William Leonard Pickard
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William Leonard Pickard (b. 1945) is a Harvard graduate from Mill Valley, California and a former deputy director of a University of California program that tracks illegal drugs.
[edit] Biography
He was also a finalist in 1963 in what was then the Westinghouse Science Talent Search.[1] (The contest is now known as the Intel Science Talent Search following a change in sponsorship.) He is currently being held in the United States Penitentiary of Victorville, California (AKA USP Victorville), a high security prison, and is appealing a 2003 conviction in which he was sentenced to 2 concurrent life sentences without the possibility of parole for conspiracy to manufacture LSD at a converted Atlas-E nuclear missile launch facility in Kansas. Pickard denies the charges and claims that he was investigating the emerging use of ayahuasca and DMT analogues.
The DEA believes that Pickard and his partner Clyde Apperson were responsible for manufacturing a majority of the LSD sold in the United States and cites a 95 percent reduction in the drug's availability as evidence of this. The DEA maintains that Pickard and Apperson previously manufactured LSD in Mountain View, California, in Oregon and in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The DEA claims their Santa Fe lab typically produced about 1 kilogram or 2.2 pounds of pure LSD, about 10 million doses with a street value of about $40 million, every five weeks.
[edit] Controversy
Within the recreational drug community, Pickard's actions were controversial. Alexander Shulgin regarded Pickard, his former student, as having "pulled a Leary" (a reference to Timothy Leary and his quest to make the psychedelic drug experience more widely known about, even at his personal expense).
Apart from the contentious Rolling Stone interview [1], the trial also generated controversy surrounding its proceedings. The government informant and principal witness at trial, Gordon Todd Skinner, was arrested a few months after Pickard's trial and convicted of distributing MDMA at the Burning Man festival near Reno, Nevada. Skinner was also charged with the interstate kidnapping and torture of an 18 year-old male. Skinner's kidnapping charges occurred after he was granted immunity in exchange for helping the prosecution.