Man behind California pot initiative is a force in 'Oaksterdam'
For much of his life, Richard Lee needed neither liberation nor a cause.
The Oakland medical pot entrepreneur, who spent $1.3 million to qualify this November's initiative to make recreational pot use legal in California, once lived for thundering his Harley-Davidson motorcycle down Texas highways.
His father, Bob Lee, said his son used to ride to a Houston airport, climb into an ultralight airplane and soar above the rice fields, "playing tag with the seagulls."
Lee's close friend Kurt Calivoda, with whom he worked in a Houston stage lighting business, remembers a wiry, athletic man "who could climb on anything."
No more.
Lee, 47, was paralyzed in a fall 20 years ago. Today, he's emerged as the unlikely protagonist in a marijuana legalization push that is changing California's cultural and political landscape.
He now surges forward in a wheelchair, pumping hard in fingerless gloves through an Oakland business district dubbed "Oaksterdam." He is credited with reviving the area with a medical pot network born from California's 1996 initiative legalizing medical marijuana use.
Combined, he said, his Oaksterdam University marijuana trade school, a medical marijuana dispensary, coffee shops and other businesses generate $5 million a year.
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