Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jan 2008 Source: Daily Camera (Boulder, CO) Copyright: 2008 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.dailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Silvia Pettem Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BOULDER'S DRUG USE SKYROCKETED IN THE LATE '60S When Donald Vendel became Boulder's new police chief in 1967, he wrote a column in the Camera titled "Chief's Corner." At the time, illegal drugs had become Boulder's biggest police problem, but the city's residents knew very little about them. In one of Vendel's articles, he invited the locals to bring their own popcorn and to view a free movie at the Boulder Public Library on "the dangerous mind-warping drug LSD." Drug use was rapidly increasing. Before long, Boulder became known as "a home for displaced hippies and a crossroads of the nation's drug traffic," according to a Camera reporter. The beginning of Boulder's drug era coincided with major societal changes all across the United States. The American build-up in Vietnam fed the country's social unrest and was partly responsible for the rise of its counterculture. Closer to home, Boulder voters, after 60 years, finally repealed the prohibition that had outlawed the sale of liquor within the city limits. While the Catacombs (in the basement of the Hotel Boulderado) and Tom's Tavern scrambled to get liquor licenses, the Boulder Police Department began its crackdown on drugs. By the summer of 1968, marijuana sold for $100 a kilogram, and LSD came in lots of 100. The late Harvard professor Dr. Timothy Leary had encouraged the use of the hallucinogen, telling young people to "turn on, tune in, and drop out." Transient subgroups hitchhiked to the foothills west of Boulder, where they freely sold and used drugs from their makeshift shelters and plastic lean-tos. Meanwhile, narcotics detectives made the circuit of service clubs and luncheon groups, urging members to write to their legislators to demand laws against the possession, use and sale of illegal drugs. In the first six months of 1969 alone, Boulder police seized more hallucinogens and amphetamines than did the Denver Police Department, prompting the Boulder police to add two more narcotics detectives to the two already employed. In 1969, after Hill merchants filed numerous complaints about loitering, panhandling, vagrancy and drug use, the police increased their patrols of the neighborhood. By then, heroin had become available on the street, and LSD sold for $4 per tab. Marijuana, most of which was imported from Mexico, had risen to $125 to $180 per kilogram, broken down on the street to $15 to $20 baggies. The stronger drug hashish, a purified resin prepared from the flowering tops of female marijuana plants, was valued at $10 per gram. Undercover agents were already at work, mixing with the "pushers" and setting up sales that led to the drug dealers' arrests. One of the first "busts" involved two detectives from the Adams County Sheriff's Department who worked with Boulder detectives, since those from Adams County were not known to local suspects. Boulder's drug problem grew so rapidly that a 1969 newspaper article stated that police were "losing the battle." Boulder dealers supplied other dealers in St. Louis, Kansas City and Chicago. The Camera quoted one police officer at the time who stated, "If the Chicago vice squad wants to know what they'll have to deal with in November, they call Boulder in October." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake