Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jun 2002 Source: Daily Camera (CO) Contact: 2002 The Daily Camera. Website: http://www.thedailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Clay Evans Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) SHROOM BUST WORTH BULLETS? Although described by Boulder police chief Mark Beckner as "a major case," the flubbed June 16 shakedown of marijuana and hallucinogenic mushroom dealers struck me as just another episode in the emperor-has-no-clothes drug war. Even Beckner acknowledged that the 18-month federal probe ended on a sour note, with two suspects evading capture (finally caught Thursday) and one man shot in the chest after he allegedly knocked an officer down with his car. I have little sympathy for fools tempted into the "easy money" of the illegal drug trade, yet I can't convince myself that this operation accomplished much. One limb of our local "shroom" and pot market was severed - -- but the drug trade, even locally, is a millipede. Plenty more where that came from. If I read the federal arrest warrant affidavits correctly, this case was more about psilocybin mushrooms than pot, which many people deem relatively inoffensive (or at least no less offensive than some legal drugs, including alcohol and tobacco). So what about 'shrooms? "Psychedelic" 'shrooms occur in nature (in cow pies, in wet climates). And according to the University of Utah Alcohol and Drug Education Center for students, mushrooms are not physically addictive, it's unknown if they are psychologically addictive, and "overdose" may result in "Longer, more intense 'trip' episodes, psychosis, possible death." Not good, obviously, but no reason to panic. I have been unable to find any documented 'shroom deaths, except from stupid, drug-induced behavior -- but Coors can do that, too. I recently spoke to a bright young person who was arrested for 'shroom dealing. Smart enough to know never to do it again, the person said Boulder is teeming with mini 'shroom operations. The ex-dealer described a mobile home that is used solely as a mushroom-growing facility. So as proud as investigators want to be about this big bust, it hardly seems worth the time or expense. And it's certainly not worth two officers nearly emptying their guns firing at a dim-witted suspect who probably was only trying to flee. Oh, and a question about the marijuana: Yes, about 80 pounds of pot (not much) was "prevented" from reaching Boulder streets. But since it was a "sting," conducted by undercover officers acting as potential buyers, wasn't the dope "ordered," in a sense, by the investigators themselves? Just wondering. This is our drug war, folks, until we "just say no." This is what we're paying good men and women in blue to do, instead of other things. Drug offenders fill our prisons, forcing us to build ever more. The federal government dallies precariously with military action in "drug-producing countries." Is it worth it to you? In last week's column about the cruel bird poison Avitrol, I screwed up. Remember that old saying about the word "assume," how it makes an a-s-s out of u and me? Well, you're absolved, but feel free to apply the label to me. Somebody is using Avitrol in Boulder, but it is not the University of Colorado or its contractors. CU, which used to use Avitrol to rid buildings of pigeons, has not done so in years, and does not contract with companies that do. I should have checked out my assumptions. I'm embarrassed and sorry. In particular, I'd like to apologize to Tom Carson and Scott Harvey at CU, and Christine Anderson at the city. I hereby sentence myself to redoubled vigilance. As old journalists like to say, even when your mama says she loves you, check it out. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk