Pubdate: Tue, 02 Sep 2003 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2003 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Martha Quillin, Staff Writer RURAL COUNTY IS METH CENTRAL Watauga Battles Illegal Drug Labs BOONE -- To hear law officers tell it, methamphetamine is killing Watauga County. It nearly killed Darien South. On a January night, the Deep Gap volunteer firefighter and part-time preacher was trying to save a burning double-wide trailer. The crew had put out the flames and was hunting for embers. South's gloves were frozen where he had held the fire hose in the 7-degree weather, but all at once the ice melted. "We've got fire under the floor," South called. He opened a crawlspace door. When he poked his head in, a hot chemical cloud hit him, searing his lungs and scorching his eyes. He reeled back, then tried again. The second time was worse. South coughed up blood and collapsed. As he was loaded into an ambulance, a deputy told him the house was a meth lab. Of the 101 labs busted in the state so far this year, 26 have been in Watauga County, and desperate prosecutors have begun charging meth defendants under a law designed to fight terrorism. "I want rid of this stuff," says Watauga County Sheriff Mark Shook. "It's ruining our county." Meth goes by a half-dozen street names, including crank and speed. It is based on pseudoephedrine, a common ingredient in cold remedies. But when highly concentrated and mixed with other chemicals, then smoked, inhaled, injected or swallowed, it's a powerful stimulant that creates a quick, intense euphoria. It is said to be more addictive than crack cocaine. Under the effects of meth, users might stay awake a week at a time. They get agitated, they often hallucinate and many become violent. This is complicated by the tendency of many to be well- armed, the result of a thriving guns-for-meth trade. Rural Watauga is well-suited for meth manufacturing, a process that uses a stew of chemicals so volatile and poisonous that they must be cleaned up by people in hazardous materials suits. The foul smell it produces is less likely to be detected in the remote hills and valleys, and a mountain culture that values privacy keeps neighbors from asking too many questions. Authorities in Watauga County first encountered meth about two years ago. Initially, it was sold by truckers coming from Tennessee. A network of cooks quickly followed, setting up labs in kitchens, the bedrooms of children, outbuildings, barns and motels. They have dumped their caustic leftovers on the roadside, or poured them onto the ground, into creeks or down drains, or tossed them into trash bins. Occasionally, the labs explode. Once discovered, they must be professionally dismantled, at an average cost of $2,000 to $4,000, according to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. Not prepared With less than $400 worth of ingredients and three to four hours, a cook can manufacture $4,000 worth of meth. "This stuff hit so hard and so fast, we weren't prepared for it," says Sheriff Shook, who was an investigator with the department then. "The SBI wasn't ready, the laws aren't there and the rest of the state isn't prepared for it, either." Watauga County is scrambling to address its epidemic. In March, the county's Department of Social Services started a Meth Lab Response Team for Children and Families. The team has grown to about three dozen members, including case workers, mental health and substance-abuse experts, environmental scientists, judges, firefighters and police. "Each time we meet, we ask more questions, and we have more questions, and we have to involve more resources," said Chad Slagle, a social worker who helped organize the team. "This is a very costly problem." From January to May, Slagle said, the county social services agency opened 15 cases involving children from homes where meth labs had been found. The agency has taken the position that when minors are found in such homes, they cannot be returned, because no one knows what toxins the child will be exposed to. If the parents return to the same home, the children are placed in foster care or with relatives. Shook, 37, was born in Watauga County and says his life's ambition was to become sheriff, which he did last December. He has made fighting meth a main mission; it consumes about half his department's investigative time. Shook says he owes his three narcotics officers more than 300 hours of overtime. He is requesting money to hire two more officers. The department has more leads on meth labs than it can investigate. A recent one came from a first-grader, who described his parents' meth operation in detail to his teacher and classmates. "If we had the manpower, we could fill up the jail," says Todd Phillips, who has worked narcotics for the county for two years. Until recently, however, those arrested on charges of manufacturing methamphetamine didn't spend much time in jail. That's because the drug charge carries a maximum penalty of 30 months, and those with no prior record could expect a suspended sentence with probation. Bonds were typically set at $1,000 to $3,000. "Some of them were back out cooking almost before we could get the paperwork done," Phillips said. Then, in July, District Attorney Jerry Wilson issued a memo suggesting local law enforcement begin charging meth cooks under a state statute that legislators rewrote after the Sept. 11 attacks to deal with the threat of terrorism. Wilson is relying on a phrase added to the law that makes it a felony to manufacture a nuclear, biological or chemical weapon of mass destruction, and defines such a weapon as "any substance that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious injury and .. is or contains toxic or poisonous chemicals or their immediate precursors." Putting law to work The first person charged under this new approach, which Shook's office refers to as the chemical weapons charge, was Martin Dwayne Miller, who investigators say was one of Watauga County's most prolific meth cooks. Before he was arrested on the chemical weapons charge July 11, he had been brought in at least twice under the drug statutes, and bonded out both times. The felony charge he now faces carries a penalty of 12 years to life. He remains in jail with bail set at $505,000. Several other counties are now considering testing the statute. State Attorney General Roy Cooper said Wilson's use of the antiterrorism provision reflects "a frustration that law enforcement and prosecutors have been feeling because of the difficulty of the fight." Cooper plans a conference in early October at which law enforcement, prosecutors, emergency responders, public health experts and others will discuss strategies for dealing with the meth explosion. Some states, for example, have begun regulating the sale of some ingredients. In the meantime, Cooper says, the antiterrorism statute is one avenue to try. Since they got Wilson's memo, county officers have charged at least seven others under the statute. On Aug. 24, officers picked up Christopher Lee Greene, at whose trailer Darien South was injured. Greene has been charged with three felonies: manufacture and possession of a chemical weapon, unlawful use of a chemical weapon, and assault with a deadly weapon, inflicting serious injury. His bail is $750,000. To skeptics who question whether the charges will stand up in court, Sheriff Shook says, "Go ask Darien South if it's not a chemical weapon." Debilitating effects South still doesn't know for sure what he inhaled that night. When he woke up in intensive care three days later, it hurt so much to breathe, he tried not to. On Thursday, South had yet another doctor's appointment. His physicians have brought the crushing headaches under control, but his lung capacity has been dropping steadily for months. Doctors haven't been able to tell him whether he will recover. He lost his job as a route man for Coca-Cola, no longer able to work 12-hour days hefting hundreds of pounds of drink-syrup canisters. He gets out of breath playing with his three children, and he can't take care of his parents' yard anymore; now they help with his chores. Sometimes at night, his wife, Renee, is awakened by his gasping, which sounds more like that of a 70-year-old emphysema patient than the robust 30-year-old he was just eight months ago. On Sundays, South still musters the energy to step to the pulpit at Bellview Baptist Church, whose 116 members rely on him. His sermons are quieter these days. "The message is just as powerful," his wife says, "but the messenger is not." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake