Crystal Romero had battled darkness for over a decade, struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder and depression after a long career in the New Mexico Army National Guard. She was treated with antidepressants but didn’t find solace and healing until she was introduced to psilocybin mushrooms in Jamaica.
The Albuquerque mother of three believes the use of psychedelic drugs — at low doses and in a controlled environment — can do tremendous good for people in New Mexico, a state that long has seen high rates of poverty and addiction. Now she wants others to have access to psilocybin-assisted therapy.
“Working with psilocybin has really allowed me to sit with my grief,” Romero said. “Depression doesn’t have to consume your life. I was able to reconnect with myself, reconnect with kids, reconnect with my community.”
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Under new legislation, New Mexico is following the path of Oregon and Colorado in preparing to roll out a tightly regulated medical psilocybin program by late 2027. Proponents of psilocybin, the naturally occurring psychoactive ingredient in “magic mushrooms,” celebrated in April when Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed the legislation allowing the program into law.
Some studies on psilocybin-aided treatment have been promising, they point out, and there is a new wave of interest in popular culture.
The practice of microdosing, or using very small amounts of a psychedelic for treatment, has hit the mainstream. News outlets recently reported Dr. Casey Means, President Donald Trump’s pick for surgeon general, suggested in a newsletter her use of magic mushrooms helped her find a romantic partner.
New Mexico’s Senate Bill 219, known as the Medical Psilocybin Act, establishes a regulated program for the medical use of psilocybin to treat qualified medical conditions such as major treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, substance use disorder and end-of-life care. It soared through both the House and Senate with wide bipartisan support.
The program, set to be fully launched by Dec. 31, 2027, calls for psilocybin to be administered to patients by a New Mexico-licensed health care provider in an approved clinical setting.
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State Rep. Angel Charley, D-Acoma, outside the San José de la Laguna Mission Church in Laguna Pueblo in May 2023. Charley noted in her speech about the bill on the Senate floor that psychedelic healing is no novel concept for Indigenous communities in the Southwest. “This medicine is not groundbreaking,” she said. “It is only new to Western modalities of healing.”
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Michael Benanav/Searchlight New Mexico
Psychedelic healing is no novel concept for Indigenous communities in the Southwest, state Sen. Angel Charley, D-Acoma, noted earlier this year when she addressed colleagues about the bill on the Senate floor.
“This medicine is not groundbreaking,” she said. “It is only new to Western modalities of healing.”
Charley recognized legendary Oaxacan curandera María Sabina during her floor speech.
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“And so I ask those voting today that we carry this knowledge forward,” she said. “This is something that our communities have offered people for hundreds of years.”
Guardrails for safe delivery
Oregon and Colorado established their medical psilocybin programs by way of ballot initiatives, so New Mexico became the first state in the U.S. to approve a program through legislation. According to the online network Psychedelic Alpha, legislation related to “psychedelic medicines” has been introduced in at least 15 states.
Still illegal under federal law, however, psilocybin is listed as a Schedule 1 drug — defined as a substance “with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.”
Advocates and lawmakers have pointed to the stiff guardrails New Mexico’s program would have to prevent abuse of the substance.
Sen. Craig Brandt, R- Rio Rancho, one of the sponsors of SB 19, said, “I think we put the guardrails in there the right way to where it’s not like the medical marijuana program. It’s a very limited application. So, there’s very few things that it can be used for.”
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Sen. Craig Brandt, R-Rio Rancho, speaks on the Senate floor in February 2024. Brandt was one of the sponsors of Senate Bill 19, which was approved with wide bipartisan support.
New Mexican file photo
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He noted patients could only receive psilocybin treatment in an approved clinical setting, without an option of taking the substance home.
Psilocybin research has shown benefits for those struggling with PTSD, Brandt said, adding lawmakers heard testimony from veterans in committee hearings.
“I do think New Mexico has a chance to do this somewhat differently, with more integrity. I would put it that way,” said Janine Sagert, a retired psychologist in Santa Fe who has advocated for psilocybin since the 1970s. “I’m very hopeful about that.”
Those who have advocated for New Mexico’s medical psilocybin program are quick to point out treatments have nothing to do with hallucinating or getting high, and magic mushrooms are not legal for recreational use in the state.
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Adele Getty — director of the nonprofit organizing The Enchanted State, a September conference on the psychedelic movement at the Lensic Performing Arts Center, believes this is a good idea.
“Oregon did a massive [decriminalization]. That was not beneficial for Oregon; Portland in particular,” Getty said. “I think Colorado is doing a better job in terms of implementation. And Oregon has actually learned and, I would say, upgraded its whole system.”
Despite the popularity of SB 19, a handful of state lawmakers opposed the program.
“My opposition to [SB] 219 is strictly due to the very little we know about this drug,” Rep. Luis Terrazas, R-Santa Clara, wrote in a text message. “While I am always supportive of therapies to help alleviate symptoms of depression and PTSD, I was not comfortable with the information provided in the debate to support it.”
Still, Terrazas hopes the therapy will be safe for those who use it and that it “truly provides relief where traditional drugs have failed.”
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“Working with psilocybin has really allowed me to sit with my grief,” Crystal Romero said. “Depression doesn’t have to consume your life. I was able to reconnect with myself, reconnect with kids, reconnect with my community.”
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
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How the program will take shape
SB 19 calls for the establishment of the Medical Psilocybin Advisory Board, with nine members “knowledgeable about the medical use of psilocybin,” including at least one who is enrolled in a tribal nation, one veteran and one behavioral health advocate.
Applications will open soon for this panel, which will be tasked with recommending patient qualifications and assisting the state Department of Health in developing, monitoring and evaluating best practices for producers and clinicians.
Aspects of the program will take shape over the next two years with input from stakeholders, said Dominick Zurlo, director of the Health Department’s Center for Medical Cannabis; the agency’s title will soon be expanded to include the word “psilocybin.”
“That’s what these next two years are about, about making sure that we are setting up the best requirements for those providers in the clinics,” Zurlo said.
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Brandt noted patients will spend a substantial amount of time with a clinician while treatment is administered. For proponents like Romero, this is an important aspect of the program.
Before her first experience with the treatment in Jamaica, Romero worked with a coach to prepare. There also were people at her side to coach her through the treatment, she said.
Crystal Romero holds a small glass mushroom made for her by her friend after New Mexico’s Senate Bill 219, known as the Medical Psilocybin Act, was signed into law this year. The program, set to be fully launched by Dec. 31, 2027, calls for psilocybin to be administered to patients by a New Mexico-licensed health care provider in an approved clinical setting.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
The Health Department is now developing the process for implementing the program, including treatment protocols, safety guidelines, clinician and producer training requirements and data-collection methods to evaluate the program’s effectiveness.
State funding will be funneled toward the nascent program, starting with $1 million in fiscal year 2026 to add new employees to the Health Department, Zurlo said.
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The psilocybin law calls for a new Medical Psilocybin Treatment Fund to aid qualified low-income patients and a Medical Psilocybin Research Fund to support studies by universities and health care providers.
The University of New Mexico’s Health Sciences Center launched new psilocybin-related research last summer, including a study on RE104 — a novel compound related to psilocybin — for postpartum depression.
The Health Department will be responsible for overseeing producers in New Mexico, as psilocybin administered by clinicians must be cultivated and produced within the state.
“We need to ensure it is actually grown and produced [here] so we are not putting anybody at risk on a federal level with crossing state lines,” Zurlo said.
A Legislative Finance Committee analysis found an estimated 1,748 New Mexicans might use the program each year, based on numbers of patients in Oregon, a state with a 5-year-old medical psilocybin program.
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“That’s going to depend a lot on how many clinics we end up permitting,” Zurlo said. “We’re really going to be evaluating that over the next two years to help determine how many can be served within those first several years.”
It is difficult to predict how many providers will become certified to participate, he said. Oregon, with a population about twice as large as New Mexico’s, had around 32 clinics permitted in its program’s first year, he noted.
Romero, who was raised around the state in Taos, Las Vegas and Mora, is optimistic about the program. “It’s really going to bring some healing in the state,” she said. “If we can rebuild ourselves, we can rebuild our communities.”
SANTA FE, N.M. – Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham asked Attorney General Raúl Torrez to investigate whether any Drug Enforcement Administration agents broke state law when pills reached New Mexico streets.
In a statement, Lujan Grisham said, “make no mistake: the DEA knew people would die if these pills made it into New Mexico communities.”
The governor also shared a timeline from 2022 to 2025 that she said shows when she asked federal officials for help with New Mexico’s fentanyl crisis and violent crime.
Lujan Grisham said the first request came on June 21, 2022, when she wrote to then-Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray and asked for 50 additional federal agents.
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She said she wrote to then-Attorney General Merrick Garland on Sept. 15, 2022, asking for more agents, resources and support for New Mexico law enforcement.
Lujan Grisham said she wrote Garland a second time on Aug. 8, 2023, with the same request.
What came next?
About a month later, Lujan Grisham said she sent Garland a third letter and said New Mexico needed more federal law enforcement to curb violent crime, drug trafficking and human trafficking.
She said her most recent request came on Sept. 4, 2025, when she wrote to former Attorney General Pam Bondi and again asked for additional agents and resources.
The governor’s statement says those requests span several years as she pressed the federal government for more help in New Mexico.
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Full statement from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham:
“I am appalled by reporting this week by the Associated Press and Albuquerque Journal that revealed federal authorities made a deliberate decision to let hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills flood into New Mexico communities, despite knowing that fentanyl is so lethal the White House has designated it a weapon of mass destruction.
Let me say that again: the Drug Enforcement Administration watched as 74,000 fentanyl pills were delivered to a mobile home park in Albuquerque, and they did nothing. And that’s just one transaction. Shockingly, the federal government stood by while monitoring shipments, tallying exact pill counts, and watching as these deadly drugs hit the streets.
There are no words to describe how reckless and dangerous these decisions were. Make no mistake: the DEA knew people would die if these pills made it into New Mexico communities, and the agency let it happen anyway. The result: hundreds of New Mexican parents burying their kids. Hundreds of New Mexican kids growing up without stable parents. All while the federal government stood by.
If the justification for letting these pills flood our communities was that it would somehow make New Mexico safer down the road through bigger eventual busts, the results say otherwise. New Mexico now leads the nation in the increase in overdose deaths for the second straight year, despite deaths dropping nationwide.
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Today, I wrote to Attorney General Raúl Torrez and asked him to investigate whether any federal agents broke state law when they allowed lethal drugs to remain on our streets, and to prosecute anyone responsible — regardless of whether they are a federal agent or not.
I have spent years working across two administrations — writing letters, traveling to Washington, meeting directly with President Joe Biden and his cabinet, pushing for accountability, asking for more federal agents to be deployed to New Mexico to help fight this crisis.
On June 21, 2022, I wrote to FBI Director Christopher Wray, imploring the FBI to assign no less than 50 additional agents to New Mexico to stem escalating drug trafficking and violent crime.
On September 15, 2022, I wrote to Attorney General Merrick Garland, requesting that the Department of Justice provide additional federal agents, resources and support to New Mexico law enforcement. We asked the department to match the level of investigative, analytical, and technical resources the FBI had deployed in its Buffalo, NY surge.
On August 8, 2023, I wrote again to Attorney General Garland, renewing my request that the DOJ expeditiously assign more federal agents to New Mexico.
On September 7, 2023, I wrote to Attorney General Garland for a third time, reiterating my request once more federal law enforcement support to curb violent crime, drug and human trafficking.
On September 4, 2025, I wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi, once again requesting additional agents and resources.
I have declared the surge of drugs like fentanyl to be a public health emergency. I have deployed the National Guard to both Albuquerque and Española. While my administration was doing everything we could to stem the tide of fentanyl coming into our state, the federal government deliberately allowed it to flood in.
New Mexican lives are not the federal government’s cost of doing business.
I plan to hold the federal government accountable for this disaster and will explore every possible avenue of action against the federal government to right these wrongs.”
The Canyon Venado Fire has grown to 852 acres east of Clines Corners and crews say wind farms in the area are threatened.
CLINES CORNERS, N.M. – The Canyon Venado Fire has grown to 852 acres east of Clines Corners and crews say wind farms in the area are threatened.
The fire is burning just east of Clines Corners, south of Interstate 40.
It forced the closure of eastbound Interstate 40 at Clines Corners on Tuesday night. I-40 reopened Tuesday night. I-40 is back open but smoke still affects visibility.
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“We’re on the side of I-40 so drivers have to be pretty cautious. As far as our establishment itself we’re pretty isolated by the freeway itself as a nice fire break,” said Lincoln Tarantino, Clines Corner general manager.
The fire has burned around 852 acres, up from just 20 at this time Monday.
Crews say the fire is not contained and wind farms in the area are threatened.
WSET ABC 13 covers news, sports and weather in the Heart of Virginia: Lynchburg, Danville and Roanoke and nearby communities including Amherst, Lexington, Cave Spring, Blacksburg, Martinsville, Farmville, North Shore, Glasgow, Altavista, Gretna, Chatham, Blairs, Bassett, Rocky Mt, Penhook, Moneta and Buena Vista