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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 31, 2003
PICKARD
AND APPERSON CONVICTED OF LSD CHARGES
LARGEST LSD LAB SEIZURE IN DEA HISTORY
Special Agent in
Charge Stephen Delgado, Drug Enforcement Administration, San Francisco
Field Division, and United States Attorney Eric Melgren, District of Kansas,
announced today that Bay Area residents William Leonard Pickard, 57, Mill
Valley, California, and Clyde Apperson, 47, Sunnyvale, California, were
found guilty today, following an eleven week jury trail of one count of
conspiracy to manufacture and distribute more than 10 grams of LSD from
August 1999 through November 2000 and one count of possession with the
intent to distribute more than 10 grams of LSD on November 6, 2000.
Melgren stated that
according to court testimony, this was the largest LSD lab seizure
ever made by the Drug Enforcement Administration. DEA agents seized
approximately 41.3 kilograms (90.86 pounds) of LSD, approximately 23.6
kilograms (51.92 pounds) of iso-LSD, a by-product from the manufacture
of LSD.
Further trial evidence
established that in the history of DEA there have only been four seizures
of complete LSD labs and three of these seizures involved Packard and
Apperson including a lab in Mountain View, California in 1998, a lab in
Oregon in 1996, and this lab in Wamego, Kansas
According to court
testimony, on October 31, 2000, DEA agents conducted a search of a silo
site near Wamego, Kansas, and found a LSD lab packed in storage boxes.
On November 6, 2000, Pickard and Apperson were moving the illegal lab
when they were stopped by the Kansas Highway Patrol. Apperson was arrested
driving the rental truck containing the lab. Pickard, who was driving
a Buick LeSabre, fled on foot and was arrested the next day at a farm
outside Wamego. Fourteen canisters of a chemical required to produce LSD
valued at over $1,000,000 were found at the missile silo. According to
court testimony, Pickard and Apperson previously manufactured LSD in Santa
Fe, New Mexico, where every five weeks the lab produced about 2.2 pounds
of LSD, approximately 10 million doses that cost less than one cent a
dose to produce and would sell for as much as $10 a dose. According to
court testimony, the LSD was shipped to California and later to Europe
for distribution.
Pickard and Apperson
each face a minimum of ten years and a maximum of life in federal prison
without parole. Sentencing is scheduled for August 8, 2003 at 9:00 a.
m. in Kansas. Pickard remains in federal custody and Apperson was remanded
to federal custody today.
The DEA San Francisco
office initiated this case and provided crucial assistance throughout
the trial. SAC Delgado stated: "The investigators in this case displayed
extraordinary tenacity and dedicated long hours away from home and their
families. LSD, like all illegal drugs, are a threat to our children and
our communities in the San Francisco Bay Area. The San Francisco office
will continue its relentless efforts to protect the Nation from the dangers
posed by drug traffickers."
United States Attorney Eric Melgren stated: "This is just one example
of the fine work of the Drug Enforcement Administration, in cooperation
with other law enforcement agencies, in the continuing fight against illegal
drugs. We are pleased to have led the effort to protect our citizens against
the dangers of LSD by this significant disruption in the nationwide supply
of this drug.
SAC Delgado wishes
to publicly thank United States Attorney Eric Melgren for his leadership
in the prosecution of this case and all the local law enforcement agencies
that helped us bring this case to today's conclusion.
For additional information,
please contact Special Agent Richard Meyer at the DEA San Francisco Division
at 415-436-7994.
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