Pubdate: Sun, 17 Mar 2002
Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY)
Copyright: 2002 Messenger-Inquirer
Contact:  http://www.messenger-inquirer.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285
Author: Kimberly Hefling, Associated Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

METHAMPHETAMINE USE, LABS INCREASING ACROSS MIDWEST

EVANSVILLE -- With tears in her eyes, Denise Quintanilla begged the judge 
to spare her a life sentence in prison.

"You know, this is my life, and I pray that the Lord's guiding you, you 
know. I'm scared," the 33-year-old mother of three told U.S. District Judge 
Richard L. Young.

Married to an imprisoned drug lord, Quintanilla was convicted last fall of 
trafficking in methamphetamines, helping to funnel drugs worth $250,000 
from Texas into southern Indiana.

Police say she is just one player in an ever increasing cat-and-mouse game 
between methamphetamine traffickers and authorities in Indiana, Kentucky 
and elsewhere in the Midwest.

In the federal court system in southern Indiana, the number of defendants 
charged with meth trafficking increased from 7 percent of the caseload in 
1995 to 28 percent in 2000. Elsewhere in the Midwest, meth cases have 
clogged court systems and cost taxpayers millions -- up to $125,000 per lab 
- -- to clean up discarded meth labs.

The problem, at least in Indiana, appears concentrated in rural areas, said 
Tim Morrison, an assistant U.S. Attorney in southern Indiana.

"Will it stay there for a long period of time? I don't know," Morrison 
said. "I can tell you, five years ago it wasn't here and now it is."

Indiana State Police helped seize 681 meth labs in 2001, compared with just 
six in 1995, Sgt. Todd Ringle said. In Kentucky, police dismantled six meth 
labs in 1996, and 268 in 2001, according to state police figures.

"We're fighting an uphill battle," Ringle said. "The numbers continue to 
get higher and higher."

In the Midwest, methamphetamines are distributed about equally by two 
different sources, said David Barton, director of the Midwest High 
Intensity Drug Trafficking Area in Kansas City, Mo.

Organized drug rings, most from Mexico, typically import meth produced in 
"super labs" in California or other Western states at a rate of 10 pounds 
or more a day.

The second source is mom-and-pop cookers who buy ingredients -- cold 
medicine and lithium batteries, for example -- at retail stores and produce 
it in motels, vans and backyard sheds. They often use and sell the drugs, 
and sometimes barter a portion for supplies for the next batch.

Both types of dealers are increasing.

Poor Man's Cocaine

Some call methamphetamines the poor man's cocaine because it is a highly 
addictive stimulant that produces a euphoria similar to cocaine, but lasts 
longer -- six to eight hours compared to a 20 minutes to an hour for 
cocaine, Ringle said.

The price, however, is equivalent, roughly $100 for a gram, about the 
contents of a sugar packet, Kentucky State Trooper Mark Applin said.

"You can smoke meth, you can snort it, you can ingest it or you can inject 
it," Ringle said.

It's hard to say why the drug, dubbed "speed," "crank," "crystal-meth" and 
"glass" on the streets, has become such a popular drug. But authorities say 
the abundance of chemicals used to make meth -- particularly the fertilizer 
anhydrous ammonium commonly found in area farm communities -- is a factor.

"It's very easy to make with a large profit return," Applin said. "It will 
probably be the longest running drug problem we'll see in Kentucky in the 
next 10 years."

Nationwide, the number of meth labs seized by the U.S. Drug Enforcement 
Administration increased from 287 in 1994 to 1,837 in 2000, said Joe Long, 
a DEA spokesman. That does not include the labs seized by state and local 
authorities.

In Kansas, 702 labs were seized in 2000, compared with 189 in 1998; in 
Missouri, the number rose from 679 in 1998 to 890 in 2000; in Illinois, the 
number increased from zero in 1995 to 246 in 1999.

In Iowa, where retailers work with police to limit the sale of meth 
ingredients, the number of seized labs has leveled off. But the demand is 
being filled with the methamphetamines smuggled by Mexican gangs, said 
Barton, of the Midwest task force.

"We're seeing a lessening in some part of the Midwest on the number of the 
smaller retail level labs, but we're seeing that reduction in labs 
reinforced with imported meth from Mexican trafficking groups, or we're 
uncovering larger capacity labs," Barton said.

It touches us all

The meth problem in Indiana and Kentucky touches a wide segment of society 
- -- from the farmer who needs to protect his fertilizer from theft to the 
Wal-Mart sales clerk watching for customers who buy a large amount of cold 
tablets containing the raw ingredients for the drugs.

Smaller-scale producers often hop from store to store to buy the needed 
products. And they steal others.

The lure of drug money tears families like Denise Quintanilla's apart.

Quintanilla -- whose children are 17, 15, 13 -- was sentenced to life in 
prison. The Dallas, Texas, woman maintained she is innocent. But the judge, 
citing two prior felony drug convictions, said he had no choice but to lock 
her up for life.

Her lawyer, David Shaw, said even if she did help traffic meth, she did not 
deserve to be sentenced to life in prison, arguing that "life in prison for 
passing on messages or running an errand is grossly disproportionate."

But the police on the streets, and increasingly on the rural roads of 
Indiana and Kentucky, are not swayed.

Concluded Barton: "A meth cook not in jail is cooking."
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager