Pubdate: Sun, 16 Nov 2003 Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. Contact: http://www.knoxnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226 Author: J.J. Stambaugh Note: The following related elements comprise a Series: The Meth Explosion Related: Roots Of Destruction Methamphetamine Labs Growing Wild In Rural East Tennessee http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_2432374,00.html Related: Limited Treatment Options Available To Meth Users http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_2436920,00.html Related: Sale Of Cold Remedies Closely Monitored http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_2439507,00.html Related: Task Force Says It's Making Progress Against Meth Problem http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_2439509,00.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ROOTS OF DESTRUCTION Methamphetamine Labs Growing Wild In Rural East Tennessee ALTAMONT, Tenn. -- The fabled outlaw tradition of East Tennessee has taken a volatile turn with the addition of methamphetamine into a cultural mix that has traditionally revolved around moonshine and marijuana, authorities say. Beginning in the Sequatchie Valley in the mid-1990s and slowly spreading to the northeast, large-scale methamphetamine use has cut an epic swath through the fabled hills and hollows that once sheltered corn stills and pot patches. So far, the meth epidemic has sent thousands of Tennesseans to jail or prison, taken nearly 500 children from their parents and cost taxpayers millions of dollars in environmental clean-up costs. A largely rural phenomenon, the tide of meth use has spread throughout the Cumberland Plateau and is now crashing through Anderson County and points further east, straining law enforcement and social service agencies to the breaking point through sheer weight of numbers. And the epidemic shows no signs of letting up soon, according to U.S. Attorney Russ Dedrick, who prosecutes federal criminal cases in the Eastern District of Tennessee. "We see problems with marijuana and cocaine and its derivative, crack cocaine, in the metropolitan areas," Dedrick said. "As you get into the rural areas, you see marijuana and methamphetamine, and methamphetamine is the major danger. ... We see the harmful effects of methamphetamine as being a larger potential problem, so we want to keep a handle on it." From retail customers who suddenly find themselves unable to buy cold tablets in bulk to the social workers who must scramble to find homes for children torn suddenly from their parents, the impact of meth is becoming more visible with each passing day. And federal authorities say they know exactly where, when and how the current epidemic began. Putting down rural roots Until the past decade, meth trafficking was generally associated with outlaw bikers, truck drivers and shady chemists out to make a quick buck, according to Dedrick. "In the past, we saw ... trained individuals in chemistry who were involved in the production of large quantities of methamphetamine in a laboratory environment in a building or the back of a house where they actually had test tubes, burners and such," Dedrick said. "That was 15 to 20 years ago. We were able to find those people pretty quickly. ... We don't see the biker gang involvement now, because we don't see a lot of biker gangs. "People that went across the country and used methamphetamine to stay awake, they just kind of dropped it off across the country from California. We saw large methamphetamine problems develop in the Plains states, like Kansas, Arkansas, Nebraska. ... They are kind of the forerunners of this problem that has developed." Meth is generally distilled from over-the-counter cold medications containing pseudoephedrine. Over time, meth distributors and addicts figured out ways to manufacture the drug on their own, presaging the epidemic of back-room "meth labs" that have bedeviled dozens of East Tennessee communities in recent years. It's in the rural areas that meth has taken hold. While there are undoubtedly meth users in Knoxville, for instance, officials from the Knoxville Police Department say they have yet to discover a single working lab in the city. Anderson County authorities, on the other hand, have busted 45 labs since January, and Cumberland County saw 36 in fiscal year 2002-03, according to agency statistics. Authorities say the main reason meth labs keep popping up in rural areas is because they draw too much attention in urban areas. Strong chemical smells reported by neighbors have tipped off police to dozens of labs. It's far easier to operate with impunity in the middle of the woods than in an apartment complex in the middle of town. It was precisely these factors that led several would-be meth traffickers to the mountains west of Chattanooga in the early 1990s, an area crisscrossed by hundreds of miles of narrow roads and no major urban centers. 'Appleseed' phenomenon As far as federal authorities can tell, the current epidemic stretches back to a methamphetamine lab that was raided in Missouri in 1993. The lab's owners -- identified in federal court documents as Robert Opdyke and Donald Zike -- fled to Lincoln County, Tennessee. Opdyke's parents lived in Fayetteville, records show, and the two men allegedly set up shop there and were able to produce at least 13 pounds of methamphetamine between Sept. 1993 and Oct. 1994. They also charged a fee to teach others how to make the drug, and their business flourished until they were indicted by a federal grand jury almost three years later. Simultaneously, men in neighboring communities came up with similar schemes and imported "cooks" from California to start their own methamphetamine operations in Grundy, Franklin and Marion counties, according to federal records. Local police and sheriff's departments initially looked at the rise in meth use as an isolated problem, but a pair of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents in 1995 and 1996 "began to understand that several groups had organized around a primary cooker" to produce the drug, according to one federal report. The first indictments -- against Opdyke, Zike and alleged co-conspirators -- began in March 1996 and ended with the men serving prison terms ranging from 70 to 130 months. But the damage had already been done. The knowledge of how to make meth cheaply from easy-to-find items like pseudoephedrine, red phosphorous, crystal iodine and lye had been readily absorbed by a community predisposed to shrug at the law. "These counties are large in area, largely rural and mountainous, with sheriff's offices and town police departments that are short staffed and have very limited budgets," the report notes. "The counties are poor, with no real industrial base and thus below average incomes. These counties have a history of moonshine activity, marijuana cultivation and (automobile) chop-shop operations. Thus, it comes as no surprise that manufacturing methamphetatmine would fit in and be wildly popular." The knowledge of how to make meth was passed on by word-of-mouth, traveling northeastward through the state as users gave recipes to friends and relatives in adjoining communities. Authorities have dubbed the process the "Johnny Appleseed phenomenon," and statistics show that it has been devastatingly effective: Since 1998, the first year that detailed records were kept, 122 meth labs have been found in Grundy County, 57 in Sequatchie, 225 in Marion, 112 in Warren and 103 in Franklin. As bad as the situation may seem to be in the communities around Knoxville region, Dedrick said the problem isn't nearly as bad as what's happened west of Chattanooga. "It's the exact same problems, but really on a smaller scale," he said. A mountain of a mess With a population reckoned at less than 14,500 in the 2000 census and a per capita income of only $12,039, Grundy County is both sparsely populated and relatively poor -- fertile ground for the types of criminal enterprise that many rural Tennessee areas are known for. The Grundy County Sheriff's Department has a grand total of nine patrol officers, including Sheriff Robert Meeks. Only two deputies are available to patrol the county's roads at night, plus a single night-shift officer each in the small towns of Monteagle, Tracy City and Palmer. The department's criminal investigations unit -- which consists of Lt. Dennis Womack -- operates out of a cluttered trailer beside the jail. Located only a block or so behind the county courthouse in the tiny community of Altamont, the department's physical appearance is that of a relic from another age. Locals refer to their community as "The Mountain," but Internet searches on Grundy County quickly turn up a more colorful nickname: "Meth Capital of the Southeast." Womack shakes his head and scoffs when asked about the sobriquet, saying: "We were once called the car theft capital of the Southeast, too." But Womack also says he can remember when it was something of an event to actually have a prisoner booked into the jail. Nowadays, however, the jail averages more than 30 inmates on any given day, and much of the crime problem in Grundy County stems in one way or another from meth. "It hit this mountain and just exploded," Womack said. "I don't know how many people we've sent to state and federal prison. ... Up here, there are plenty of areas to cook in, especially out in the woods where a lot of it is done. We don't have enough personnel to go out and hunt them." Womack remembers that at first meth labs were found "only occasionally -- then all of a sudden we'd get two a day sometimes. ... They started getting smaller. They used to carry them around in big green plastic containers, but then they got small enough to fit in a backpack." Womack has plenty of stories about meth addicts and the psychosis that often accompanies long-term use of the drug. He talks about one man who cut off his own thumb while in the throes of a psychotic episode and shows photographs of one dead addict who was covered in sores. "If someone gets on a binge, they stay up for days and days," Womack said. "They stay up for so long they're dreaming although they're still awake." Because the chemical process that generates meth is highly toxic and can pose an explosive hazard, specially trained teams have to be called in each time a lab is found, Womack explained. The average clean-up bill is $3,300, he said, which is paid for by the DEA. "That's a lot of money," he said. "If we got two labs each day, there's no way this county could afford that." Womack said that meth-related fires and other dangerous situations have become so common that he doesn't even hesitate when he hears the pitched wail of a fire engine. "Now if there's a fire, then the first thing I think is that it's a meth lab," he said. "Of course, that's just my way of thinking, not everybody's." In 1999, the problem got so bad that Sheriff Meeks sent an urgent letter to Dedrick asking for help. Meeks' appeal for assistance led to the creation of the South/East Tennessee Methamphetamine Task Force, a joint effort by local, state and federal agencies to combat the problem in 41 counties in East and parts of Middle Tennessee. "I don't know what I would have done without Russ Dedrick," Meeks said, adding that the meth problem seems to be receding after reaching a high water mark in 2000. "They stay away from the (production of) quantity now. We've still got some party dope going around, but the quantity's gone." When asked how many people in his community have ended up in jail or prison, Meeks replied: "Lord knows how many. ... We've sent at least 50 into federal custody, and easily hundreds in state court. It's ruined a lot of families' lives." Diane Easterly, who oversees foster-care operations for the Department of Children's Services in Grundy, Franklin, Marion and Sequatchie counties, said caseworkers have investigated 96 meth-related referrals involving 181 children during the past 11 months. Of that number, DCS has filed 16 petitions to remove 31 children from their homes because their parents were cooking or using meth, she said. But the number of children removed from their parents' custody is actually much higher because they are often given to a relative, eliminating the need for DCS to actually file a petition in court, she said. "If we get a referral and the family is really involved in drugs, often they will make a placement with grandma or someone and we won't get involved," Easterly said. "We do not have many referrals involving meth that aren't validated." A new criminal culture Despite East Tennessee's history of embracing illegal drugs, Dedrick said he believes there are far more differences than similarities between today's meth addicts and yesterday's smugglers. One obvious difference is that while the moonshiners and pot growers of the past might have used their own products, most of what they made was exported for profit. The typical meth lab, however, is operated by users whose main concern is feeding their own addiction. Insofar as large-scale methamphetamine trafficking is concerned, East Tennessee is sometimes used as a distribution point for groups importing the drug from Mexico and other areas but those groups have little or nothing to do with the rash of clandestine labs, Dedrick said. One recent example was the recent "Westward Ho" indictments, where 34 people were indicted for allegedly running a $5 million drug conspiracy that spanned from Mexico and Texas to Georgia and East Tennessee. In that case, the defendants are alleged to have sold thousands of pounds of marijuana, more than 500 grams of meth and more than 100 grams of cocaine. "I would say it's a new thing in terms of culture overall, both in terms of how it's spread and the people involved in it," Dedrick said. "Some of the same individuals were involved previously with marijuana, cocaine, car theft ... We do see a criminal element involved in this, but on the other side we see individuals who come from depressed areas, jobless individuals. .. It's a new type of culture we're trying to deal with." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom