Pubdate: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2002 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Todd Bensman DRUG AGENCY EXPANDS N. Texas Force Will Add 3 Squads To Target Oklahoma Meth Labs A North Texas federal drug task force is expanding its reach into Oklahoma to counter some of the nation's largest concentrations of clandestine methamphetamine laboratories. The North Texas High Intensity Drug Area task force, one of 33 multiagency groups funded across the country in recent years to dismantle major drug organizations, has won approval to form three new squads from a number of Oklahoma law enforcement agencies. Law enforcement officials in Dallas said gaining approval for the task force expansion to Oklahoma had been difficult because counterterrorism has been such a high priority, but they said an inability of thinly stretched local police to stem a major rise of a national methamphetamine trade made a powerful argument for the expansion. "Oklahoma is second or third in the country as far as the number of these clandestine labs. It's a major problem there," said task force director David Israelson, who works at the 3-year-old group's headquarters near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. "With those three task forces being formed, I think it will give us a pretty good starting point in Oklahoma. For right now, that's about all we can do with the available money." The six targeted counties are in the central and eastern parts of the state: Oklahoma, Tulsa, Muskogee, Sequoyah, Comanche and Cleveland. Last year, those counties accounted for most of the 1,200 labs confiscated by state authorities. The Office of National Drug Control Policy, which oversees the nation's 33 HIDTA task force offices, approved the rare expansion in September with an initial $250,000 grant. The three new squads should be deployed by Christmas. "There just aren't a lot of resources up there," said Dallas DEA Special Agent in Charge Sherri Strange, who campaigned for the expansion in her office's jurisdiction. "Oklahoma is a very rural place, and a lot of their resources are spread out." An HIDTA "threat assessment" study this year in rural Oklahoma cites a surge in substance-abuse treatment numbers that places Oklahoma 42 percent higher than the national average for stimulant abuse. The study also says Oklahoma is a major national hub for the smuggling and distribution of illegal "precursor" chemicals used in the home production of methamphetamine. "There appears to be no slowdown in either clandestine methamphetamine lab activity or Oklahoma's role as a major source for precursor chemicals," the report said. "With 35 registered wholesalers and three manufacturers of pseudoephedrine, Oklahoma-based chemicals have been found in all surrounding states and as far as California and Nevada." Pseudoepedrine is a decongestant commonly used in over-the-counter cold medicines. It also is a main ingredient in the production of illegal methamphetamine. Mr. Israelson said one task force squad will try to disrupt the trade in precursor drugs. Another will target clandestine labs. A third Oklahoma City-based squad will spend much of its time supporting those activities in intelligence-gathering roles but also gathering information about Mexican drug-trafficking gangs operating in Oklahoma. Mexican drug traffickers have set up operations near Oklahoma City and Tulsa, creating tightly knit gangs that traffic in large quantities of cocaine, marijuana, and heroin, federal officials said. Primary corridors Interstates 35, 40 and 44 in Oklahoma are the primary corridors for these operations, with large amounts being shipped to other major cities, particularly Chicago, Kansas City and New York. Money from the drug transactions is then shipped back to Mexico by similar routes, the threat assessment report said. Malcom Atwood, director of Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics, said he welcomes the extra government help to combat a problem that seems to be spiraling beyond his agency's control. "Those are probably the counties in which most of the drug activity in Oklahoma has been taking place," he said. "With the federal resources, we'll be able to focus in on those problems." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens