Pubdate: Thu, 18 Jul 2002 Source: Daily Ardmoreite, The (OK) Copyright: 2002 Daily Ardmoreite Contact: http://ardmoreite.com/stText/sendLetter.html Website: http://www.ardmoreite.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1574 Author: Marsha Miller, News Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH LAB EXPLOSION BECOMES MURDER CASE AFTER VICTIM DIES MILL CREEK -- The investigation into an illicit methamphetamine lab explosion June 30 that sent a fireball through a local residence and injured two women has turned into a homicide case. District Attorney Task Force agents said Teresa Hicks, who was burned on 50 percent of her body, when the lab exploded in her kitchen, died Monday at Integris Baptist Burn Center in Oklahoma City. District Attorney Mitch Sperry said late Tuesday Hicks' death changes the focus of the case. "It ups the ante," Sperry said. "It's now a homicide case." Hicks, 39, and Stacy Hughes, 23, a visitor at the woman's home, were both burned as a result the exploding lab that Task Force Agent Gary Watson had described as "massive" and "highly volatile." Johnston County Sheriff Jon Smith said at least 15 people were present in the house when the explosion occurred, including Hick's husband, Gary, and two small children. The children escaped burn injuries. Both children were placed in the custody of the Department of Human Services. Smith said while the children were not injured by the fire, they would undergo medical evaluations to attempt to determine if they suffered from the toxic fumes the lab created. "Unfortunately, it's always the children who end up being the true victims in incidents like this," he said. Meanwhile, authorities say Hicks' husband has disappeared in a probable effort to escape arrest. Authorities are searching for him. Hicks and Hughes reportedly left the residence shortly after the fireball seared through the kitchen and local firefighters were called. The two women were later found at another Mill Creek house. They were taken to nearby hospitals. Subsequently, both women were transferred to the burn center. Hicks was listed in critical condition immediately upon her arrival to the intensive care unit. Hospital officials said Hughes had sustained second-degree burns on 10 percent of her body. She was listed in serious condition and was not a ICU patient. State Fire Marshal John Haney assisted in the investigation of the lab that claimed Hicks' life. Smith said Haney's probe validated information authorities already had secured concerning the illicit lab. "The fire marshal identified the ignition source as a hot plate that had been sitting in the kitchen. That confirms information we had obtained from witnesses that they had a jar sitting on the hot plate which cracked and became a rolling fireball," Smith said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom