Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jan 2000 Source: Press-Enterprise (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: 3512 Fourteenth Street Riverside, CA 92501 Website: http://www.inlandempireonline.com/ Author: Aldrin Brown Note: This is the second item in a series. When the entire series is archived at MAP we will create an index. A HISTORY OF METH Its Popularity Burgeoned In The 1980s Methamphetamine -- also known by such street names as crank, crystal, speed, ice or simply meth -- actually has been around longer than many drug agents assigned to combat it. During World War II, German troops were issued a version of amphetamine, a synthetic stimulant present in the current-day drug, to stay awake during combat operations. Amphetamines endured as a useful tool for maintaining alertness. United States Air Force pilots use the drug, under medical supervision, during long-distance flights. As early as the 1960s, motorcycle gangs such as the Hell's Angels, which originated in Fontana, traversed the country on glistening choppers selling a version of the drug to mostly white customers. In the four decades since, the appeal of the drug has grown exponentially, crossing ethnic and geographic boundaries. The skyrocketing popularity has spawned a lucrative business. Increasingly, that trade is dominated by sophisticated Mexican drug cartels. The result is a multimillion-dollar illegal underground industry, based largely in Riverside and San Bernardino counties, that every year makes tens of thousands of pounds of the drug and sells it for big profits. "It's a money-maker," said Sgt. Steve Rinks, a narcotics officer with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department. "The methamphetamine is more in demand now than it was in the '80s." Law-enforcement and fire officials first noticed the drug's growing presence in the Inland area in the '60s, as local bikers made meth and sold it nationwide. During the 1970s, San Bernardino County's hazardous materials unit occupied itself mostly with labs producing PCP, a narcotic that acts as a stimulant, hallucinogen and painkiller. But by the 1980s, law-enforcement officials noticed meth emerging as a big business. "Probably about the early '80s we saw a shift more from PCP manufacturing to meth," said Joe Ashbaker, supervising environmental health specialist with San Bernardino County's Hazardous Materials unit. Throughout the 1980s, methamphetamine slowly emerged as the drug of choice in the region as users and suppliers realized its advantages over cocaine. Meth is generally less expensive to buy, and many users find the high preferable to that of cocaine. "The effects are much more intense and longer-lasting," Rinks said. And the process for manufacturing meth, which can be made using relatively easy-to-find household ingredients, became more efficient in the past decade. Chemicals like ether -- highly flammable substances that emit noticeable odors -- have been replaced with ingredients that are more stable and harder to detect. Other chemicals once used in the process have been done away with in an effort to simplify manufacturing. "The Mexican nationals have it down to a science where everything is measured out," Rinks said. "It's more efficient. The purity is greater." A major turning point in the local war against methamphetamine came in 1991, when local and federal authorities prosecuted San Bernardino towing company owner Charles Wesley Arlt on drug-manufacturing and money-laundering charges. Arlt, now 55 years old and serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole, was convicted of orchestrating an elaborate scheme to provide methamphetamine ingredients to Mexican cartels. "It was because of that case that people started to realize that meth was a bigger problem than we thought," said Sgt. Mike Bayer, a narcotics investigator with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. In the scheme, which generated about $1 million a year, Arlt bought mining property in California and Nevada to conceal the real purpose behind purchases of large quantities of phosphorous, iodine and hydriodic acid. The chemicals, which are integral to the manufacture of methamphetamine, also can be used to extract gold from soil. Arlt also used the mines to hide income generated by the sales. Arlt sent chemicals to partners, who set up a network of drug labs, in Mexico and in Riverside and San Bernardino counties. In a jab at authorities, Arlt's vehicle carried vanity license plates that read "DEAICU." The translation: "DEA: I see you." ("DEA" refers to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.) Arlt's case prompted a reorganization of the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department's narcotics effort as drug agents realized the level of sophistication and resourcefulness required to combat large-scale meth traffickers. In the several years that followed Arlt's arrest, the unit more than quadrupled in size -- from 18 officers to more than 80. Law-enforcement officials began lobbying state and federal legislators for laws that would make it tougher for manufacturers to get ingredients necessary to make meth. Regulations passed during the past four years limit the amount of over-the-counter cold medication that can be purchased at a time and restrict the sale of other chemical ingredients used to make meth. By the end of 1996, the department developed the Methamphetamine Interdiction Team to concentrate on high-level methamphetamine operations. In mid-1999, the team combined its offices with the Riverside County sheriff's methamphetamine team. Today, local, state and federal law-enforcement agencies share money and information in an effort to match the resourcefulness of their criminal adversaries. But while the quantity of drugs and labs seized has risen dramatically in the past 10 years, the end of the methamphetamine epidemic appears as elusive as ever. "I would say methamphetamine is a very large portion of our caseload. The prosecutors are very busy, that's all I can say. It would be nice to have (more attorneys on the staff)," said Ken Smith, who heads narcotics prosecutions for San Bernardino County. "I think there's been some impact, but it doesn't seem to be bringing the number of cases down any." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake