Pubdate: Mon, 30 Sep 2002 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 2002 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Holley Gilbert COUNTIES COLLECT MONEY TO FIGHT METH VANCOUVER -- Since federal law enforcement efforts joined local ones to put the squeeze on illegal drug trafficking along the Interstate 90 corridor, methamphetamine cookers and sellers have moved elsewhere -- including Southwest Washington. Now, $200,000 in federal dollars will come directly to Clark, Cowlitz and Lewis counties for police training, equipment and investigations primarily aimed at shutting down mid-to large-size meth operations. "I want to send a loud and clear message to criminals and drug pushers: You will not continue to get away with it," U.S. Rep. Brian Baird, D-Vancouver, announced Friday. "Southwest Washington is a great place to live but a terrible place to use and distribute drugs." The three counties recently were added to the federal High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Program because despite diligent efforts against the meth trade, the region remains "overwhelmed" with methamphetamine- related crime, Baird said during a news conference called to announce approval of the federal money. In Clark County, 80 percent of forgery, fraud and identity theft crimes can be linked to the use of meth and cocaine, Clark County Sheriff Garry Lucas said. The increase in burglaries and other property crimes within the city also means, "Somebody's supporting a drug habit," said acting Chief Brian Martinek of the Vancouver Police Department. "Meth is, if not the, one of the main threats to society right now," Martinek said. The federal program money will buy items such as disposable coveralls and purifying respirators worn by police inside meth labs, as well as electronic surveillance equipment. It will allow Clark County law enforcement officials to tap into the program's intelligence database in Seattle. And it will train police in how to handle the clandestine labs and support long-term, intensive investigations. Clark County will receive $100,000, and Cowlitz and Lewis counties will get $50,000 each. Meth production in Washington is often fed by shipments of pseudoephedrine, an ingredient common in nasal decongestants, which can be bought legally in large quantities in Canada, Baird said. Or meth can be shipped into the state from huge "superlabs" in California, said Commander Keith Kilian of the Clark-Skamania Drug Task Force. Shutting down a large meth operation in Clark County could mean closing, or at least slowing down, a related illegal drug operation in another state, he said. The meth lab problem is growing, Kilian said. So far this year, the task force has shut down 25 labs, compared with 17 during the same period last year. Meth's low price, prolonged high and extreme addictiveness have made it popular in Western, primarily rural states, including Idaho, Utah and Washington. But users can be more violent than other addicts, and meth's use is spreading east. Some "Bible Belt states are suffering huge increases in production and use," Lucas said. Baird, who saw meth's effects firsthand as a psychologist and went on to found the 89-member bipartisan Congressional Caucus to Fight and Control Methamphetamine, said he hoped program money would flow at about $200,000 for several years. Exact amounts are subject to change, however, depending on the federal budget, he said. Prevention efforts must continue, and more money is needed for treatment, Baird said, calling treatment of meth addicts "desperately difficult." But choking the meth supply will eventually result in fewer users, he said. The new federal money will help turn around what has been a decade- long rise in meth production and use, Baird said. But the process won't be quick. "I don't think we're done with this," he said. "I think we'll be dealing with this for a decade or so." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens