Nicholas Sand

Nick Sand (born May 10, 1941)[1] is a cult figure known in the psychedelic community for his work as a clandestine chemist from 1966-1996 for the Brotherhood of Eternal Love.[2][3] Sand was also Chief Alchemist for the League for Spiritual Discovery at the Millbrook estate in New York and was credited as the "first underground chemist on record to have synthesized DMT".[4]

Background

Sand grew up in Brooklyn, New York and by his late teens he was already aware of the LSD scene developing around Greenwich Village. While attending Brooklyn College, Sand became interested in the teachings of Gurdjieff, the study of different cultures, and various Eastern philosophers.[5]

In 1961, he had his first mescaline experience.[1]

Graduating in 1966 with a degree in Anthropology and Sociology, Sand followed Leary and Alpert to Millbrook and became a guide to the psychedelic realm for many of the people who came to Millbrook. During this time Sand also began extracting DMT in his bathtub, and he is credited with being the first to discover that it was active when volatized (smoked).[5][6]

Sand later started a perfume company as a front for the production of Mescaline and DMT.[7]

Nick Sand and David L. Mantell were arrested on April 1, 1967 when their truck failed to stop at the Dinosuar, Colorado Port of Entry. The truck was eventually searched and federal agents reportedly found 313,000 doses of LSD and a laboratory-on-wheels.[8]

In 1967 Sand was introduced to fellow chemist Tim Scully, who trained under Owsley Stanley until Stanley's legal troubles in December 1967.[9]

In December 1968 Sand purchased a farmhouse in Windsor, California, at that time a small town in rural Sonoma County. There he and Scully set up a large LSD lab. Here they produced over 3.6 million tablets of LSD that was distributed under the name "orange sunshine".[2]

1972 Indictments

A joint state, federal and local strike force called "Operation BEL" was assembled in early 1972. On August 3, 1972 the Orange County, California Grand Jury returned an indictment against 29 alleged members of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, including Nick Sand; the indictment was primarily aimed at the hashish smuggling arm of the Brotherhood.[10]

The investigation continued and on December 6, 1972 the Orange County, California Grand Jury returned another indictment, this time aimed primarily against the Brotherhood of Eternal Love's "orange sunshine" LSD system; Nick Sand was included in that indictment too.[11]

1973 Arrest and Prosecution

On January 19, 1973 "Leland H. Jordan" (later identified as Nick Sand) and Judy Neal Shaughnessy were arrested on drug charges by Kirkwood, MO police, shortly after they arrived from San Francisco. Their residence at 425 North Highway 21 in Fenton, MO, an elaborate hilltop home on 18 acres of land, had been found to contain hundreds of gallons of chemicals and elaborate laboratory equipment [12][13][14]

On April 25, 1973, Nicholas Sand, Timothy Scully, Michael Randall and four other major figures in the LSD operation were indicted by a Federal grand jury in San Francisco, California.[15][16][17]

On January 30, 1974 Sand and Scully were found guilty [18][19] partially due to the testimony of Billy Hitchcock and other "snitches".[20][21] On March 8, 1974 Sand was sentenced to 15 years in a federal penitentiary.[22]

The defense offered at his trial claimed that the defendants had made ALD-52 instead of LSD-25 [23]

Sand's attorney appealed his conviction, based on four technical legal issues: pre-indictment delay, refusal to suppress bank records, lack of a taint hearing and use of Swiss Bank Records. The appeal was denied by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on September 13, 1976 and rehearing was denied October 8, 1976.[24]

LSD chemist William Leonard Pickard contributed to Sand's legal defense fund.[25]

Nicholas Sand fled to Canada in 1976, evading imprisonment. LSD historian Mark McCloud reports that Sand then traveled to the ashram of so-called "sex guru" Rajneesh in west India. Sand eventually returned to North America, again producing large quantities of LSD while spending his time between Mexico and Canada.[26] Sand was arrested for drug manufacturing in 1990 in British Columbia, but as he was living under an alias, police did not determine his identity and Sand fled while on bail.[27]

1996 Arrest

Living under the alias of David Roy Shepard, Sand was arrested again in 1996 in Canada. Refusing to cooperate with the police, it took forensic investigators two months to determine Shepard's real identity. Police found 43 grams of crystalline LSD at Sand's lab, approximately 430,000 doses of LSD. The bust also uncovered large quantities of DMT, 2C-B, MDMA, and $500,000 worth of cash and gold.[27] LSD historian Jesse Jarnow suggests that Sand's arrest was a factor leading to the turn-of-the-century decline in availability of LSD in the United States.[25]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Erowid Nick Sand Vault
  2. 1 2 Nocenti, Annie. Baldwin, Ruth. Krassner, Paul. The High Times Reader. Nation Books. 2004
  3. Oroc, James. Tryptamine Palace: 5-MeO-DMT and the Sonoran Desert Toad. Park Street Press. 2010.
  4. Wilcock, David. The Source Field Investigations Penguin Group. 2011.
  5. 1 2 Lee, Martin A. Shlain, Bruce. Acid Dreams: The Complete Social History of Lsd. Grove Press. 2007
  6. http://www.dmtsite.com/dmt/information/history_discovery.html
  7. The Brotherhood of Eternal Love Drug Library.net
  8. "LSD Lab Carried $1.5 Million of It". The Billings Gazette. Billings, Montana. United Press International. April 7, 1967. p. 2.
  9. Tendler, Stewart; May, David. The Brotherhood of Eternal Love. London: Panther Books. p. 109.
  10. United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act (October 8, 1973). Hashish Smuggling and Passport Fraud: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love (Report). pp. 21, 79.
  11. United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act (October 8, 1973). Hashish Smuggling and Passport Fraud: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love (Report). pp. 22, 79.
  12. "Quantity of Drug Materials Seized". Post-Dispatch. St Louis, MO. January 18, 1973. pp. 1, 5.
  13. "Pair Arrested in Drug Case". Post-Dispatch. St Louis, MO. January 20, 1973. pp. 1, 3.
  14. "Press for LSD Tablets Confiscated in Fenton". Post-Dispatch. St Louis, MO. January 22, 1973. p. 12b.
  15. United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act (October 8, 1973). Hashish Smuggling and Passport Fraud: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love (Report). p. 23.
  16. "8 Indicted by Federal Grand Jury After Worldwide Probe". The Times. San Mateo, California. Associated Press. April 26, 1973. p. 25.
  17. "Six 'World Suppliers' Are indicted In LSD Net". The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento, California. April 26, 1973. p. A18.
  18. Maxwell, Evan (February 1, 1974). "Federal Jury Convicts Two in LSD case". Los Angeles Times. p. OC_A3.
  19. McKillips, Drew (January 31, 1974). "2 Guilty in LSD, Tax Evasion Case". San Francisco Chronicle. p. 4.
  20. Lembke, Daryl (November 15, 1973). "Oil Heir Testifies on Financing of LSD Lab". The Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. p. 27.
  21. Fosburgh, Lacey (January 28, 1974). "Oil Millionaire Key in Drug Case". The New York Times. New York, New York. p. 16.
  22. Gieber, Stephen (March 15–31, 1974). "Scully gets twenty years, Acid trial's judge freaks out, saves US from mind-expanders". Berkeley Barb. Berkeley, California. p. 15.
  23. Gieber, Stephen (January 25–31, 1974). "The Acid Trial Peaks". Berkeley Barb. Berkeley, California. pp. 3–4.
  24. US v Sand, 541 F.2d 1370 (9th Circuit 1976).
  25. 1 2 Jarnow, Jesse (2016). Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America (First ed.). Boston: Da Capo. p. 357. ISBN 978-0-306-82255-1.
  26. Jarnow, Jesse (2016). Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America (First ed.). Boston: Da Capo. p. 356. ISBN 978-0-306-82255-1.
  27. 1 2 Wallace, Bill (19 December 1996). "LSD Fugitive From '70s Busted for Lab in Canada". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 3 October 2016.

External links

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