Pubdate: Tue, 03 Apr 2012 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2012 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Chip Johnson FEDS HAVE WRONG IDEA ON HELPING OAKLAND On many fronts, Oakland is in dire need of federal assistance. The city needs help reducing violent crime and would benefit from the feds' expertise in investigating allegations of government corruption. Unfortunately, Oakland doesn't need the kind of help federal authorities are giving us now. On Monday, officers with the Drug Enforcement Administration, Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Marshals Service raided Oaksterdam University, the state's first school for people in the cannabis industry, and the apartment of its founder, the outspoken and wheelchair-bound Richard Lee. Thank goodness. Now I can sleep at night. Because for all the shootings and murders and break-ins and violence occurring on the streets of Oakland every day, the mere thought that Lee, who was detained and questioned, is out there rolling around the streets of our city is absolutely terrifying. He certainly qualifies as Public Enemy No. 1 in our town. Is this some poor, misguided attempt at federal humor? Lee is about as menacing as a litter of kittens. Around 7 a.m., federal authorities broke down the door and entered the school on Broadway at 16th Street. Once inside, authorities shut down a dispensary and seized sacks full of marijuana plants. If federal authorities were truly interested in helping Oakland, they would help us carry the piano instead of merely grabbing pillows from the sofa and expecting us to be thankful. And if any federal decisionmaker doubted the depth of Oakland's continuing troubles, Monday's mass shooting at a Christian college should have made it clear. Right around the same time the feds were protecting us by tearing down a legally formed business, a gunman opened fire and killed several people in an East Oakland classroom at Oikos University. It would be in the best interests of everyone if law enforcement efforts in Oakland focused on taking down the real bad guys - the ones shooting other people. Oaksterdam University isn't the problem the city needs federal assistance to curb. And Richard Lee isn't the biggest danger to others in this city. Not by a longshot. It is counterintuitive to use three federal law enforcement agencies to close a marijuana school and dispensary while ignoring illegal street drug operations in Oakland that continue to thrive, causing more violence. Oakland is at the forefront of the national debate over medical marijuana, and the City Council emphatically supports the policy. It recently approved initial plans to open more dispensaries. Even if the state and federal government are at odds over whether California can allow the sale of medicinal pot, the priorities of law enforcement should remain in place. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom