Pubdate: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 Source: Evansville Courier & Press (IN) Copyright: 2001 The Evansville Courier Contact: http://www.courierpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/138 Author: John Martin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH STILL BIG RURAL PROBLEM Hot labs. Remnants of labs. Anhydrous ammonia thefts. Bulk purchases of supplies. Methamphetamine isn't new and trendy any more. Some might even view it as yesterday's news. But area police say it's still being produced and used in big numbers across the region, and in rural areas of Western Kentucky, it hasn't let up at all. "If it's curtailed any, it's by a very small percentage," Union County, Ky., Sheriff Ronnie Girten said. "We arrested two this week for tampering with anhydrous ammonia tanks. Last week we found three abandoned labs." The lone full-time drug investigator with the Daviess County, Ky., Sheriff's Department said he's run ragged with meth cases. "We've arrested so many people that we're backlogged in court," Detective Jim Acquisto said. "We aren't able to get out and do proactive investigations. "I spent all morning in court (Friday,)" Acquisto added. Rural areas are more friendly for meth makers than cities. Authorities are often led to meth labs by their odors, and wide open spaces offer manufacturers some cover. Tanks of anhydrous ammonia, a meth component, are also easier to find in rural areas. Acquisto, who investigates drug cases in areas of Daviess County, outside Owensboro, said the meth problem there hasn't reached its plateau. "I think if anything else," Acquisto said, "it's increased." Small police departments elsewhere are also struggling to locate the makers, buyers and users of meth. "We're still getting quite a bit of it," White County, Ill., Sheriff Jerry O'Neal said. "They're hitting our anhydrous tanks quite a bit. It's not slacked up any here. We don't even make a dent in it. There's so much of it." In Gibson County, Ind., the sheriff's department receives at least one tip about meth activity per week. "That's probably what it's been for the last year," according to Sheriff George Ballard. He says Gibson County's meth problem seems to have leveled off, but activity remains high. In Evansville, meanwhile, police say meth traffic seems to have declined. Many recent meth-related arrests by the Evansville Police Department have been of rural Tri-State residents buying pseudoephedrine tablets, lithium batteries, starting fluid or coffee filters from local stores. Evansville and Vanderburgh County authorities have asked local retailers to call them when customers buy a combination of those supplies or buy one of them in bulk. "Knock on wood, we're seeing a decline, and I think the community effort is the key," said Sgt. Mike Lauderdale, an Evansville Police Department drug investigator. In 1999, Evansville police found 49 meth labs. The number fell to 30 last year. So far this year, police have seized 18 labs in the city. Some new Indiana laws have also played a role in curbing city meth traffic, Lauderdale said. Police can charge a person with dealing meth if they possess more than three grams, or if the person is caught within 1,000 feet of a school, park or public housing complex. But Lauderdale said he's aware the decline in Evansville meth activity doesn't extend beyond the city's borders. "Where we see a little bit of a decline, (rural areas) have seen a little bit of an increase." - --- MAP posted-by: GD