Pubdate: Sun, 14 Sep 2003 Source: Oklahoman, The (OK) Copyright: 2003 The Oklahoma Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.oklahoman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/318 Author: Ryan McNeill, The Oklahoman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) MORE USE OF DRUG COURTS URGED FOR METH ADDICTS Oklahoma needs major changes to stem skyrocketing rates of methamphetamine production and addiction, including more regulation and a shift toward rehabilitating users, lawmakers were told this week. Officials from law enforcement and public health agencies testified before the House Criminal Justice Committee for two days as part of an interim study on methamphetamine use. It included numerous elected officials and narcotics officers, many telling lawmakers that methamphetamine use is draining manpower and budgets from state and local agencies. "It's growing like a wildfire in Oklahoma," said John Nance, R-Bethany, who requested the study. Despite fears of being considered soft on crime, narcotics officers from several agencies told lawmakers they should begin looking at ways to get more methamphetamine addicts into treatment programs, such as drug courts. They said it would have a ripple effect because most methamphetamine producers are addicts. "Incarceration is not a deterrent" said Lonnie Wright, director of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. "They are addicted. They are driven to it." Oklahoma law enforcement agencies seized 1,254 methamphetamine labs last year, placing the state among the nation's leaders, according to numbers provided by the Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. That's an increase from the 10 seized in 1994. The massive increase is credited to new recipes for production allowing a change from major methamphetamine production rings to small-time operations, often six or eight addicts, Wright said. The new recipes use widely available products, such as pseudoephedrine. "The goal is to sell enough to get back the cost of materials," Wright said. "As soon as they're out, they're back to making it again." That shift to small-time operations made up of addicts is the reason many are calling for change in Oklahoma's drug policy. If a majority of addicts ended their addiction to the drug, it would free up narcotics officers to hunt larger operations that are making cocaine, heroin and marijuana in addition to methamphetamine, said Scott Rowland, chief legal counsel for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. "These crimes are not economically motivated," Rowland said. "They are addiction motivated." Tulsa County District Attorney Tim Harris said methamphetamine also is causing public health problems statewide. He said taxpayers often are footing the bill for the 109 percent increase in emergency room deaths and 370 percent increase in visits from 1994-97 in Tulsa County. Harris said it costs about $2,500 to clean up each methamphetamine lab, many of which are found in vehicles, hotel rooms or homes. Some at the hearing touted drug courts -- operating in 24 counties -- as a viable alternative. Taxpayers saved millions of dollars in recent months as a result of Oklahoma County's drug court because offenders were rehabilitated and gained full-time jobs instead of going to prison, said Kelly Basey, assistant district attorney assigned to the court. Rates of recidivism are much lower from drug court graduates, about 14 percent for women and 21 percent for men, said Lt. Gov. Mary Fallin, who spoke during the hearings. She is also chairwoman of a task force studying incarceration rates of women in Oklahoma prisons. But Basey said not enough money is available to get many who qualify into the drug court system. She said it costs several thousand dollars to put indigents into treatment systems, meaning when money runs out they are sent to prison. "All we've done is fill up jails and keep them full," former Oklahoma County District Attorney Bob Macy said. "There's got to be a better way. And I think drug court is one of them." Nance said the Legislature probably will address several issues when it reconvenes early next year. He said the committee -- led by Rep. Paul Roan, D- Tishomingo, a former Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper -- will study requiring locks on anhydrous ammonia tanks, creating regional collection points where officers can store materials for cleanup and increasing drug courts in the state. "We are pushing for drug courts," Nance said. "We're going to be perceived as soft on crime, but what we're doing isn't working." - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl