Pubdate: Tue, 10 Dec 2002 Source: Olympian, The (WA) Copyright: 2002, The Olympian Contact: http://www.theolympian.com/forms/lettrfrm.shtml Website: http://www.theolympian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/319 Author: John Dodge INVESTIGATORS: METH GROWTH SUBSIDING To learn more For information about the methamphetamine problem in Thurston County, and to learn the signs of a meth lab operation in your neighborhood, go to www.methmonster.org. The once steady rise in methamphetamine labs in Thurston County appears to be leveling off, law enforcement officials said Monday. "We've seen a slowdown in activity the past few months," said Capt. Dan Kimball of the Thurston County Sheriff's Office. "When you take the key players out of the community and put them in jail, the numbers begin to drop -- it's encouraging." When the 2002 numbers are in, narcotics officers expect to see a downturn in the number of meth lab seizures by police and meth dump sites discovered by the state Department of Ecology, said Capt. Jim Chamberlain of the Thurston County Narcotics Task Force. Through October, there were 105 lab seizures and discovered dump sites in the county, Chamberlain said. That compares with 151 for all of 2001 and 127 in 2000. "Indications are the labs are moving into counties with less aggressive enforcement," Kimball told Thurston County commissioners Monday. "But the labs aren't going away." Changing tactics In fact, he said, those who cook up methamphetamine are breaking the production up into different processes at different locations to escape notice. Monday, the commissioners approved receipt of a 2003 federal grant to the sheriff's office to continue the fight against methamphetamine. The $98,289 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice is one of 22 grants to local agencies in the state that are working against illicit meth labs and the drug use associated with those labs. Statewide, the federal funding totals $1.9 million for next year. The money can be used to pay overtime, purchase additional supplies for meth laboratory busts and pay for annual medical exams of law enforcement officers engaged in the crackdown on meth labs, Kimball said. Thurston County has had one of the highest concentrations of meth labs in the state in recent years. The highly addictive drug accounts for about 85 percent of all drug-related arrests in the county, according to the sheriff's department. Law enforcement officials estimate that meth use is linked to 80 percent of all crime in the county. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth