Pubdate: Thu, 06 Dec 2001 Source: Island Packet (SC) Copyright: 2001, The Island Packet Contact: http://www.islandpacket.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1514 Author: Chris Bender CHEMIST HIRED FOR DRUG LAB BY CHRIS BENDER BEAUFORT -- A former State Law Enforcement Division chemist will create Beaufort County's first drug lab and help whittle down a backlog of about 300 drug-related cases. The Sheriff's Office hired Renita Berry on Nov. 26 to run the drug lab and analyze cases for the Beaufort County General Sessions Court, including some that Sheriff P.J. Tanner has said date back to 1997. Tanner expects the new lab to be operational by Christmas. The county drug case backlog is the result of an overburdened SLED crime lab in Columbia, he said. Having the drug lab will allow the Sheriff's Office to move drug cases to the Solicitor's Office in 30 days or less, he said. "Establishing a drug lab in-house will exponentially speed up the judicial process for our county's drug cases," Tanner said. Berry, 33, a police officer since 1998, also worked for the state Department of Health and Environmental Control for four years before going into police lab work. Berry, who will earn a salary in the mid-$40,000 range, said drugs must be tested to determine the exact nature of the substance. While deputies might identify something that looks like a drug, they don't have the tools or the training to analyze the substance. "You need to make sure that (drug possession) is actually what you are charging them with," Berry said. "We're always going to go by what the science tells us, not what the substance looks like." At SLED, Berry analyzed about 800 drug cases a year. In Beaufort County, she expects to work about 500 to 600 cases a year. Berry's responsibilities at SLED included testifying at trials that the substance in question was in fact a specific type of illegal drug. Having her at the Sheriff's Office will allow her to be available for testimony, rather than having to schedule a chemist to come from Columbia, Tanner said. The state has six regional drug labs: in Charleston, Greenville, Spartanburg, Anderson and York counties, and one at the Columbia Police Department. The drug lab is being funded by $200,000 from the county and $100,000 from the state Department of Public Safety. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens