Pubdate: Thu, 02 Oct 2003 Source: Appalachian, The (NC Edu) Copyright: Appalachian State University 2003 Contact: http://www1.appstate.edu/dept/csil/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2788 Author: Anna Oakes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION CASES IN WATAUGA COUNTY FIRST IN NATION Miles away from Iraq and Afghanistan, several weapons of mass destruction cases are awaiting trial here in Watauga County. According to a July 17 press release from the office of District Attorney Jerry Wilson, his office is now charging individuals found with clandestine (methamphetamine) laboratories with the B1 felony of Unlawful Manufacture, Assembly, Possession, Storage, Transportation, Sale, Purchase, Delivery, or Acquisition of a Nuclear, Biological, or Chemical Weapon of Mass Destruction in violation of North Carolina General Statute 14-288.21. This is in response to the growing number of methamphetamine laboratories in this district, namely Watauga County, the press release said. In its press release, the district attorney's office said that the existing statutes for dealing with methamphetamine laboratories are only class H felonies, which carry a maximum sentence of 30 months in jail. "The current statute is woefully insufficient to address the epidemic of clandestine methamphetamine laboratories that Watauga County is experiencing," the press release said. Assistant District Attorney Charles Byrd said that out of approximately 100 laboratories found in North Carolina this year, 28 have been found in Watauga County. Byrd said that so far there are 8-15 cases in Watauga County seeking the weapons of mass destruction charge. If there are convictions in these cases, the punishment will range from a minimum of 12 years in prison to a life sentence, depending on the defendant's record, Byrd said. "It definitely will make the risk of manufacturing methamphetamine greater and hopefully will deter others from engaging in that type of activity," Byrd said. Byrd went on to say that he believes it will set a precedent statewide, and other states will follow as well. Vincent Gable is currently representing four of the defendants in these cases. Watauga is the first county in the nation to charge someone with this, he said. Gable said the first trial is set for Dec. 8. "[If there is a conviction] it would set a very bad precedent," Gable said. "You're looking at a possibility of up to a life sentence on this." Ian Mance, a political science graduate student at Appalachian State University and co-president of the campus American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), said "DA Wilson is undermining the intent of the state legislature, exploiting the national climate of fear for personal political gain, and stretching the failed drug war to new, even more outrageous limits." "A conviction in this case would be historic," Mance said. "It would essentially mean that under the government's newly expanded powers, non-violent drug offenders could now face up to life imprisonment, if prosecuted as domestic terrorists for crimes that previously would have warranted relatively short sentences." Mance said that students should be concerned "because this is happening in our community. It's happening to people our age." "It's offensive to our collective sense of justice to think that in our country, people could get locked away forever for drug crimes. But this is now a very real possibility." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin