Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 Source: Times Record News (Wichita Falls, TX) Copyright: 2004 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://TimesRecordNews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/995 Author: Jessica Langdon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mushrooms POLICE SEIZE MILLIONS IN DRUGS Sizeable Mushroom Bust Said To Be One Of Biggest On Record Investigators look over psilocybin mushrooms seized during a search Tuesday in Clay County. Officers seized a total of 25 pounds during their investigation. Mushroom Seizure by the Numbers Psilocybin mushrooms seized: 25 pounds Dosage units: 1.13 million Total value: $11.35 million Drug officers from several agencies made a rare find in Clay County this week. They made a mushroom bust bigger than anything the North Texas Drug Task Force has seen before. Investigators Tuesday turned up 25 pounds of psilocybin mushrooms - hallucinogenic drugs - with a street value topping $11 million. One Clay County residence housed 21 pounds of the mushrooms, investigators said. "We were kind of amazed at the value," Wichita Falls police Sgt. Cindy Walker said. Investigators said if it wasn't the largest seizure of its kind in North Texas, it was one of the largest. Wichita Falls undercover officers, Department of Public Safety narcotics officers and the Clay County Sheriff's Department conducted the investigation. Task Force Investigator Chris Taylor said the probe started after an arrest in Dallas-Fort Worth several weeks ago produced some information. One person was arrested in Wichita County, he said, and another arrest was pending in Clay County. "It was involving the mushrooms that were being grown in the Petrolia area that were going to other parts of the state," Taylor said. He said officers tracked distribution all the way to Austin. Joe Ben Patrick, 53, of Clay County was charged with unlawful delivery or manufacture with intent to deliver a simulated controlled substance in connection with an incident June 8. His bond was set at $10,000, and he was not being held Thursday in the Wichita County Jail. There is no field test for psilocybin mushrooms, and investigators are waiting for results of other tests, which is why the charge addresses a "simulated controlled substance." The arrest affidavit gave this description of the incident: Someone cooperating with the investigation arranged to have 3 pounds of mushrooms delivered. The person who delivered those mushrooms also cooperated, saying he's bought mushrooms in the past from the suspect in this case. He said that's where the 3 pounds of mushrooms he delivered came from. That witness arranged with the suspect to have 1 pound delivered, the affidavit said. That led to the search warrant in Clay County, a press release from the Wichita Falls Police Department stated. Officers found "where the psilocybin mushrooms were being cultivated," the release stated. They seized the mushrooms and hauled the evidence away in bags and glass jars. The jars filled a roomful of shelves. "I think we made a significant dent," said Jim Blake, a DPS narcotics investigator, "even though we didn't know we were having the problem." Taylor said drug officers - used to working with drugs like methamphetamine - haven't had that many run-ins with mushrooms. He's only seen a few cases in nearly 10 years. "I've even seized some from people on the streets before," Sgt. Walker said - but never anything of this magnitude. "We were very lucky that day," Blake said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin