Pubdate: Wed, 10 Sep 2003 Source: Wilmington Morning Star (NC) Copyright: 2003 Wilmington Morning Star Contact: http://www.wilmingtonstar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/500 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ATTORNEY GENERAL WANTS LAWS, FUNDS TO FIGHT METH LABS North Carolina's attorney general says he plans to ask the General Assembly for help in curbing the spread of clandestine methamphetamine labs across the state. "The growing problem of these secret labs is quickly becoming an epidemic," Attorney General Roy Cooper said at a community forum in Boone. "The drug kingpins aren't in other countries. They are right in our own back yard." The forum focused on public health and safety problems posed by methamphetamine and the toxic combination of household chemicals used to make the illegal drug. It was organized by the Boone area Chamber of Commerce with help from the Watauga County Sheriff's Office. Small-scale methamphetamine labs began proliferating on the West Coast nearly 25 years ago, authorities said. Since then, they have spread steadily, becoming a scourge nationwide. In recent years, the problem has taken root in Tennessee and Georgia and has been growing steadily in North Carolina, especially in counties in the western part of the state. Watauga County has been one of the hardest-hit areas. So far this year, SBI agents and local law-enforcement officials have raided about 116 labs statewide, Cooper said. Of those, 24 labs, or one out of every five, has been found in Watauga, making it "ground zero" in the effort to root out the secret labs and the people operating them, he said. SBI officials said that the number of clandestine meth labs found by law-enforcement officials could reach as high as 400 statewide next year. Four years ago, only six meth labs were raided statewide. Cooper said that the need for legislative action was illustrated by a recent decision by Watauga County district attorney Jerry Wilson to prosecute people accused of making methamphetamine by using laws prohibiting chemical weapons of mass destruction. Wilson plans to use the anti-terrorism statutes because the statutes carry stiffer penalties than the laws governing meth production. "This (move) is clearly evidence of the frustration that law enforcement officials and prosecutors feel about the inadequate resources they have to fight this new and dangerous problem," Cooper said. "That's why we need ... the General Assembly to help us deal with this. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake