Pubdate: Mon, 7 Oct 2002 Source: Joplin Globe, The (MO) Contact: 2002 The Joplin Globe Website: http://www.joplinglobe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/859 Author: Gary Garton, Globe Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH MATERIALS FOUND IN PIT Lawmen: Sinkhole Contains Materials From 200 Operations Dumped Over Two-Year Period HOCKERVILLE, Okla. -- Two federal agencies balked Thursday at cleaning up debris from an estimated 200 methamphetamine-making operations dumped in a mine sinkhole over the past two years. The materials and a stolen car were found Wednesday by local drug officers investigating another case. "It's the biggest collection of toxic junk I've ever seen," said Miami police Lt. Danny Green. "This place must have been a well-known dumping ground for meth cooks all over the area." Green and Lance Fields, a Bureau of Indian Affairs officer, found the sinkhole about 2 p.m. on Wednesday while walking through land owned by Samuel Thomas Hart, 31, of rural Hockerville, northeast of Picher in Ottawa County. Green said the officers went to Hart's home and did a "knock and talk" interview regarding a federal fugitive, Sam Fitzgerald, who may have been seen in the area recently. Hart is free on bond awaiting an Oct. 29 preliminary hearing on charges of possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia. The charges were filed in February. Green said Hart gave the officers permission to search his home and land. Green said the officers were walking through the heavily wooded property when they found a Corvette covered by a tarp. Officers later determined that the car was reported stolen earlier this week from a used-car dealership in Baxter Springs, Kan. The officers then found the sinkhole, about 25 feet across and more than 30 feet deep, which was nearly full of equipment and chemicals used to manufacture meth. "Some of it was pretty rusty, and some was bright and shiny new, so this has been an ongoing dump site for what I would estimate was at least two years," Green said. Green and Fields are members of the 13th Judicial District Drug Task Force, and have had training and experience in cases involving the making of meth. Because the pit is on federal trust, or Indian, land, the officers contacted the Drug Enforcement Administration, which normally handles the cleanup and disposal of toxic drug materials found on federal land. The officers also contacted the Environmental Protection Agency, because of the scope of the waste dump and the potential contamination of soil and ground water by chemicals leaching out of the pit during rainy periods. Green said the officers were informed that the EPA would not respond. He said they maintained security at the scene for nearly 24 hours before a DEA agent arrived. Nancy Jones, with the EPA's Region Six office in Dallas, said in a telephone interview Thursday that the agency "is not funded for drug-related cleanup. The DEA is funded for that." Local officers said Thursday that Gary Young of the DEA's Tulsa office, who arrived to look at the site, told them his agency could do only a partial cleanup. Lt. Charles Addington, with the BIA police unit stationed in Miami, said the DEA uses a private contractor to clean up toxic drug debris at meth-lab sites. "They're apparently only equipped to handle small individual sites," he said. "Nothing on the scale of this one has ever come up before." Fields, with the BIA police, said officers were told by Young that the DEA's private contractor "will bring in a backhoe and try to dig out as much of this stuff as they can. They won't try to clean up the contaminated soil or look at any possible water problems in the area." Addington said BIA environmental specialist John Dalgarn, who was at the scene, said he would try to contact someone about an extended cleanup. Dalgarn and Young did not speak to reporters at the scene Thursday. Green, with the Miami police, said the DEA contractor was coming from Moore, near Oklahoma City, and was not expected to arrive until late afternoon or early evening Thursday. "We will have to continue maintaining security for public safety around the scene, and possibly may try to fingerprint some of the equipment when the DEA crew brings it out," he said. Green said Hart had denied any knowledge of the meth dump or the stolen car on his land. "He said there are always people passing through the area, some without his knowledge," Green said. In February, officers served a search warrant at Hart's home and reported finding a number of items with traces of methamphetamine and marijuana, and some drug paraphernalia. A probable-cause affidavit filed for the search warrant said a confidential informant told officers that he had purchased and used meth at Hart's home and had seen it being cooked in an abandoned structure nearby. Hart has been free on bond, and delays resulting from motions filed by his attorney and conflicting dates on the court's calendar forced the postponement of his preliminary hearing from Aug. 1 to Oct. 29. Assistant District Attorney David Anderson said Thursday: "It's too soon to say if this discovery will in any way be linked to Mr. Hart or result in any new charges against him. The fact that the dump was on Indian land might put the case in the federal court's jurisdiction." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager