Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jan 2000 Source: Riverside Press-Enterprise (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: 3512 Fourteenth Street Riverside, CA 92501 Website: http://www.inlandempireonline.com/ Author: Aldrin Brown OFFICERS CONCERNED ABOUT LABS EFFECTS - DAY 3C Some drug agents say fumes from methamphetamine chemicals cause health problems, from headaches to rare illnesses. Riverside County sheriff Detective Carla Gordon never considered wearing protective equipment while examining toxic chemicals in the countless methamphetamine labs she investigated during the 1980s. Protective masks and boots, now standard equipment for drug officers, were unheard of. In those days, recognizing the unique odors of the chemical ingredients was a key part of the job. Back then, that's how we identified some of the chemicals, Gordon said. The precautions we took were more for the fire hazard or explosions, not for the fumes. Gordon said she commonly experienced headaches and irritated lungs during and immediately after working in drug labs. In 1990, Gordon began to suffer migraine headaches and vision problems. After numerous examinations by physicians, she was diagnosed with a rare condition known as orbital pseudo tumor, an accumulation of lymphoid tissue that damaged the muscles surrounding her eye. Doctors have been unable to say for certain what caused the ailment. Nonetheless, Gordon is among a growing number of current and former narcotics agents who suspect they were unwitting victims of the chemical hazards found in drug labs. Once it was identified what it was, I suspected that there was a connection, Gordon said. Fumes from the brew of toxic chemicals used to make methamphetamine chemicals like benzene, red phosphorous, acetone, iodine and countless others can poison respiratory and nervous systems, even in the short term. The long-term health hazards, largely unknown, are of even greater concern to narcotics officers charged with finding and investigating toxic drug labs. Virtually all law enforcement officers either know personally or have heard stories of officers who developed rare and inexplicable illnesses resulting in permanent disability and ruined careers. You have just all types of avenues of exposure that people don't realize, said Jim Erwin, president of the San Bernardino County Safety Employees Association, which represents sheriffsdeputies. We will probably in the future seek special hazardous-duty compensation for those who work in meth labs because of the chemical exposure and the higher risk. During the 1980s, before the drugs epidemic popularity, relatively little was known about the hazards posed by inhaling or touching the methamphetamine ingredients. We all know the dangers now, said Sgt. Steve Rinks, a narcotics investigator with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, whose first job with the drug unit lasted from 1986 to 1989. Unfortunately, back in the 80s this is something that was new to us. In those days, it was common for officers to transport the drug chemicals in the back seats of their cars. Detective Gordon, now 44, spearheaded probes of methamphetamine and PCP labs for the department from 1984 to 1989. After the diagnosis of her eye condition, she underwent exploratory surgery and a medley of experimental treatments, but she still suffers from headaches and limited peripheral vision. She considers herself fortunate that the condition has not ended her 21-year law-enforcement career. It's essentially like with a lot of injuries or disabilities. I've just learned to compensate, Gordon said. Former San Bernardino County sheriff's narcotics Detective Mike Howell wasn't so lucky. Howell was forced to take medical retirement in 1996 after being diagnosed with a severe respiratory illness that reduced his lung capacity to less than 50 percent. Doctors could not definitively say what caused the condition. But Howell, who worked in methamphetamine and PCP labs, smoke-filled jails and commercial chemical dumps, has no doubt that it was caused by his job. In 1996, a workers' compensation judge and a county retirement board agreed with him. Howell was awarded a one-time five-figure settlement and half of his salary and full medical benefits for the rest of his life. Benefits panels have taken similar positions elsewhere in the country. Between 1990 and 1996, four Portland, Ore., police officers won workers' compensation cases resulting from illnesses the officers argued had been caused by exposure to methamphetamine labs during the 1980s. Three of the officers developed non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a form of cancer, while the other was diagnosed with a lung disease. Each of these claims had a medical report from a doctor indicating that it was probable that the condition was caused by the work, said Julie Leonard, assistant administrator of the Portland Fire and Police Disability and Retirement Fund. Many Portland officers who worked with methamphetamine labs during the 1980s routinely complained of such symptoms as skin rashes, headaches, coughing and peculiar tastes in their mouths, Leonard said. The Portland workers' compensation awards are not the norm nationwide. Panels in other communities have been less generous. Retired Los Angeles Police Department narcotics supervisor Roy Wunderlich was diagnosed in 1997 with a rare form of liver cancer that resulted in the removal of half of his liver. Wunderlich, 56, said he was among the first Los Angeles officers to specifically target manufacturers of methamphetamine during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Everyone had headaches and dizziness, he recalled of the meth raids. I'd had a handful of exposures where I received medical attention. There are several times where I probably should have had medical attention, but I didn't. For the past two years, Wunderlich has fought to recover more than $200,000 in out-of-pocket medical expenses. He also wants the city of Los Angeles to fund lifetime medical benefits. Since medical experts on both sides of the issue hesitate to directly link cancers to specific job exposures, Los Angeles city officials dispute the claim that Wunderlich's cancer can be definitively linked to his time on the force. Still, he wants to see more done to protect his former colleagues. Officers who work with drug labs should receive more thorough health screenings, Wunderlich said. Currently, narcotics officers in many California departments undergo annual blood, urine and lung tests. But the baseline screenings don't go far enough, Wunderlich said. I had a complete physical several months before I was diagnosed, he said, noting that the baseline screening didn't detect his potentially life-threatening illness. Mike Baker, a drug agent with the state Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement's Redding office, also had a clean baseline physical weeks before he was diagnosed with thymoma, another rare form of cancer. Baker, 41, had a baseball-sized tumor removed from behind his heart. He, too, has been fighting to recover workers' compensation benefits for the injury, which he believes stems from his 12 years of investigating methamphetamine labs. The whole issue is proving that a certain chemical caused that particular cancer, Baker said. It's very difficult. Dan Stralka, regional toxicologist for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's San Francisco office, said researchers have just started examining the effects of long-term exposure to chemicals found in meth labs. But clearly, the hazards of breathing some of the chemicals, like benzene, a known human carcinogen, are real, he said. These law-enforcement personnel weren't measuring the level of toxins, and they weren't taking appropriate precautions, so their level of exposure and what hazard could be associated with that would generally be unknown, Stralka said. In the future, narcotics officers may have an easier time winning their injury cases. Two state laws passed in 1999 require that cities and counties bear the burden of proving that cancers among police officers with more than five years on the job were not caused by the work. In San Bernardino County, sheriff's narcotics officers began undergoing baseline physicals about four months after Detective Howell took his medical retirement. Like other departments throughout the state, local officers are trained and equipped to protect themselves from the hazards of chemical contaminants. No amount of protection is foolproof, however. Often the demands of the job , including pursuing suspects inside meth labs, mean officers go unprotected into the harmful vapors for brief periods of time. Other times, officers exploring crime scenes at seemingly safe distances from chemicals later realize they were too close. I get cramps when I go to one of these labs, said Lt. Bobby Phillips, commander of the sheriff's Methamphetamine Interdiction Team. One of our guys starts sneezing. San Bernardino police narcotics Sgt. Mitch Kimball sees similar symptoms. I think every one of us goes out of there with a headache after one of these things, he said. For those who work around drug labs, thinking of the potential health effects can be unnerving. Some officers become anxious at the first hint of a strange twinge or unusual illness as they learn more about the hazards of the chemicals that have surrounded them for years. Every time you get any type of a symptom of something that is out of the ordinary, that's usually the first thing that you fear,94 Gordon said. Aldrin Brown can be reached by e-mail at --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson