Pubdate: Mon, 21 Oct 2002 Source: McAlester News-Capital & Democrat (OK) Copyright: McAlester News-Capital & Democrat 2002 Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=139068&BRD=1126 Website: http://www.mcalesternews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1892 Author: James Beaty START ME UP! POLICE SEIZE THOUSANDS OF CANS OF STARTING FLUID Pittsburg County Sheriff Jerome "Snookie" Amaranto paused after helping load 283 cases of car starting fluid confiscated during a raid in McAlester on Wednesday afternoon. He wondered aloud why people who manufacture methamphetamine seem to have such a hard time starting their vehicles. "Every time we get to a lab, we find these starting fluid cans," quipped Amaranto, who is well aware starting fluid is used in many formulas used to manufacture methamphetamine. Amaranto and Pittsburg County Undersheriff D.G. "Stoney" Stonecipher were among a large group of law enforcement officers from federal, state and county agencies who confiscated the starting fluid from a rental storage facility in north McAlester. With 12 cans in each of the 283 cases, the bust netted 3,396 cans of the fluid, or 849 gallons. The storage building in McAlester in which officers found the fluid had been rented by a Stuart man, according to the sheriff's department. No arrests were made in conjunction with the raid, authorized by a federal search warrant. With a number of agencies cooperating on the investigation, evidence concerning the case is expected to be presented to a federal grand jury. Authorities obtained the search warrant following a long-term investigation. A large amount of pseudoephedrine, containing "hundreds of thousands of dosage units," had been seized in a raid conducted weeks earlier connected to the same investigation, according to a sheriff's spokesman. Among those participating in the raid were the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the FBI, the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, the Pittsburg County Sheriff's Department and the District 22 Narcotics Task Force, which includes Pontotoc, Seminole and Hughes counties. Tom Cunningham is a member of the District 22 Task Force. Stuart, in Hughes County, is in the task force's jurisdiction. "The finished product goes into both jurisdictions," Cunningham said. The local District 18 Narcotics Task Force had been involved in an earlier phase of the investigation, according to Stonecipher. One law enforcement officer alleged the starting fluid was connected to a "large-scale operation." Asked if he thought the raid would put a sizable dent in methamphetamine production in the McAlester area, Amaranto said "no." He said those who manufacture the illegal drug will find other sources for what they need, or come up with different ways to manufacture it. "This is what we deal with day after day," Amaranto said. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex