Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jul 2001 Source: The Sturgis Journal (MI) Website: http://www.sturgisjournal.com/ Address: 209 John St., Sturgis, MI 49091 Contact: 2001 The Sturgis Journal Fax: (616)651-2296 Author: Kathy Jessup LOCAL POLICE GET A LESSON ABOUT METH CONSTANTINE - Michigan's new "drug of choice" is turning houses, apartments, hotel rooms and cars into potentially toxic time bombs, where users are processing over-the-counter ingredients into cheap psychological stimulants 10 times as potent as cocaine. "Cookers" armed with hot plates, plastic tubing, Mason jars, coffee filters and taped coolers are turning common cold medications, chemical solvents, lye, drain cleaners and anhydrous ammonia - a common farm fertilizer - into powders and pastes which can be snorted, injected, eaten or smoked to create a "high" that can last 24 hours. Methamphetamine has turned many of the drug's users into amateur chemists, as "recipes" for processing the ingredients are passed among "cookers" and over the Internet. According to Michigan State Police experts who recently conducted a training for St. Joseph County law enforcement officials, the clandestine, amateur labs can turn a house or car into a potential powder keg that can threaten a neighborhood and the safety of officers entering a structure or opening a vehicle. Although most of the chemicals have common household uses, combined or improperly handled, they can cause explosions, fires, or create toxic fumes which can kill a human being almost immediately. Police suggested ways to shut down potentially lethal meth labs: alert neighbors who notice the strong smells of ammonia, ether or acetone; a watchful retailer who's aware of large-volume purchases of cold medications; or farmers who recognize tampering with liquid fertilizer tanks. The highly addictive and chemically dangerous nature has done little to dissuade meth's spread from the West Coast and beyond motorcycle gangs. Michigan State Police units seized 18 meth labs statewide in 1999, 43 in 2000, and 34 during the first five months of 2001. Locally, St. Joseph County law enforcement officials recently discovered what they believe was a meth operation set up in a Sturgis motel room. Another was discovered in Kalamazoo County, operating in a Stadium Drive motel. A third was shutdown in Paw Paw. Trooper Randi Whitney, a member of the statewide MSP Methamphetimine Investigation Team created in August 2000, said police estimate there are at least 100-150 labs operating across Michigan. That may not include makeshift meth kitchens set up in car trunks and even suitcases, Whitney said. Det. Sgt. Dale Hinz, also with the MSP Meth Team, said police have seen a "concentration in southwest Michigan," warning officers to watch for unusual equipment and chemical components when responding to domestic disturbances or making traffic stops. "These "Beavis and Butthead' labs are dangerous because they deal with things that are explosive and the chemicals are toxic and carcinogenic," Whitney said. "They can booby trap their labs so do not touch anything or turn on or off any power switches or lights. Don't move any containers, don't sniff them and don't smoke around them. "These labs can kill," she said, as a picture of three victims who inhaled an escaping gas flashed on the screen. The fact that meth's ingredients are easily obtained, that processing is relatively short - 20 minutes to two hours - and that the drug produces an intense, long-lived but highly addictive high, have combined to give give it what police call a "shorter food chain." Meth distribution may have only two or three tiers from producer to user, rather than the complicated distribution chains involved with many other illegal drugs. And many users are cutting out the middle man altogether by doing the cooking process themselves. According to Hinz, producing methamphetamine generally is a three-step process which begins with ephedrine, an active ingredient commonly found in cold medications like Sudafed, in bronchial dialators, and in some diet medications. Cookers use a variety of different solvents to separate the ephedrine from other ingredients in the medications. Then the solvent is evaporated or boiled off. Next, a chemical reaction with the ephedrine paste or power is created using anhydrous ammonia and lithium metal commonly found in camera batteries, or by using red phosphorous, a substance in flares and matchbook strike plates. That process produces an oil which cookers sometimes try to conceal in juice bottles because it resembles apple juice. The final step typically uses sulfuric acid and salt which bubbles a gas through the oil, separating out the solid meth. By-products are also a serious concern. According to Hinz, six pounds of hazardous waste is created in the production of every pound of methamphetamine. Michigan State Police investigators say the cost to dispose of wastes left behind from a meth operation can cost $3,000-$30,000. Michigan imposes a 20-year prison penalty for manufacturing or delivering meth and 10 years for having the chemicals/equipment to manufacture the drug, police said. If prosecutors can prove a building or vehicle owner was aware cookers were using their property for manufacturing meth, the owners can face a 10-year felony. Illegally disposing of meth by-products is a 20-year felony. Police advise persons who detect strong, unexplained odors of ammonia, ether, acetone or a urine smell, to contact police. Finding coffee filters, Mason jars and duct tape which are chemically stained red, or large amounts of discarded cold medicine packaging, insulated jugs duct-taped closed, or many empty drain cleaner, solvent or camera battery coverings are other warning signs. If you suspect a meth production lab, don't enter the area, troopers warn. Instead, Hinz suggests calling the Michigan State Police Methamphetamine Investigation Team at (866) METH- TIP. MSP officials said the line is anonymous and confidential and calls are answered in Lansing. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth