Pubdate: Thu, 05 Apr 2001 Source: Chattanooga Times & Free Press (TN) Copyright: 2001 Chattanooga Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.timesfreepress.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/992 Author: Carolyne Park, Staff Writer OFFICERS CRANK UP ANTI-METH BATTLE Law enforcement officials are continuing to struggle against the growing epidemic of methamphetamine in Southeast Tennessee. According to federal Drug Enforcement Administration statistics, about 140 methamphetamine labs have been seized in the 17-county region in the past six months -- close to one a day. U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp, R-Tenn., said Wednesday DEA records indicate the rural mountainous region of East Tennessee is second only to California for illegal production of methamphetamine. "This is a plague," Rep. Wamp said. "It is the fastest growing drug problem in America. And in certain parts of the country, like East Tennessee, it has overtaken cocaine." Over the past two years, Rep. Wamp has helped secure $1.9 million in federal funding for the local war on meth. This year he hopes to obtain another $1 million. The funding goes to the Southeast Tennessee Methamphetamine Drug Task Force. Marion County Detective Gene Hargis worked more than 17 hours Tuesday after the Sheriff's Department seized a meth lab in New Hope. It was one of six labs the department has seized in the past six days in Marion and Grundy counties. "If it wasn't for that money, it would be hard for us to work these cases the way we do," Detective Hargis said. Meth is a powerful stimulant known as "poor man's cocaine," crank or speed. Authorities say "cookers" can turn a $100 investment in materials into about $1,000 worth of the illegal drug in a matter of four or five hours. There is no shortage of meth in the Chattanooga region. A representative with a local hazardous materials company contracted to clean up meth labs said his company has seen 190 since last September. Company officials, who requested that they and their company remain anonymous for security reasons, operate in a 150-mile radius around Chattanooga. It is one of five such companies locally. They were called out Tuesday to meth lab in Marion County. "I wish they would give this up and go back to smoking pot," said New Hope Police Chief John Griffith. "It's pure poison." Meth labs, which combine common household materials into toxic mixtures to produce the drug, can be found in houses, mobile homes, apartments and even moving vehicles, Chief Griffith said. Tuesday night's bust was in a modest mobile home off dead-end Pine Grove Road. Inside the home, police found bottles of hydrogen peroxide, drain cleaner, a canister of lantern fuel, and several other components used to make meth. Tuesday night's lab seizure was the result of a six-month investigation by the Sheriff's Department and local police. Larry Kirk, 39, of New Hope, and Grady Breedwell, 36, and Vicky Lynn Templeton, 26, both of Flat Rock, Ala., were arrested and face federal charges, said Marion County Chief Detective Brent Myers. Detective Hargis said it was the largest of the labs seized in the past week, but is "average" in size compared to typical labs. Detective Hargis said about 30 grams of finished meth, and as much as 60 more grams of unfinished product, were seized in Tuesday's arrest. He said the drugs have a street value of more than $7,200. Chief Griffith said the increasingly popular drug is both dangerous and extremely addictive. "I've known people who have been on it," he said. "They lose so much weight and lose their teeth. There's about a five-year life expectancy with this stuff." Rep. Wamp said meth "wreaks havoc on lives in Southeast Tennessee." "We're even having meth problems show up in rural schools in Southeast Tennessee," he said. "Principals talk to me about it -- about the kids they have in their schools from meth families." Rep. Wamp, a member of the Appropriations Committee, said local prosecutors and law enforcement officials must submit proposals to him by April 27 to receive federal funds. He likened methamphetamine in Tennessee to the region's old moonshine problem. "It's easy to hide, easy to make and cheap," he said.