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Daily Archives: November 16, 2010
The Berkeley Wire: 11.16.10
Rallies expected at Wednesday’s Regents’ meeting [Daily Cal]
Pioneering wellness letter celebrates 25th anniversary [UCB News]
City employees face rise in health care costs [Daily Cal]
Protesters in Feb. 26 riot on south side acquitted [Daily Cal]
Berkeley Lab has second most powerful supercomputer in the world [Science Blog]
Berkeley woman shoots herself in the foot [Albany Patch]
West Edge opera is “triumphant romp” [Mercury News]
Photo: Last Apples of the Season by dougsmi/Berkeleyside Flickr pool
Protests and other noontime activities at Cal
A few dozen protesters gathered near California Hall on the UC Berkeley campus at noon on Tuesday to protest proposed fee increases.
Students and UC employees hung up banners and spoke out against the spiraling cost of a UC tuition, as well as Cal’s ongoing contract dispute with workers. A group of 40 protesters had tried to block the east entrance to the hall earlier in the day.
The UC Board of Regents will meet … Continue reading »
Tagged The Movement, UC fee increases
Quarterly report shows drop in Berkeley crime
The city’s quarterly report on crime, to be presented at tonight’s City Council meeting, shows a 17% drop in violent crime and a 7% drop in property crime for the first nine months of the year compared to the same period in 2009. The police department’s goal was for a 10% reduction in crime.
There were 388 violent crimes in the year through September, compared to 466 last year. There were four homicides in each period, but all other … Continue reading »
Tagged Chief Michael Meehan
Street art watch: horse overlaid on buffalo
We’ve kept a regular eye on the street art on the abandoned photo processing booth on the corner of Telegraph and Ashby (previous installments here and here). The latest work overlays a rather classically drawn horse on top of Jesse Hazelip‘s buffalo/airplane. (Hat tip Marc Rumminger)
Tagged Berkeley street art, Jesse Hazelip
Notorious Berkeley drug house sold
For more than 20 years, the house at 1610 Oregon Street was an epicenter of Berkeley’s drug wars, a place where dealers dealt crack openly, people were shot, and crowds and cars congregated.
Now the shingled house, once owned by Lenora Moore, is shuttered behind a chain link fence. The glass in the front windows is broken and two “No Trespassing” signs and a red “Keep Out” sign are nailed by the front door.
For decades, Lenora Moore and her extended clan of Perrys and Robinsons lived in the modest, two-bedroom home near California Street. But they left in early 2010 after four court battles, a grand jury investigation, and finally, an injunction won by the city of Berkeley declaring the house a public nuisance.
Now the house has been sold to a new, unidentified buyer. A offer was accepted on the property Oct 29, just 10 days after the house went on the market for the low price of $199,000, according to a spokesman for Security Pacific realtors, which listed the property. The house had been in foreclosure.
For next-door neighbor Paul Rauber, who was the lead plaintiff in a 2005 suit brought by 14 neighbors against Lenora Moore, the exodus of the family has meant an end to gun battles, late-night partying, the discovery of used hypodermic needles and condoms on the street, and a fear of going outside.
“It’s been delightful,” said Rauber. “It’s been like a normal neighborhood. People aren’t afraid anymore to walk past our house in the evening with their kids. It is like night and day.”
The battle to force Lenora Moore and her extended clan to stop the blatant drug dealing went on for two decades, and exposed the political alliances and racial politics of Berkeley in a not always flattering light.
Lenora Moore, now 80, was a member of Berkeley’s African-American society, a woman who worked for Catholic Charities for years, was friendly with eight-term City Councilwoman Maudelle Shirek, and someone whom many respected. When she claimed that she was unaware that some of her children, grandchildren and their friends were selling drugs 24/7 out of her home, many of her supporters believed her. She was never charged with involvement in drug dealing. Her supporters were outraged that a group of mostly white neighbors were trying to evict her from the house she had owned for decades and said racism and gentrification — not an attempt to close a drug house — was the motivation behind the various neighborhood lawsuits.
But a review of police and court records shows that 1610 Oregon Street was a place where, for decades, almost anyone could buy pot, heroin, or crack cocaine. A 1994 Berkeley Police Department log shows officers made hundreds of visits to the house in just that year. Lenora Moore’s grandson Mark A. Perry was killed nearby in April 1992 in a drug-related shooting. One of Moore’s sons, Frank Moore Jr., and a grandson, Ralph Perry Jr., were shot by rival drug dealers in October 1999 in the 1500 block of Oregon. Other members of her family, including her son Steve Moore, Jr., were arrested and convicted of drug-related offenses.
Yet for decades attempts to stop the rampant drug dealing failed. A group of 30 neighbors sued Moore in 1992 in small claims court and were awarded $155,000 for the pain and suffering brought on by the activity in the house. The decision was upheld on appeal, but Moore never paid the fine. Instead, she filed for bankruptcy and transferred title of the house to a son and daughter-in-law.
The drug activity at 1610 Oregon continued, although neighbors worked closely with police to tally and report any suspicious activity. In 2000, the city of Berkeley cited Moore for 22 code violations, forcing her to move out temporarily while repairs were made. But the city, despite support from then-Mayor Shirley Dean and other city council members, was not able to force Moore to stop the dealing on her property or leave her home.











