Pubdate: Wed, 10 Apr 2002 Source: Denver Post (CO) Xebpage: http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1002,53%257E517309,00.html Copyright: 2002 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Howard Pankratz METH-LAB FORCE TO OFFER EVIDENCE Case Focus Of Tattered Cover Ruling Wednesday, April 10, 2002 - The North Metro Drug Task Force plans to present evidence next week to Adams County prosecutors against those it believes ran the methamphetamine lab that was the focus of Monday's Tattered Cover Book Store ruling. Should prosecutors accept the case, the task force will issue a nationwide arrest warrant for the suspects, who disappeared shortly before the lab was raided, said Lt. Lori Moriarty, commander of the task force. "We don't know where they are," said Moriarty. "We were never able to find them and don't know how to get ahold of them." At the time of the spring 2000 raid on the trailer which contained the lab, two people were present. But Moriarty said an investigation showed the pair had never been there before and were waiting for four people thought to have lived in the trailer. Craig Silverman, a former Denver prosecutor, said it makes sense for prosecutors to pursue a case against the suspects rather than simply abandon it because their whereabouts are unknown. "There appears to be an epidemic of methamphetamine usage and manufacturing in Colorado. Any responsible prosecutor has to be concerned about that," said Silverman. "It would send a wrong message from a prosecutorial perspective to suggest a person who manufactures methamphetamines can leave the state and not worry about local law enforcement trying to find them," said Silverman. Moriarty stressed that investigators believe the ruling Monday by the Colorado Supreme Court denied investigators a critical piece of evidence. Investigators recovered a Tattered Cover mailer at the home with a suspect's name on it and two "how-to" meth books - which the Tattered Cover sold - in the master bedroom where the lab was located. The task force sought Tattered Cover sales records to see if one of the suspects ordered the "how-to" books. Moriarty said investigators believed that the person whose name appeared on the mailer may have been the ringleader, but that he apparently didn't sleep in the master bedroom where the lab and books were found. Knowing who ordered the books might have established who slept in the master bedroom and ran the lab, she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth