Pubdate: Sun, 16 Nov 2003 Source: Daily Citizen, The (Dalton, GA) Copyright: Daily Citizen 2003 Contact: http://www.northwestgeorgia.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1929 Author: Cady Van Dolson, The Daily Citizen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) MIGRATING METH - DEMAND HIGH HERE Not only has the number of methamphetamine labs found so far this year in Whitfield County already surpassed the number found in 2002, but the numbers of meth-related arrests have increased dramatically as well, officials said. "The demand for the drug is high," a detective with the Whitfield County Sheriff's Office's narcotics unit said. County drug detectives have found 19 meth labs so far this year. In 2002 they found 18. And 123 people have been arrested by county detectives so far this year on meth-related charges, up from 87 people in 2002. The amount of meth seized this year has almost doubled, with 33 pounds worth about $2.2 million confiscated so far in 2003, compared to 17 pounds worth about $1 million in 2002, detectives said. Statistics from the Dalton Police Department's drug unit were not immediately available. The cost of cleaning up the labs, which depends on their size, was not immediately available, said Ben Scott with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Chattanooga office, which covers North Georgia. "The larger the lab, the more expensive it is," Scott said. "It would vary so much depending on what was involved with cleanup." Meth labs usually are found in houses, outbuildings and garages, detectives said. On Wednesday, seven people were arrested at a meth lab at 127 Fannie St. off South Dixie Highway. Five were charged with trafficking by manufacturing methamphetamine, among other drug-related charges. In July, eight people were arrested when county detectives discovered four meth labs in four days. Last year, two labs caught on fire, both injuring people. In August 2002, a Rocky Face man received burns to his hands when a meth lab caused a fire at his mobile home on LaFayette Highway. In September 2002, a 20-year-old Rocky Face woman suffered burns covering about 75 percent of her body after a meth lab her mother was operating exploded, officials said. In October of this year, 18 distributors in a "major" methamphetamine network in Dalton were arrested following a yearlong investigation by the sheriff's office and police department along with the Drug Enforcement Administration, Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, FBI, Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Rome/Floyd Metro Drug Task Force and Georgia Probation and Parole Department. Charges pursued in federal courts in Rome and Chattanooga included distributing or possession with intent to distribute between 50 grams and 500 grams of methamphetamine, and conspiring in North Georgia and East Tennessee to distribute 500 grams or more of "ice" - a purer form of meth - 500 grams or more of cocaine and 50 kilograms of marijuana. Whitfield County grand juries in the past two years have recommended more resources for drug enforcement. Two drug detectives requested by the sheriff's office for the 2004 budget are expected to be approved in December, officials said. The sheriff's office and police department both have four detectives in their drug units. The police department also has four officers on its Situational Response Unit, which works street level drugs. "We've got eight people to their six, and they've got a larger geographical area than we do," Dalton Police Chief James Chadwick said. "We can always use more personnel, but right now that's what we have." On May 15, the charge for operating a meth lab in the state of Georgia was changed from possession with intent to sale to trafficking by manufacturing methamphetamine. That change increased the penalty from five to 15 years in prison to 10 to 30 years in prison plus a $100,000 fine. The changes came about due to Georgia's "meth lab crisis," said Lee Miles, assistant district attorney. "We're having so many of them," Miles said. "People are getting more educated and the governor's office understood meth labs are a great danger due to the chemicals and the (threat) of fire and explosions." The new law may stop some people from making their own meth, Miles said. "That's the best we can hope for," he said. "They're aware of it. They read the newspaper and watch TV." - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl