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  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    2:34pm, EDT

    Oaksterdam 'cannabis college' raided by DEA, IRS

    Noah Berger / AP

    With marijuana proponents chanting behind them, federal agents raid Oaksterdam University in Oakland, Calif., on Monday.

    By msnbc.com news services

    Federal authorities raided Oaksterdam University, a “cannabis college” in northern California, on Monday morning.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Agents with the Internal Revenue Service, Drug Enforcement Agency and U.S. Marshals were spotted outside the medical marijuana facility, with some entering the site with power saws and a sledgehammer and other carrying out bags of material to a van, nbcbayarea.com and the San Francisco Chronicle reported.


    Two other buildings in the city’s cannabis district -- known as Oaksterdam -- were also raided.

    Calls and emails seeking comment from the IRS, DEA and Oaksterdam were not immediately returned. But IRS spokeswoman Arlette Lee told local media that the probe was under seal in a Northern District Court and the agents were serving a federal search warrant.

    Federal prosecutors have recently been stepping up pressure on medical cannabis dispensaries, forcing hundreds to close, the Chronicle reported. They maintain that federal law trumps California's 1996 voter-approved law legalizing medical cannabis.

    The raid comes about two weeks after the Oakland City Council approved doubling the number of medical marijuana dispensaries, approving four new potential operators, the Oakland Tribune reported.

    Many view Oaksterdam as the heart of California's pot legalization movement. In business since 2007, Oaksterdam was founded by Richard Lee -- the main backer of the 2010 state ballot measure that would have legalized marijuana for recreational use if it had passed, nbcbayarea.com reported.

    Oaksterdam University teaches classes on how to cultivate marijuana plants for personal use.

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    352 comments

    Legalizing and taxing marijuana could bring $billions into state/federal coffers instead of the pockets of the Mexican Drug Cartels. What a waste of taxpayer money!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oakland, california, marijuana, cannabis, featured, oaksterdam
  • 3
    Mar
    2012
    4:36am, EST

    Three Occupy Oaklanders charged with hate crimes, robbery

    By NBC, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Three Occupy Oakland protesters accused of surrounding and taunting a woman before stealing her wallet were charged on Friday with robbery and hate crimes, authorities said.

    Michael Davis, 32, Nneka Crawford, 23, and Randolph Wilkins, 24, confronted the woman on the streets of Oakland in February after she told them not to riot, the Oakland Police said in a written release.


    According to a report by NBC Bay Area, police said the woman was crossing the street from a Wells Fargo bank when she noticed a group of Occupy protesters calling for a riot. She allegedly told them not to riot in her neighborhood and was then surrounded.

    "She was surrounded by three protesters and battered as they yelled vulgar epithets regarding their perception of her sexual orientation," Oakland Police spokeswoman Johnna Watson said.

    The female victim was not identified except as a 20-year resident of the neighborhood.

    Occupy Oakland: 400 arrested after violent protest

    "Her wallet was taken during the crime," Watson said. "The victim broke away from the group and called police, who were able to arrest one suspect near the scene."

    Watson said the other two suspects were arrested at a February 29 Occupy Oakland protest.

    Each was charged by the Alameda County District Attorney's Office with felony counts of robbery and hate crimes, Watson said.

    An Occupy Oakland organizer could not be reached for comment on Friday evening.

    PhotoBlog: Occupy protesters target downtown Oakland bank branches

    A rallying cry of the movement has been that 1 percent of the population has too much of the nation's wealth and the remaining 99 percent is disadvantaged.

    It has lost momentum in recent months after police cleared encampments in New York, Oakland and other major cities.

    NBC Bay Area said police were asking anyone with information about the incident to contact the Major Crimes Section at the Oakland Police Department.

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    NBC Bay Area, msnbc.com staff and Reuters contributed to this report.

    525 comments

    And the Billions the bankers stole DO NOT MATTER, since no one has yet been arrested or gone to Jail. But 3 occupiers steal a wallet and it's headline news? The propaganda machine is fully on this non news story.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oakland, california, protest, robbery, charge, hate-crime, featured, crime-and-courts, occupy-oakland
  • 30
    Jan
    2012
    9:25am, EST

    Occupy DC faces eviction as deadline passes

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

     

    An Occupy protester sits at the McPherson Square Occupy encampment in Washington, DC, on January 30, 2012.

    Occupy protesters chanting "let us sleep so we can dream" set up a large, blue tarp with the words "tent of dreams" in the nation's capital as a noon deadline to end camping at some of the movement's last remaining large encampments passed.

    The National Park Service said in a flier released Friday that it would begin enforcing regulations prohibiting camping and the use of temporary structures for camping at McPherson Square and Freedom Plaza. Individual violators may be subject to arrest and their property subject to seizure as evidence, the flier said.

    Washington Post live-blogs Occupy D.C.

    Justin Jacoby Smith, a 25-year-old activist with OccupyKSt and member of their media team, said the protesters at McPherson Square had plans for the deadline but noted: “We’re still sorting of keeping the specifics under wraps … we like to have surprises when we can.”

    Still, by noon the blue tarp, also decorated with the words "dream together" and yellow stars and a moon, could be seen in the square via a video livestream. "This is what democracy looks like," protesters chanted.

    “Today what we’re trying to do is make sure that everyone knows that when you enforce a regulation against sleeping then you can’t dream of a better world, either … when you can’t sleep, you can’t dream," he said. "We’re going to make sure that we still have the opportunity to dream and that the people in this demonstration that have no place else to go are kept safe from the criminalization of homelessness that this order effectively creates.”

    Officers would be on site to monitor the situation and try to get protesters to comply, Carol Johnson, a Park Service spokeswoman, told msnbc.com on Friday. Compliance entails removing all camping materials and leaving one side of all temporary structures open.

    “People can be there 24 hours a day, but they can’t live there, they can’t sleep there,” she said.

    “We still do back the First Amendment, and it is their right. It is not their right to camp. And ... we would, you know, support them if they came into compliance and they had a vigil and they had tents that were there for logistical or symbolic purposes,” she added. "They can occupy as a vigil but not camping."

    More than 80 arrests have occurred at the two sites, including for public urination, drunkenness, assault and drug use, she noted.

    On Sunday, a protester at one of the camps -- in McPherson Square -- was Tasered and arrested following a confrontation with law enforcement, according to NBCWashington.com. A video of the incident, posted on YouTube, shows the man yelling at officers, "We all know you're coming tomorrow."

    Many of the Occupy camps were closed across the country last fall and early winter, and the sites in the nation's capital were two of the bigger outfits remaining.

    The Park Service noted that two "compliant" 24-hour First Amendment vigils have been running in Lafayette Park and near the Vietnam Veterans Memorial since the early 1980s. Johnson said they were "very small" vigils and also noted that they were not evicting the Occupy protesters.

    But the McPherson Square camp said it was a de facto eviction: "Rather than own up to the fact that they're evicting us, the 'camping ban' allows NPS to pick us off one by one. Death by attrition," read a tweet from the OccupyKSt twitter account.

    The action by the Park Service also comes after the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and Subcommittee held a hearing last week about the McPherson Square encampment.

    "Late is better than never," Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., chairman of the subcommittee on the District of Columbia, said in a statement after learning of park authorities' notice. "I continue to wonder whether others who are 'camping' in national parks would have been afforded a 100-day grace period before the law was enforced."

    Occupy groups across the country continue to assemble and organize protests, with about 400 demonstrators in Oakland arrested late Saturday after authorities thwarted their attempt to take over a vacant convention center for a new camp site. Some protesters broke into City Hall and smashed glass display cases and burned the U.S. and California flags, while others ran into a YMCA to evade police.

    At least three officers and one protester were injured. Mayor Jean Quan said the cost to the city related to the Occupy Oakland protests is about $5 million.

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    Follow @mimileitsinger

    722 comments

    I'm sure BO wouldn't mind the company over at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oakland, freedom, square, mcpherson, plaza, occupy, ows
  • 30
    Jan
    2012
    4:44am, EST

    Occupy Oakland: 400 arrested after violent protest

    A violent Occupy Oakland protest over the weekend resulted in damage to Oakland's historic City Hall and YMCA and about 400 arrests. KNTV reports.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Crews cleaned up Oakland's historic City Hall on Sunday from damage inflicted overnight during violent anti-Wall Street protests that resulted in about 400 arrests, marking one of the largest mass arrests since nationwide protests began last year.

    At a press conference on Sunday, Oakland police and city officials said they did not have a final tally of arrests. Earlier in the day, the city's emergency operations office put the figure at around 400. The skirmishes injured three officers and at least one demonstrator.


    Police said a group of protesters burned an American flag in front of City Hall, then entered the building and destroyed a vending machine, light fixtures and a historic scale model of the edifice. The city's 911 emergency system was overwhelmed during the disturbances.

     

    • Related: Oakland assesses City Hall damage after Occupy break-in

    "While City Hall sustained damage, we anticipate that all city offices will be open for regular business tomorrow," said Deanna Santana, Oakland city administrator.

    Beck Diefenbach / AP

    Occupy Oakland protesters burn an American flag found inside Oakland City Hall on Saturday.

    Oakland has become an unlikely flashpoint for the national "Occupy" protests against economic inequality that began last year in New York's financial district and spread to dozens of cities.

    The protests in most cities have been peaceful and sparked a national debate over how much of the country's wealth is held by the richest 1 percent of the population. President Barack Obama has sought to capitalize on the attention by calling for higher taxes on the richest Americans.

    Related stories:

    • Prosecutors aim new weapon at Occupy activists: lynching allegation
    • Authorities to end camping at Occupy DC sites 
    • More see class conflict between rich and poor

    Occupy protests focused on Oakland after a former Marine and Iraq war veteran, Scott Olsen, was critically injured during a demonstration in October. Protesters said he was hit in the head by a tear gas canister but authorities have never said exactly how he was hurt.

    The Occupy movement appeared to lose momentum late last year as police cleared protest camps in several cities.

    Violence erupted again in Oakland on Saturday afternoon when protesters attempted to take over the apparently empty downtown convention center to establish a new headquarters and draw attention to the problem of homelessness.

    'Violent splinter group'
    Police in riot gear moved in to drive back the crowd, which they estimated at about 500 protesters.

    "Officers were pelted with bottles, metal pipe, rocks, spray cans, improvised explosive devices and burning flares," the Oakland Police Department said in a statement. "The Oakland Police Department deployed smoke, tear gas and beanbag projectiles in response to this activity."

    Oakland Mayor Jean Quan accused a "violent splinter group" of the Occupy movement of fomenting the Saturday protests and using the city as its playground. Protesters have accused the city of overreacting and using heavy-handed tactics.

    Police move in on Occupy Oakland protesters on Oak Street and 12th as tear gas gets blown back on them in Oakland.

    Oakland officials on Sunday were inspecting damage inside City Hall that was caused by about 50 Occupy protesters who broke in and smashed glass display cases, spray-painted graffiti, and burned the U.S. and California flags.

    The break-in on Saturday was the culmination of a day of clashes between protesters and police. At least 300 people were arrested on charges ranging from vandalism and failure to disperse.

    At least three officers and one protester were injured.

    Quan said Occupy protesters have caused an estimated $2 million in damages from vandalism since October. She said the cost to the city related to the Occupy Oakland protests is pegged at about $5 million.

     

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    •  

       

    This article includes reporting from NBCBayArea.com, The Associated Press and msnbc.com's Miranda Leitsinger.

       

     

       

    277 comments

    Who is correct Occupy wall street about the rich not paying their fair share,Obama {redistribute the wealth}?............. Top earners are the target for new tax increases, but the U.S. tax system is already highly progressive. The top 1 percent of income earners paid 38 percent of all federal incom …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: wall-street, oakland, featured, occupy
  • 29
    Nov
    2011
    3:26am, EST

    Baby, 7 others shot as gunmen target rapper's van

    A one-year-old boy is in critical condition after he and seven others were shot when gunmen sprayed bullets at a van belonging to Oakland rapper Kafani. KNTV's Cheryl Hurd reports.

     

    By Associated Press and msnbc.com staff

     

    Updated at 1 a.m. ET: A one-year-old boy was undergoing surgery Monday night after he and seven others were wounded in a hail of gunfire in Oakland.

    Television footage showed a van belonging to an Oakland rapper, Kafani, that was riddled with bullet holes. The vehicle had apparently taken some of the victims to the hospital.


    Surgeons were trying to relieve swelling on the boy's brain after his father, who was also shot, drove him to Children's Hospital in Oakland, relatives told KTVU-TV.

    "We are aware of a one-year-old boy who was shot — possibly in the head — in critical condition right now," Oakland Police Lt. Robert Chan told the station. The hospital declined to release any details about the victim.

    In a Twitter message, Kafani said to "send y'all prayers to @hirolla900_bfa its his son who was shot."

    He also asked people to "Pray for my lil cuz."

    Kafani tweeted that he had not been shot and said news reports that he had been shooting a music video when the shooting took place were incorrect.

    The wounded were taken to local hospitals by others at the scene before officers arrived to find dozens of bullet casings near the parking lot where the crowd had gathered early Monday evening, police said.

    The shootings happened just after 6 p.m. near I-880 in the city's West Oakland neighborhood, Oakland police spokeswoman Johnna Watson said.

    The other victims' conditions were unclear, though police said their injuries did not appear to be life-threatening.

    Investigators were seeking multiple shooters, but further details on suspects or a motive were not immediately available.

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    200 comments

    You're supposed to want a better life for your children not subject them to the "gangsta" world you reside in. Start by removing those ridiculous pistols off your T-shirt.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: rapper, shooting, oakland, kafani
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