Pubdate: Thu, 11 Sep 2003 Source: Albany Herald, The (GA) Copyright: 2003 The Albany Herald Publishing Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1747 Website: http://www.albanyherald.net/ Author: Mark Passwaters, Staff Writer METH LABS EASY, CHEAP - AND LETHAL The Community Gets Educated About Methamphetamines. ALBANY - What do Sudafed tablets, lighter fluid and the phosphorus tops to matches have in common? Nothing, except in one case: they are all ingredients used in making methamphetamine. Methamphetamine, or "meth" as it is popularly known, is quickly becoming one of the most popular drugs in the United States, and Southwest Georgia in particular. In order to better educate members of the community about the drug and how it is produced, experts on the subject held a two-hour seminar Wednesday at the Albany Area Chamber of Commerce. Maj. Bill Berry of the Albany-Dougherty Drug Unit and Sgt. Vic Camp of the Albany Police Department said methamphetamine use was skyrocketing because it is cheap, powerful and easy to produce. Berry said that a $200 spending spree at Wal-Mart would get enough of the products needed to make 2 grams of the drug worth $5,600 on the street. "I can go most any place in town and get all this, and I don't have to worry about smuggling," he said. Berry and Camp said "meth labs" can appear anywhere, from the kitchen of a nice house to a "Beavis and Butthead" lab that consists only of two large plastic cups connected together by bendable straws. Berry described several of the processes used to create methamphetamine, telling the audience the makers of the drug will recycle items - including their own urine - to make more of it. The combination of chemicals used in creating methamphetamine can easily be fatal, but Berry said people with little or no knowledge of chemistry make the drugs in their own home. "That's the spooky part of this thing," he said. "You've got Jethro Bodine (a character from the "Beverly Hillbillies" TV show) making dope." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake