Jamaica Gleaner

Amend Dangerous Drugs Act to include ‘magic mushroom’ – NCDA boss

- Corey Robinson/ Senior Staff Reporter corey.robinson@gleanerjm.com

IT IS celebrated in some circles, touted even by some hoteliers as the latest pull factor for foreigners to the island, but the National Council on Drug Abuse (NCDA) says it is keeping eye on the proliferat­ion of ‘magic mushrooms’, for which there is no regulation in law.

Magic mushrooms are a version of the plant that contains psilocybin or psilocin chemicals, which cause users to hallucinat­e - feeling, seeing, and hearing things that are unreal. They are sold in fresh, dried, or powder form and can be inhaled, injected, taken as a tea, or cooked with food. Magic mushrooms can lead to tolerance and dependence, experts say.

Outside of research purposes, the drug is illegal in Canada while some states like Oregon in the United States have legalised its usage. Jamaican laws, however, are silent on the drug as various mushroom conference­s are held in Jamaica, and local dispensari­es stock it in their showcases.

“It is not illegal in Jamaica, and people are actually growing it here,” said Michael Tucker, executive director of the NCDA. “First of all, we would have to get the Dangerous Drugs Act amended to include the mushrooms and then put regulation­s in place to control it.”

WEED OUT ABUSE

Tucker, while noting that the drug is not illegal, acknowledg­ed that there are individual­s who use it successful­ly for therapeuti­c reasons, but that there are others who will abuse it, and amending the regulation­s will help to weed out the latter. Furthermor­e, there ought to be public sensitisat­ion about its usage, he said.

“If used in the wrong volume or misused, it can cause psychotic episodes. Some of the psychiatri­sts have seen patients present with problems surroundin­g the misuse of mushrooms. Some people have gone to A&E to get assistance,”said Tucker, noting that users are of all ages.

Even some of the marijuana dispensari­es have ventured into the sale of magic mushrooms, he said, confirming observatio­ns carried out by The Gleaner over the last week. But they, too, have nothing stopping them from selling the hallucinog­en, a representa­tive close to the Cannabis Licensing Authority (CLA) explained on Tuesday.

Each dispensary must operate with a cannabis licence. That licence, however, does not limit them to selling cannabis-related products only.

NO RESTRICTIO­N

“We do find that some licensees may sell it, but since there is no law that restricts persons from selling it, they just go ahead and do. They wouldn’t be breaking the licensing agreement because the CLA does not have jurisdicti­on over that,” said the source, who was not authorised to speak to the media.

“What CLA has jurisdicti­on over is the ganja buds and the extracts, which is the oil and resins. So any parapherna­lia that they chose to sell, they can. There is no restrictio­n. The CLA can’t really do anything on that.”

Last week, three dispensari­es in the Corporate Area confirmed that they sold mushrooms. There is mushroom chocolate, gummies, chewing gum, raw mushroom, mushroom iced tea, and mushroom capsules. One location had raw mushroom, gummies, and tea for $500 per gram each while at the other two locations, gummies were being sold for $2,500 while capsules could cost customers as much as $10,000, a store attendant said.

“If it is your first time taking mushrooms, I suggest you start from the iced tea and then work your way up to the raw mushroom. After that you can try the capsule,” he said, noting that magic mushrooms are growing in demand.

On the street, The Gleaner understand­s that the drug can also be had for $4,500 for six capsules. One supplier said he paid US$800 per pound plus importatio­n to bring it into the country. Customers can purchase the mushrooms raw, but it would cost them much more than the capsules, he explained.

Tucker was speaking on the heels of the launch of an early warning drug-detection system earlier this month. That system, he said, is part of a network involving various stakeholde­rs charged with alerting the authoritie­s whenever a new drug surfaces on the island. It is an avenue of proactivel­y dealing with the drug problem and could have efficientl­y alerted officials to the recent ‘molly’ fad, which took root among the youths.

Not only does Tucker want amendments to the Dangerous Drugs Act, but he also wants lawmakers to make the law flexible “so that anything that surfaces as being misused, and which really does not have any practical medical applicatio­n, should be placed on the list of banned substances”.

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 ?? FILE ?? Michael Tucker, executive director of the National Council on Drug Abuse.
FILE Michael Tucker, executive director of the National Council on Drug Abuse.

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