Pubdate: Sat, 07 Sep 2002 Source: West Australian (Australia) Copyright: 2002 West Australian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.thewest.com.au Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/495 Author: Eloise Dortch MUSHROOMS LEAD TO COURT TRIP A POLICE crackdown saw 15 people appear in Donnybrook Magistrate's Court on magic mushroom charges on Thursday. As charges were read, it became clear most had gathered the fungi at a Forest Products Commission-managed pine plantation near Balingup, a popular picking site for years. Residents of Balingup, about 70km south-east of Bunbury, have long complained of stoned mushroom pickers knocking on their door seeking help when lost or out of fuel. Every winter as mushrooms have pushed up through the pine needles, police have had an easy job catching the culprits. Forty people were caught in three weeks in June. Possession of the mushrooms, which contain a prohibited drug, carries fines of up to hundreds of dollars and the likelihood of a criminal conviction. Police warn that ingesting mushrooms also can cause psychological problems. All 15 in court pleaded guilty and were fined an average of $100 each plus $57 court costs. Past fines have been as high as $400. Sen. Const. Peter Duncan, of Donnybrook police, said police knew exactly where pickers went. Parked cars were a giveaway and locals had no hesitation in calling police. "The intelligence is extrmeely good," Sen. Const. Duncan said. "Because it's seasonal, you can be down there and waiting for them." Forest Products Commission plantation manager Sean Sawyer said that experiments to eradicate mushrooms from the plantation had met with varying success. Clearing and burning pine debries, spreading superphosphate - which shrivelled growing mushrooms - and introducing grazing cattle had been tried. But the unpredictable nature of mushroom growth made it hard to know what resources to use, and where. This winter had followed two years of drought in the Balingup area. Magistrate Robert Lawrence was heard to mutter in court that it must have been a good crop this year. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake