Pubdate: Mon, 07 May 2001
Source: Daily News of Los Angeles (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Daily News of Los Angeles
Contact: http://www.DailyNews.com/contact/letters.asp
Website: http://www.DailyNews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/246
Author: Jason Kandel

'MOM-POP' METH LABS INVADE NEIGHBORHOODS

By Jason Kandel
Staff Writer

Methamphetamine -- once the drug of choice for outlaw motorcycle gangs who 
cooked it in large batches in out-of-the-way places -- has moved downtown 
with "mom-and-pop" drug labs springing up across Los Angeles, police say.

Recent meth busts in the Santa Clarita Valley and in Van Nuys last week 
highlighted the ease with which users can start their own labs and 
manufacture the drug in small doses.

"The chemical formula has become sort of simple even for people not that 
aware of chemistry," said Robert Schirn, the head of Major Narcotics 
Division of the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office. "Some of the 
materials are not that difficult to get."

Meth, considered "blue-collar cocaine," was the domain of motorcycle gangs 
in the 1970s, cooked up in rural areas where investigators and others 
couldn't get wind of the toxic fumes. The areas also protected cooks from 
blowing their cover if the volatile mix exploded.

But new recipes, often downloaded from the Internet and made with items you 
can buy at a drugstore, are less volatile and don't smell as much, meaning 
the makers can use relatively small spaces to make the drug.

"We're finding smaller labs in residential areas, light industrial areas, 
storage lots, trailers, motels, hotel rooms -- things where you can bring 
all your equipment and fit it in one small room," said Greg Smith, the 
assistant director of Los Angeles Interagency Metropolitan Police 
Apprehension Crime Task Force.

The drug now has an audience with young, urban residents, police say.

"Methamphetamine is popular now, and gaining in popularity because it's 
more readily available. It's cheaper than (cocaine)," said Shirley Lessiak, 
a special agent with the state Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement. "The high 
lasts longer, and it's very addictive.

"It's gone beyond just the motorcycle gangs. It's an epidemic. It appears 
to be everywhere."

Los Angeles County is second in the state, behind Riverside, for the number 
of labs seized, with 310 in 1999, the last year statewide stats are available.

In the city of Los Angeles, police seized 53 labs in 2000, up from 25 in 
1999, according to the latest department records. Los Angeles authorities 
seized 12 labs in the first three months of this year. About 60 percent of 
L.A.'s calls for of the clandestine lab unit's call-outs are to the San 
Fernando Valley.

California is the nation's leader in methamphetamine production, with more 
than six times the number of labs seized of any other state. The majority 
of labs seized in California were located in Los Angeles, Riverside, Orange 
and San Bernardino counties, police said.

Despite the increase in the numbers of labs, police are not confiscating as 
much of the drug as they used to, partly because the labs are smaller.

In 2000, 533 pounds of the drug was seized by Los Angeles police, compared 
with 1,012 pounds in 1999. So far this year, police have seized 33 pounds 
of meth.

The L.A. Interagency Metropolitan Police Apprehension Crime Task Force, 
which investigates large-scale drug trafficking in the Sheriff's 
Department's jurisdictions, and assists smaller police departments, seized 
57 labs in 2000, compared to 62 in 1999.

In Val Verde, an unincorporated area of Los Angeles County about five miles 
northwest of the city of Santa Clarita, state agents seized about 18 pounds 
of methamphetamine, 50 gallons of chemicals, and guns Thursday during a 
search of a "super lab" being run in the hills.

Super labs, those able to produce 15 to 20 pounds, account for 40 percent 
to 45 percent of the meth produced in the United States, according to Los 
Angeles Police Department authorities.

But finding them is tough, authorities said. They are usually in rural 
areas, in canyons, far away from paved roads. They commonly have guard 
dogs. They could have lookouts, and meth makers are usually very evasive 
from law enforcement.

"We don't find super labs every week," Lessiak said. "A majority of our 
seizures are mom-and-pop operations."

Los Angeles police raided what they believe to be a mom-and-pop lab inside 
a three-bedroom home in the 6600 block of Fulton Avenue in Van Nuys on 
Thursday, police said.

Detectives, conducting a stolen property investigation, uncovered the 
suspected methamphetamine lab and arrested a couple. They also confiscated 
suspected meth-making paraphernalia and chemicals.

The toxic chemicals involved in making the meth are extremely dangerous and 
they can explode. In 1999, 20 Los Angeles police and fire fighters were 
injured responding to meth lab explosions and fires.

"This stuff," said Schirn, the L.A. prosecutor, "is in our own back yard."

Staff Writer Kathy Sweeney contributed to this report.
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