Drug activist draws flak for sending magic mushrooms, coca leaf to B.C. MLAs
Surrey South MLA Elenore Sturko calls Dana Larsen's actions inconsiderate and frustrating
A well-known cannabis and drug policy reform activist says he sent samples of illegal drugs to every member of the legislative assembly in British Columbia to show elected officials the benefits of the substances' "medicinal effects."
Dana Larsen, who runs the Medicinal Mushroom Dispensary in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, says he mailed all 87 B.C. MLAs one gram of psilocybin mushrooms and a coca leaf as "gifts" for the holidays.
Psilocybin is a hallucinogenic compound found in mushrooms.
The drug is prohibited in Canada by the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. Some exemptions exist in B.C. for people who possess and consume drugs, however, it is illegal to traffic psilocybin and other psychedelic drugs without an exemption from Health Canada.
"I wanted to show our elected officials what these things really are," Larsen told Gloria Macarenko, host of CBC's On The Coast. "There's nothing to be afraid of when it comes to a coca leaf or a mushroom."
The package also included a user guide and a two-page letter calling on MLAs to rethink drug policies.
Larsen has previously made headlines for mailing B.C. Premier Christy Clark a half-ounce of marijuana back in 2014 to "help resolve a B.C. teachers' strike."
He says his recent "holiday gifts" to MLAs are in response to raids executed by Vancouver Police Department on his three psilocybin stores in November.
"I was also held in police custody for seven hours and then I was released with no charges and I reopened our store the very next day," he said.
The dispensary owner makes no attempt to hide the federally-controlled substance it offers.
"If we look back to the legalization of cannabis, it took exactly this kind of civil disobedience to get these laws changed," he added. "I hope in five or 10 years when we finally get these laws changed, elected officials will also accept the legalization of psychedelic mushrooms."
Larsen draws criticism from MLAs
A letter enclosed in the package asked MLAs to discourage raids at mushroom dispensaries like his and invited them to visit his stores.
Surrey South MLA Elenore Sturko, B.C. United critic for mental health, addiction, recovery and education, called Larsen's move "inconsiderate."
"I am a person who lives in sobriety and maybe there are members who are former substance users and to get these gifts in their mail is really an inconsiderate act," she told CBC's On The Coast.
Sturko said she and other B.C. United MLAs are turning the drugs over to police.
"It frustrates me and angers me that he is putting the public at risk and then considers himself a hero," she said.
Other elected officials have also spoken out against the packages, including B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad.
"Premier Eby's NDP have been clear: they want to 'de-stigmatize' the use of hard drugs which kill people, ruin lives, and destroy our communities," Rustad said in a statement to CBC News. "This is the result of their policies and approach."
Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth also condemned Larsen's actions.
"The irresponsible act of sending illegal substances to MLA offices in British Columbia is reprehensible and wrong," Farnworth said. "Government has alerted law enforcement. They have provided instructions to MLA offices on the appropriate actions to take."
- With files from Charlie Cho, Joel Ballard and On The Coast