{"id":4592,"date":"2021-06-16T16:30:24","date_gmt":"2021-06-16T16:30:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/?p=4592"},"modified":"2021-06-16T16:32:02","modified_gmt":"2021-06-16T16:32:02","slug":"the-acid-house","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/archives\/4592","title":{"rendered":"The acid house"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><br><strong>A look at Britain as a producer of illegal<br>drugs, Peter Simonson revisits the 1970s, when a remote Welsh<br>mansion was home to the world\u2019s biggest LSD factory.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>If you were to ask the man on the proverbial Clapham omnibus<br>where the majority of the world\u2019s illegal drugs were supplied<br>from, he\u2019d probably mention the coca covered mountains of<br>Colombia or the opium poppy fields of Afghanistan. If he were<br>a little more knowledgeable, he might mention the fact the<br>majority of herbal cannabis smoked in Britain is grown within<br>its borders in suburban houses, warehouses and industrial<br>estates \u2013 nearly 7,000 of which were closed last year. But our<br>role as a mass producer of illegal drugs is not just a recent<br>trend. During the late Seventies, Britain was the world\u2019s largest<br>producer of LSD.<br>Before LSD was made illegal in 1966, the nascent devotees of<br>its psychedelic properties obtained their supply legally through<br>its originator, Sandoz Chemical in Switzerland. Post-ban, LSD<br>was obtained from illegal labs outside Britain, most famously<br>from clandestine chemist Oswald Augustus Owsley III in<br>California.<br>However, there were some small LSD labs operating within<br>UK borders. In 1968 an Islington pharmacist, Victor Kapur, was<br>jailed for nine years after producing 19 grams of LSD (enough<br>for 95,000 doses) in two labs. One lab was in his garage and<br>another in the back room of his chemist shop on the New<br>North Road. A year later Peter Simmons and Quentin Theobald<br>were jailed for five and seven years respectively after police<br>busted two clandestine labs, one on a caravan site in the East<br>End and another at Theobald\u2019s home in Hythe, Kent. But the<br>urban LSD labs soon disappeared, partly because the LSD scene<br>itself \u2013 which centred around squatted hippy communes in<br>the London districts of Notting Hill and Camden \u2013 was being<br>constantly targeted by police.<br>From the late Sixties groups of hippies in Britain and<br>America started setting up alternative communities away from<br>the big cities, in rural idylls, where they could live without<br>being routinely harassed by the \u2018The Man\u2019. In the US, this<br>counter-culture exodus away from urban centres led to an<br>exodus to far flung states such as New Mexico, were they were<br>relatively free to live alternative lifestyles and consume and<br>produce drugs \u2013 as the police force was scattered over<br>an immense area. In the UK, they left the squatted<br>communes of London for the verdant fields of Wales.<br>Like their New Mexican brethren, hippies and counter<br>cultural types could set up their utopian communities<br>of free love, self sufficiency and, of course, the<br>consumption of psychoactive drugs, without too much<br>fear of being troubled by the local constabulary.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>THEY PURCHASED A CRUMBLING<br>MANSION IN THE CAMBRIAN<br>MOUNTAINS NEAR CARNO,<br>CALLED PLAS LLYSN, WITH THE<br>AIM OF MAKING LSD THERE<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>This was augmented by the burgeoning appeal of the free<br>music festival scene in Wales, including the Elan Valley Free<br>festival in Rhyader, the mushroom festival at Pontrhydygroes<br>and the legendary Meigan Fayres in the Preselli mountains.<br>The remoteness of parts of the Welsh countryside suited these<br>festivals, while the locals were accommodating and happy<br>to rent out their fields to the nomadic hippies. Local Welsh<br>markets, stores and pubs mostly welcomed the increased trade.<br>Of course the main drugs consumed at such festivals were<br>cannabis, magic mushrooms and LSD. In the late Sixties the<br>area was visited by luminaries who felt a certain anonymity<br>there, such as Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix and Keith Richards.<br>According to Lyn Ebenezer, a local reporter at the time, Bob<br>Dylan also visited under the assumed name, Jerry. A farm<br>worker in the area later saw the cover of Nashville Skyline and<br>stated: \u201cDamn, I didn\u2019t know Jerry had made a record.\u201d This<br>fertile and somewhat remote environment was the ideal place<br>to set up a clandestine lab. Enter chemist Richard Kemp.<br>JANUARY\/FEBRUARY 2011 DRUGLINK | 21<br>In the late Sixties Kemp had been working with David<br>Solomon in Cambridge in an attempt to produce synthetic<br>THC, the active ingredient in cannabis. Solomon had edited a<br>book in 1964, LSD: The Consciousness Expanding Drug and had<br>been a regular at Millbrook, where Timothy Leary conducted<br>group therapy with LSD. Kemp travelled initially to France<br>with Solomon with the intention of producing THC, but soon<br>tried his hand producing LSD. With the financial help of an<br>American friend of Solomon\u2019s, Paul Arnabaldi, they purchased<br>a crumbling mansion in the Cambrian Mountains near Carno,<br>called Plas Llysn, with the aim of making LSD there.<br>Although LSD was illegal, the possession of its precursor<br>chemicals, such as ergotoxine tartrate, was not against the law.<br>This helped Kemp and his friend, Andy Munro, another chemist<br>with an interest in making LSD. They were able too buy most<br>of the precursor chemicals, through front companies, from<br>Czechoslovakia. Then the production line began to roll.<br>Prior to Kemp and Munro\u2019s LSD factory, illicit acid had been<br>mainly available in liquid form dropped onto sugar cubes,<br>on blotting paper and as capsules. Kemp\u2019s premier skills as a<br>chemist came to the fore in perfecting a smaller, more easily<br>transportable form of LSD, which was to become known as the<br>microdot. Their invention, which became a form of \u2018brand\u2019,<br>would prove a global hit, with the lab producing hundreds of<br>thousands of LSD microdots a year ending up as far afield as<br>Canada and Australia.<br>LSD had become a drug not just associated with hippies. As<br>Andy Roberts notes in Albion Dreaming, in the Sixties certain<br>drugs were associated with certain discrete subcultures. But<br>from the early Seventies onwards, this delineation breaks<br><br>But what of illicit production of drugs in the UK post<br>Operation Julie? While Julie was a landmark case<br>due to its international scale and its links with the<br>counter culture of the day, the arrests clearly did not<br>stop budding chemists from attempting to produce<br>illicit substances<br>The rise of Acid House and outdoor raves from 1987,<br>which in many ways mirrored the free festivals<br>of the 70\u2019s and probably exceeded them in terms<br>of numbers attending the events, provided the<br>opportunity for budding chemists with a taste for<br>psychoactive substances and an un-taxable income.<br>In the US, two books by Dr Alexander Shulgin and<br>Ann Shulgin, \u201cPiHKAL: A Chemical Love Story\u201d (1991)<br>and TiHKAL: The Continuation\u201d (1997), provided<br>the chemical formulas for a range of psychedelics,<br>empathogens, amphetamines, and tryptamines.<br>1993<br>Paul Halfpenny, a research chemist with Parke Davis, the<br>pharmaceutical arm of multinational Warner Lambert,<br>was arrested with 2kg of amphetamine sulphate near<br>Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire. Halfpenny, along with fellow<br>Parke Davis chemist, Dr Reginald Richardson, appeared<br>to have been producing amphetamine and attempting<br>to produce MDMA at Parke Davis\u2019 Addenbrooke labs. Dr<br>Richardson was eventually cleared of all charges, while<br>Halfpenny was found guilty of possession, production of<br>controlled drugs and conspiracy to produce MDMA.<br>1998<br>Operation Pirate, one of the largest police operations against<br>UK clandestine chemists, saw amphetamine sulphate<br>labs being dismantled in Merseyside, Cheshire, Cumbria<br>and Greater Manchester. An 18-man organisation led by<br>Frederick Cook were arrested and charged. Police discovered<br>a clandestine lab in a remote cottage in Cumbria with<br>enough precursor chemicals to enable the gang to produce<br>\u00a318 million worth of speed at street value. A further raid<br>at a furniture warehouse in Widnes, appropriately named<br>\u2018Aladdin\u2019s Cave\u2019, netted a further batch of chemicals which<br>could have produced \u00a34 million worth of amphetamine. Along<br>with the other raids the total value of drugs was estimated by<br>the police to be worth in the region of \u00a336 million.<br>2004<br>The first detected case of LSD production post Operation<br>Julie was discovered in a house in Ovingdean, near Brighton.<br>Casey Hardison, an expat American and self-styled medical<br>anthropologist was raided after a tip-off from US Customs,<br>who had seized a package containing \u00a34K worth of MDMA<br>that Hardison had posted to America. During the raid,<br>police in chemical protection gear dismantled the lab and<br>discovered 145,000 blotter tabs of LSD, quantities of the<br>psychedelic disassociatives DMT and 2CB and evidence that<br>Hardison had bought \u00a338K worth of precursor chemicals<br>used to produce psychedelics. He was charged with<br>producing LSD, DMT and 2CB, intent to supply LSD and<br>trafficking. At his trial in 2005, Hardison, much like Kemp<br>back in \u201978, pleaded that he was motivated not by profit,<br>but by the spiritual \u201cjourney\u201d to produce LSD. Prosecutors<br>argued that he had moved to the UK to produce LSD to<br>avoid heat from US police. Hardison was found guilty and<br>sentenced to 20 years and is currently campaigning against<br>the sentence through the Drug Equality Alliance.<br>2005<br>Peter Sanders had turned his legitimate chemical company,<br>Sanchem, into an after hours amphetamine lab with the<br>help of his top chemist Ian Kilner. Through Sanchem they<br>were able to procure the chemicals to produce Benzyl Methyl<br>Ketone (BMK) a precursor in the production of amphetamine<br>sulphate. They produced the BMK at a remote farmhouse<br>near Southport and transported it back to a portakabin on<br>the Sanchem site to convert into amphetamine. When the<br>police raided Sanchem they found enough precursors to<br>produce \u00a34.2 million worth of amphetamine paste. Arrested<br>alongside Sanders and Kilner were Steve Dalton (found with<br>\u00a31.5 million of amphetamine paste in his wardrobe), Anthony<br>Bodell, and the alleged ringleader, Leonard Briscoe Stubbs.<br>Bodell and Stubbs were jailed for five and a half years each,<br>Dalton for four years and Kilner and Sanders got three years<br>each. Interestingly, Stubbs had previously received two years<br>after being arrested during Operation Pirate (see 1998).<br>2006<br>The first case against UK manufacturers of<br>methamphetamine appeared before the courts. Timothy<br>Morgan, David Walker and Stefan Thomas had attempted<br>to set up a bogus chemical supply company in order to buy<br>ephedrine, used in the production of methamphetamine.<br>When this failed they resorted to the US method of buying<br>up cough medicines from which they extracted the drug. The<br>police investigation estimated that the gang had the potential<br>to produce \u00a31.5 million of methamphetamine per year.<br>AFTER JULIE: UK synthetic drug factories since Kemp and Munro\u2019s lab<br>JANUARY\/FEBRUARY 2011 DRUGLINK | 23<br>down. Even punks who positioned themselves as opposed to<br>everything hippies stood for, took LSD.<br>The growth of LSD use inevitably came to the attention of<br>British police, who had worked out that an LSD factory was<br>based in the UK. While Kemp and Munro\u2019s lab was in full<br>production mode, under the watchful eye of Detective Inspector<br>Dick Lee, a police task force began to gather intelligence<br>at commercial concerts and free festivals, using a team of<br>undercover officers with outgrown hair and hippy clothing.<br>The evidence coming back to DI Lee was irrefutable: LSD was<br>everywhere. And all roads seemed to lead to a \u2018Richard Kemp\u2019<br>in Wales.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>TO THIS DAY, THERE ARE STILL<br>RECURRING, HOLY GRAIL-LIKE<br>TALES OF \u2018JULIE\u2019 MICRODOTS BEING<br>UNCOVERED, SUCH WAS THE QUALITY<br>OF KEMP\u2019S CHEMISTRY<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The international dimension to the case only dawned on DI Lee<br>when he visited the Home Office laboratories in Aldermaston<br>during the early Seventies. He was told that 95 per cent of the<br>LSD being seized in the UK and 50 per cent worldwide was in<br>microdot form \u2013 the mark of Kemp and Munro\u2019s production<br>line. Lee had further intelligence that the wholesale price<br>of LSD was substantially cheaper within the Welsh borders<br>than elsewhere in the UK. By 1976 Lee had joined up the<br>links between Wales and the global supply of LSD and the<br>organisation encompassing Richard Kemp, Andy Munro,<br>Christine Bott (Kemp\u2019s partner), Henry Todd, David Solomon<br>and a cast of others.<br>On a very small budget, DI Lee set up a surveillance team<br>to gather evidence on the goings on at Plas Llysn. Officers<br>disguised as coal mining surveyors and itinerant fishermen<br>were, within the confines of the Welsh countryside, trying<br>to bring down a worldwide drug production ring which was<br>using pubs in rural Welsh towns and villages such as Tregaron,<br>Cwmann and Ffarmers to exchange massive supplies of LSD.<br>On March 26 1977, \u2018Operation Julie\u2019, named after a female<br>officer who had been working on the case, sprung into action.<br>Over 800 officers raided 83 locations across England and Wales.<br>Police discovered 600,000 microdots buried in a field near<br>Reading and 120 grams of LSD crystals \u2013 enough to produce 1.2<br>million microdots \u2013 beneath a compost heap near Christine<br>Botts\u2019 potato patch. A further 50,000 microdots were found<br>under a stone in a field near Plas Llysyn and 100,000 microdots<br>in a Winalot dog biscuit box buried in another local field.<br>A raid on the organisation\u2019s London HQ netted enough LSD<br>crystal to make a further 2.5 million microdots. In a safety<br>deposit box in Christine Bott\u2019s name in Zurich police discovered<br>cash, a gold bar and 2kg of ergotamine tartrate. Later, after<br>a police tip-off in October, a further 1.3kg of LSD crystal was<br>discovered, buried beneath Kemp and Botts kitchen.<br>At the trial in 1978, Mr Justice Parks sentenced 17 defendants<br>to a total of 124 years. Kemp got 13, Todd, 13, Solomon, 11,<br>Munro, 10 and harshest of all, Christine Bott received nine<br>years.<br>Bott had not been<br>actively involved in the production<br>or distribution of the LSD and as the secondary<br>chemist, Andy Munro said: \u201cBott got nine years for making<br>sandwiches. I got 10 for making acid.\u201d<br>Kemp had originally written an 8,000 word defence<br>statement, but was advised by his lawyers against using it. It<br>was released at the time to a journalist at the Cambrian News<br>who pr\u00e9cised it under the headline \u2018Microdoctrine \u2013 the tenets<br>behind Kemp\u2019s LSD\u2019. The gist of Kemp\u2019s defence was that LSD<br>was a catalyst for social change, the motive was the ideal not<br>the money.<br>Even after the court case, the gang\u2019s hoard of LSD was being<br>unearthed. A cache of one million microdots was discovered<br>buried in a wood in Bedfordshire in September 1979. It took the<br>total value of the six million LSD tabs seized during Operation<br>Julie to \u00a3100 million. To this day, there are still recurring, Holy<br>Grail-like tales of \u2018Julie\u2019 microdots being uncovered, such was<br>the quality of Kemp\u2019s chemistry.<br>The use of LSD has, since the Seventies, rapidly declined.<br>Its use had a strong following within the anarcho-punk scene<br>and the travelling hippy communities. The mixing of these two<br>scenes saw the emergence of the \u2018new age traveller\u2019 movement,<br>which coincided with the rise of the rave scene.<br>The last British Crime Survey puts last year LSD use<br>amongst 16-59 year olds at 0.2 per cent of the population.<br>Those seeking spiritual enlightenment or psychedelic pranks<br>still have other avenues to choose. As Mark E Smith of The Fall<br>sang in 1979 a year after the Operation Julie, \u201cI don\u2019t need the<br>acid factories, I\u2019ve got mushrooms in the field,\u201d while others<br>buy substances such as San Pedro cactus and Salvia Divinorum,<br>plus an array of \u2018research chemicals\u2019 available online and<br>produced in the Far East.<br>Many of the outlaw British chemists of the 21st Century<br>seem more motivated by the quest for financial rather than<br>spiritual gain. But although illegal use of LSD is ever declining,<br>after some 50 years in the cupboard, it\u2019s now enjoying a<br>psychotherapeutical renaissance. The Multidisciplinary<br>Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) highlights research<br>in Switzerland which uses LSD to reduce anxiety for people<br>with terminal illnesses, while the Beckley Foundation is looking<br>at the use of LSD in brain imaging research. Albert Hoffman\u2019s<br>\u2018problem child\u2019 appears to be having a rebirth.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Peter Simonson is a research intern at the<br>UK Drug Policy Commission <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.drugwise.org.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/Acid-house.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">http:\/\/www.drugwise.org.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/Acid-house.pdf<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Operation Julie: The World\u2019s Greatest LSD Bust,<br>by Lyn Ebenezer, is published by Y Lolfa (2010)<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A look at Britain as a producer of illegaldrugs, Peter Simonson revisits the 1970s, when a remote Welshmansion was home to the world\u2019s biggest LSD factory. If you were to ask the man on the proverbial Clapham omnibuswhere the majority &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/archives\/4592\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"advanced_seo_description":"","jetpack_seo_html_title":"","jetpack_seo_noindex":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[1],"tags":[584,578],"class_list":["post-4592","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-1","tag-acid","tag-house"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack-related-posts":[],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4592","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4592"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4592\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4595,"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4592\/revisions\/4595"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4592"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4592"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alanlodge.co.uk\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4592"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}