Pubdate: Thu, 20 Nov 2003
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2003 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300
Author: Kevin Taylor, political reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

YEAR'S WORK TO CLEAR P LAB BACKLOG

The backlog of forensic work needed on methamphetamine labs will take
another year to clear, police say.

But Police Commissioner Rob Robinson told the law and order select
committee yesterday that discoveries of new clandestine labs appeared
to be levelling off.

"We are not getting the exponential growth that we have had in the
past two to three years."

He said during the police's annual financial review that Environmental
Science and Research (ESR) was hiring more scientists and technicians
to cope with the backlog.

Last week Acting Police Minister Paul Swain told Parliament there were
132 suspected clandestine labs being investigated by ESR, and the
oldest case dated from July 2002.

Mr Robinson said that with new ESR workers being hired, managers there
said they would be able to process the volumes of labs the police were
now dealing with.

"We are probably still a year or so away from not managing a backlog,"
Mr Robinson said.

"We have something in the order of probably six months worth of labs
in that backlog."

Questioned by National Party police spokesman Tony Ryall about the
risk of losing cases because of the ESR backlog, Mr Robinson said:
"Those risk are always evident."

Describing methamphetamine as a "scourge", he said the drug had been
embraced by young people who had created a profitable market for
organised crime to exploit.

"If we deal with methamphetamine simply as a law enforcement problem,
we will never solve it."

A more comprehensive partnership between Government and community was
required and the Government's methamphetamine "action plan" launched
this year was achieving that.

The recent reclassification of methamphetamine to a Class A drug was a
very significant step, but strong policing was required and fighting
organised crime was part of that.

The police had received an extra $6.8 million over four years to fight
the drug and were recruiting staff for a clandestine methamphetamine
lab response team in Auckland.

Police operations such as "Choker" in Auckland significantly disrupted
organised crime in and around Auckland.

"Other operations up and down the country both during the past year
and ongoing, simply seek to do that - hold people accountable and
disrupt those criminal enterprises."

This month the police union, the Police Association, said delays in
testing speed labs meant drugmakers were being freed on bail to reoffend.

Association president Greg O'Connor said he knew of cases in which
methamphetamine cooks reoffended while they were on bail.

Others had been freed because it was taking up to two years to go to
trial because of the ESR backlog.

[sidebar]

Fighting Speed

* There are 132 suspected clandestine methamphetamine labs under
investigation by ESR with the oldest active case dating back to July
2002.

* In the Budget the Government gave an extra $6.8 million over four
years to process methamphetamine cases. Two seven-member clandestine
lab response teams were set up, and an extra $700,000 went to ESR for
100 lab investigations.

* In the year to June the number of labs discovered rose to 154 - 88
more than the previous year 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake