Pubdate: Tue, 27 Apr 2010 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/comment/letters/write/ Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Randy Richmond SCHROOMS FLASHBACK TO LONDON DRUG SCENE Magic Mushrooms The psychedelic '60s have sprouted in London's drug scene. Twice in the past month, police have busted grow operations that did not boast the usual marijuana plants. Instead, investigators found a throwback to hippies, the Summer of Love and San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district -- magic mushrooms or schrooms as they are sometimes called. "We haven't seen them cultivated in town for a long time," said Det. Supt. Ken Heslop, head of the criminal investigation unit. RCMP officers say they can't remember the last time they busted a magic mushroom grow-op in Ontario. "It is very strange. It is not a common thing," said Sgt. Marc Laporte, media relations for London-based O Division that polices the province. Veteran drug officers told him "they've never come across them before," Laporte said. Two busts hardly represents a trend, Laporte said. But, he added, "it is definitely something to keep an eye on." Magic mushrooms describe a variety of species that contain the hallucinogen psilocybin. Dried and taken orally in tea, or in food, psilocybin mushrooms can produce a feeling of heightened perception, hallucinations and euphoria. They can also cause psychosis, panic and nausea. Some American cultures, most notably the Aztecs, used magic mushrooms for centuries. But it took counter-culture gurus such as Timothy Leary to spread the word through the United States during the psychedelic era in the 1960s. Magic mushrooms seemed to fade in notoriety as hippies grew older, bought houses and started saving for retirement. Although they've always been available, magic mushrooms aren't mentioned in the 2010 national drug threat assessment from the U.S. National Drug Intelligence Center. Nor does the latest national analysis from the RCMP, dated in 2007. Last fall, however, Mounties seized about 68 kg of magic mushrooms, worth about $700,000, grown in B.C. and heading east. Mushroom grow-ops are easier to hide than marijuana grow-ops, Heslop said. "They are smaller. They are easily concealable and don't need the hydro or lighting situations (marijuana) grow-ops do," he said. "It can be done in a closet or a corner really out of the way of everybody." In fact, London police weren't looking for the magic mushroom grow-ops when they came upon them. Police were investigating a marijuana grow-op when they seized mushrooms at a Third St. residence March 30. A robbery investigation April 14 on Fleming Dr. led to another seizure. Neither seizure was large -- each about two, metre-square containers worth of soil and mushrooms. There were enough mushrooms to sell, but likely just locally, Heslop said. London police have to wait for three months for Health Canada tests to confirm the mushrooms were indeed magic. But police believe that's what they've seized and are wondering now if a new era of psychedelic drugs is on the horizon. "We'll see if it goes somewhere," Heslop said. - --- --- --- MAGIC MUSHROOMS What: More than 190 species that contain psilocybin, a hallucinogen. How: Ingested orally, psilocybin broken into another hallucinogen, psilocyn. Effects: Range from euphoria, a feeling of heightened perception and hallucinations to panic, paranoia and psychosis. Can cause physical side-effects, such as vomiting, but no evidence of physical dependence. Nicknames: schrooms, caps, boomers, mushies. Source: U.S. National Drug Intelligence Center - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart