William Leonard Pickard

Researcher

Birthday October 21, 1945

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace DeKalb County, Georgia

Age 78 years old

Nationality Georgia

#44250 Most Popular

1945

William Leonard Pickard (born October 21, 1945) is one of two people convicted in the largest lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) manufacturing case in history.

1960

It is reported by LSD historian Mark McCloud that Pickard worked with a group of LSD traffickers, known as the Clear Light System, in the 1960s.

1971

In 1971, he got a job as a research manager at the University of California, Berkeley, Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, a job he held until 1974.

From then on, his academic resume begins a 20-year gap.

1972

Pickard is said to have contributed to LSD chemist Nicholas Sand's legal fund following Sand's arrest in 1972.

Pickard also reportedly had a background manufacturing the drug MDA.

1988

In December 1988, a neighbor reported a strange chemical odor coming from an architectural shop at a Mountain View, California, industrial park.

Federal agents arrived to find 200,000 doses of LSD and Pickard inside.

Pickard was charged with manufacturing LSD and served five years in prison.

His first arrest for manufacturing LSD came on December 28, 1988, in Mountain View, California.

The laboratory was contained inside a trailer that had been moved into a warehouse.

It contained state-of-the-art equipment, including a roto-evaporator, heating mantles and a pill press.

He was producing kilogram quantities of LSD and putting them onto windowpane (gel), Microdot (tablet), and blotter forms (blotter paper).

He spent time in prison for this and became a Buddhist while inside.

Pickard had laboratories in a number of different locations.

Pickard never liked to stay at one location more than two years so as not to draw attention to himself.

1994

By 1994, Pickard had enrolled at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

There, he focused on drug abuse in the former Soviet Union, where he theorized that the booming black market and many unemployed chemists could lead to a flood of the drug market.

It is not publicly known where Pickard initially produced LSD.

1996

In early 1996, the lab was located in Oregon; it was subsequently moved to Aspen, Colorado, in late 1996.

1997

From September 1997 to September 1999, the laboratory was located in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

He liked the Santa Fe location for a number of reasons; his overhead costs were lower and the precursor source was closer.

He also liked the fact that there was virtually no humidity, which can affect the production of LSD.

All of the laboratories are alleged to have produced a kilogram of LSD approximately every five weeks.

1998

Gordon Todd Skinner became involved with Pickard and his partner Clyde Apperson in February 1998.

It is rumored that Pickard and Skinner were introduced to each other in a somewhat formal gathering of various LSD dealers and chemists.

The meeting is said to have taken place in the former home of Jerry and Carolyn Garcia (Mountain Girl), where Skinner was allegedly then living.

One of his main customers was a man named "Petaluma Al" from Petaluma, California.

Pickard would always arrange for the produced LSD to be transported to the Denver, Colorado, or Boulder, Colorado, area to be mailed or picked up so that Petaluma Al would never know where the laboratory was located.

Most of Petaluma Al's customers were overseas in Europe, which meant that in addition to millions of dollars in United States currency, Pickard also handled millions in Dutch guilders and Canadian bank notes.

2000

In 2000, while moving their LSD laboratory across Kansas, Pickard and Clyde Apperson were pulled over while driving a Ryder rental truck and a follow car.

The laboratory had been stored near a renovated Atlas-E missile silo near Wamego, Kansas.

Gordon Todd Skinner, one of the men intimately involved in the case but not charged due to his cooperation, owned the property where the laboratory equipment was stored.

He preferred to deal in ƒ1,000 notes or Canadian $1,000 notes (discontinued since 2000 in Canada) because it meant less bulk cash to have on hand.

He required his distributors to convert all lower currencies into $50 or $100 notes at the least so as not to cause problems.

2020

On July 27, 2020, Pickard was granted compassionate release from federal prison 20 years into his sentence.

Prior to his arrest, Pickard was deputy director of the Drug Policy Research Program at the University of California, Los Angeles.

He came from a well-to-do family; his father was a lawyer and his stepmother was a fungal disease expert at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In high school, he was an honors student, played basketball, and was named "most intellectual".

He earned a scholarship to Princeton University, but dropped out after one term, instead preferring to hang out at Greenwich Village jazz clubs.