Colorado could become 2nd state to decriminalize mushrooms

Jason Lopez, a proponent of a Colorado general election ballot measure to decriminalize psychedelic mushrooms, is shown on his family's property Sunday, Oct. 30, 2022, near Morrison, Colo. If the measure is passed by voters next Tuesday, Colorado would become the second state in the union—behind only Oregon—to decriminalize the mushrooms for people 21 and over. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

DENVER (AP) — Fresh off his third tour of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, Jason Lopez awoke in crisis from an alcohol-induced nap during a family gathering in Colorado in 2014. The Army Special Forces soldier, thinking he was once again in battle, grabbed the heavy coffee table in front of him and threw it across the living room.

"(I was) coming out of an intense panic situation, thinking I was in, literally, hand-to-hand combat and not knowing whether I was dreaming or what was reality,” recalled Lopez, now 34 and out of the military.

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