Pubdate: Mon, 30 Jul 2001 Source: Hawk Eye, The (IA) Copyright: 2001 The Hawk Eye Contact: http://www.thehawkeye.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/934 Author: Stephen A. Martin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) POLICE CHANGE WAYS OF INVESTIGATING DRUGS NAUVOO, Ill. -- Hancock County's involvement in the anti-drug West Central Illinois Task Force came just in time, authorities said. The county joined the Macomb, Ill.-based, multi-agency group after the election of Sheriff John Jefferson in 1998. It was a campaign issue for Jefferson, said Chief Deputy Bill Ferrill. And it was a step that needed to be taken before methamphetamine production became rooted in the county. "We've seen a big increase," he said. "Three years ago, we didn't have meth labs." Illinois State Police Sgt. Mike Inman, the task force's lead investigator, said the arrival of methamphetamine has made police change their way of doing things. Ever since Illinois legislators first let agencies band together into task forces in 1985, he said, the typical anti-drug operation has involved taking someone who doesn't look like a cop and sending him or her try to buy drugs. But what worked to take down a cocaine dealer isn't an effective way to keep meth off the streets, Inman said. More than half of those addicted to methamphetamine are mixing up batches of the stuff themselves, he said. That's a new phenomenon, Inman said. And it changes the job police are required to do. "The production end of cocaine occurred in the jungles of South America. It didn't have a darned thing to do with American law enforcement," he said. But since meth arrived in the area, Inman said officers have been trying to stop the drug before it gets made. "The dynamics of methamphetamine are so different that we have short- circuited the process," he said. "We feel we're really dropping the ball if we have to wait until meth is made." New laws against possession of methamphetamine ingredients while intending to make the drug are aimed at stopping production before it starts. There's also a law on the books making it a felony to carry anhydrous ammonia in an unapproved container. By getting meth cooks before they have the chance to make up a batch, Inman said, society benefits. "They haven't produced any hazardous waste," he said. "They haven't polluted with who knows what." The ingredients are relatively cheap, he said. But a large number of meth cooks look to cut their costs further by just stealing what they need. "I don't know how many of our cases we develop from shoplifting," he said. Ferrill said his deputies regularly trade information with the task force, as well as with anti-drug groups in adjoining Lee County in Iowa and Adams County, Ill. "People will call us up," Ferrill said. Store employees recognize when someone is buying the ingredients for meth, he said. Some require people to leave their names before buying the main ingredients. One of the big advantages of task force membership has been access to trained personnel to clean up the hazardous chemicals involved in meth production, Ferrill said. Task force officers wear suits of fire-resistant Nomex -- the same stuff NASCAR drivers wear beneath their uniforms -- under their clothes. When cleaning up a known meth lab site, Inman said he goes for more protection and puts on a level B hazmat suit. But there are times when even these levels of protection are no match for the dangers of methamphetamine. There was a time when a bullet-proof vest afforded nearly all the protection a law officer needed. But Inman said there's nothing that will protect an officer making a traffic stop from the possibility of an explosion or deadly gas from inside the car. Even if there's no lab in the car, Inman said encountering a meth user comes with its own set of dangers. Methamphetamine users become paranoid -- a condition that becomes aggravated by days without sleep. The drug also gives users a superhuman tolerance to pain. "You're going to need help," he told a group of firefighters, ambulance personnel and township road commissioners at a Nauvoo, Ill., training session. Inman remembers a roadside safety check in Gulfport, Ill., during which a fellow officer stopped a man later found to be a meth user and put him in handcuffs. Even with his hands behind his back, the man continued to fight. Inman and another officer arrived to help and found an odor of pepper spray that made their eyes start to water. Sprayed and cuffed, the man still kept trying to fight. "Don't let your guard down with someone you suspect is under the influence of meth," he said. Inman said the price of cocaine has dropped by about half since methaphetamine arrived in western Illinois. "It's just like Kmart," he said. "If they've got an abundance of something, they'll put it on sale." And like anyone in a competitive business, Inman said cocaine dealers have become aggressive in their marketing. "What you're seeing is crack cocaine trying to compete to win these folks back," he said. "But it's not as good a high, the people in the culture tell us." Ferrill said his office and task force agents have information on a number of people suspected of methamphetamine production. But building a case takes time. "It's a never-ending battle," he said. Prior to the arrival of methamphetamine in Hancock County, said Ferrill, it was easier for the county to go it alone. A typical anti-drug operation involved finding someone growing marijuana on a rural farm. "We heard about meth labs," he said. "Then all at once, we've got them." Now it would be hard to go back to life without the task force, he said. "We've got to work together," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe