bank accounts to pay their staff, their taxes, and to account for their non-profit funding. But the banks are refusing to handle cannabis accounts due to pressure from the Feds. This is not okay. We need the First Bank of Cannabis. Let these too big to fail and too big to take cannabis money institutions become dinosaurs. Hopefully people will all take their money elsewhere, as the Occupy movement and other social change groups are calling for. I am moving my accounts on Saturday.
The 99% are us and we are the 99% at least 13% of it. Many of the issues facing the larger economy can be related to the cannabis cause. Because we waste so much time and resources arresting and jailing cannabis consumers and growers, we fail to educate our kids, provide healthcare and housing, fix our roads, and perform basic functions of a civilized society. This is no longer okay and the whole world is watching.
As a movement we are asking a good portion of the 99% to support cannabis reform. If an initiative makes the ballot we will need more than just our 13% to pass adult use. We will be asking our sensible neighbors and friends to stand with us to help re-establish cannabis freedom in this Country and to stop prohibition. We are asking others to stand up for us so that we can quit being treated as second class citizens, and quit being arrested or having our property searched because we smell like cannabis. We are looking for the 99% to support us, so we should in-turn support the 99% movement. The peaceful resistance that is happening across the Nation is powerful and it would bode well for us to stand in solidarity, get out of our house and into the streets, and form alliances with the larger call for change. I think you will find that there is a great deal of support for the cannabis issue and it is a great place to meet with other activist groups to establish partnerships and like-minded strategy.
I saw many great cannabis activists at the General Strike movement yesterday, which was nice. It would be nice to see more at future gatherings. I think we can use this powerful message to help voice our similar concerns for change to the system. Be a part of the tidal wave of passion and understanding that is now occupying the streets of our country, especially Oaksterdam, which is Hella Hella Occupied….
from Cannabis Warrior




















