Pubdate: Sun, 10 Aug 2003 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (MS) Copyright: 2003 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://www.clarionledger.com/about/letters.html Website: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Sid Salter Related: Facts: http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0308/10/lperse-toid1.html Arrests by County: http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0308/10/lperse-toid3.html Meth arrests: http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0308/10/lperse-toid2.html STATE'S DRUG WAR CHANGING Crack, Marijuana And "Crystal Meth" Now The Drugs Most In Demand Some things never change in Mississippi: The bad guys are still "cooking," but the recipe has changed. Corn mash is out. Ammonia and pseudoephedrine are in. In 2003, there were 443 manufacturing operations working across Mississippi that weren't listed in the Mississippi Development Authority's files - all illegal drug laboratories and most manufacturing illegal "crystal" methamphetamine or "crack" cocaine. There are more such laboratories operating across the state as you read this sentence. The 443 cited are simply the ones discovered and destroyed in the state in 2003 by federal, state and local law enforcement agents. What's the state of the war on drugs in Mississippi? Federal, state and local drug enforcement took almost 15,800 lbs of cocaine, 35 lbs. of crystal methamphetamine, almost 3,700 lbs of processed marijuana and another 5,210 marijuana plants, and a collection of narcotics off the street in some 2,244 drug arrests. State Bureau of Narcotics Director Frank Melton said the agency's evidence room vault currently holds $1.6 billion in confiscated drugs - even after destroying $10 million to $15 million in processed drug evidence since he took command of the agency in 2002. "The numbers don't mean a thing," said Melton. "No matter how many drug dealers are arrested or how much drugs we take off the street, real progress lies in education and prevention in schools and neighborhoods and in concentrating less on arresting a lot of street dealers and more on arresting drug suppliers." Mississippi taxpayers dedicated money to the problem - some $12.2 million in state Bureau of Narcotics funding alone last year. That doesn't count a Mississippi taxpayer's share of general federal, state and local law enforcement agencies that routinely deal with drug cases. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has a $1.9 billion budget. Fifty years ago, rural Mississippi communities were often havens to illegal clandestine liquor manufacturing operations. The "moonshine stills" circumvented the state's legal prohibition of booze and provided income for those who could make more money "running 'shine" than by more honest pursuits. Moonshine whiskey produced in the state ran the gamut from the finest sipping whiskey to rotgut brews that left customers sick or dead from lead poisoning. The advent of legal liquor and beer in the state proved the death knell of the vast majority of illegal stills in the state beginning in the early 1970s. But both state and federal agencies charged with drug enforcement in Mississippi say that the manufacture of "crystal" methamphetamine - and to a somewhat lesser degree "crack" cocaine - has become the moonshining operations of the 21st century. Modern drug dealers manufacture their products in homes, in rural outbuildings and in other locations. Two Mississippi sheriffs bolster state and federal concerns about methamphetamine manufacture. "It's quick to make, relatively easy to make and we see more methamphetamine on the street than all the other drugs combined," said Neshoba County Sheriff Glen Waddell of Philadelphia. "Mostly we see small manufacturing for use, but there have been big labs found here making it to sell. It's been a serious problem here." Calhoun County Sheriff Billy Mac Gore of Vardaman said local manufacture of methamphetamine was among "the most serious problems" in his county. "We see the problem most in the white community than the black community and we see teenagers being used by adults to buy the materials to make the stuff in local stores," Gore said. "This(methamphetamine manufacture) is far more widespread than moonshining ever was." Melton said that because of the danger of fire and explosion from the meth labs and the popularity of the drug, methamphetamine "is the biggest, most dangerous drug problem confronting Mississippi today." He said methamphetamine abuse produces many of the same physical dangers as ingestion of rotgut whiskey did a half-century ago in the state. U.S. DEA officials agree. In the 2002 DEA report on the drug situation in Mississippi, the agency reported: "While cocaine, particularly 'crack' cocaine, is still considered to be the biggest drug threat facing the state of Mississippi, the increase in methamphetamine abuse and manufacturing follows closely behind . . . methamphetamine use in Mississippi is rampant." Melton said that MBN has several critical needs if the agency is to be more successful in fighting drugs in Mississippi - increased agency funding from $12.2 million to $17.5 million, salary increases and a better retirement plan for MBN agents and a change in the current state drug forfeiture formula. Currently, if MBN works a case in a local jurisdiction with the assistance of a local law enforcement agency, MBN receives only 20 percent of drug assets forfeited by seizure while the locals get 80 percent. Melton wants that changed to 50 percent for MBN. "It would help morale and help offset budget concerns and it's simply the fair way to do things," he said. But Melton said that none of those initiatives will help further the cause of combatting drugs in Mississippi unless his "safe schools and safe neighborhoods" programs are successful. Melton said MBN officials have interacted with 10,600 students in 26 Mississippi schools and that the safe neighborhoods program is active in "two or three communities across the state" each week. "Education and prevention is only one side of it," said Ole Miss professor emeritus of history Dr. David Sansing. "Our drug laws are inconsistently enforced. We're not rehabilitating anybody, not dealing with addiction. That's still the missing piece of the puzzle." Melton's MBN annual report lists a gram of methamphetamine at a street value of $100, a rock of crack cocaine at $20. "Bottom line, it's about the money," Melton said. "That's what we're battling." "The only moonshining we see up here anymore is an occasional person making a small amount of "home brew," said Gore. "But these meth labs have spread all over northeast Mississippi and the problem is growing, not getting smaller." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk