Pubdate: Mon, 24 Nov 2003 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2003 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://DesMoinesRegister.com/help/letter.html Website: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Author: Tony Leys Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/methact.htm (Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act) IS IOWA'S PLAGUE HOMEGROWN? Authorities, Ex-Users At Odds Law enforcement leaders have been saying for a decade that most of Iowa's methamphetamine comes from huge labs in Mexico and California, but some treatment counselors and recovering addicts disagree. Dr. Dennis Weis, who runs one of the state's largest meth-treatment programs, said his clients tell him that in recent years, local manufacturers have become the dominant suppliers. Seeking solutions * Drug agents in California, who use high-tech surveillance equipment to look for large-scale meth labs, last year busted a ring of 36 people accused of smuggling 40 million cold and allergy tablets from Canada into Southern California. The amount would have been enough to make some 3,300 pounds of meth. Agents believe their new focus on finding products used in making meth was the reason seizures of major labs fell slightly last year. * Canadian authorities this year put into effect regulations that made ephedrine, pseudoephedrine and other ingredients controlled substances. In recent years, smugglers bought large amounts of the materials in Canada and slipped them into California. "There's always room for improvement, but this definitely has had an impact," said Doug Culver of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's chemical diversion program. "Everyone who comes in here is either making it himself or knows someone who makes it," said Weis, medical director of the Powell Chemical Dependency Center in Des Moines. "You listen to law enforcement, and they say 90 percent of it is coming from Mexico," he said, shaking his head. "Is that for job security, or what? They're after the big, glamorous bust. They're looking for the guy living in a mansion in Guadalajara. Meth isn't glamorous. It's a dirty, nasty thing." Dr. Rizwan Shah, a Des Moines pediatrician who specializes in treating drug-affected babies, said she has seen a change toward more locally made meth. She said she worries that law officers are underestimating how many small labs are active in Iowa homes, which means they're underestimating the number of children at risk from the fumes and possible explosions. Meth addicts enrolled in a prison treatment program also believe investigators are hanging on to outdated theories. Macie Burton, a prisoner from Des Moines, had a typical reaction to reports that most of Iowa's meth is cooked elsewhere. "Absolutely not," she said. "Ninety percent of the meth I did, I knew the guys who made it." Inmates said local meth, made with anhydrous ammonia, has become the preferred drug because it is much stronger and often is cheaper than the Mexican and Californian versions. Several also said police are more likely to catch big, interstate dealers than hometown manufacturers who sell their meth only to people they know. State and federal law enforcement leaders acknowledge that local meth labs are an increasingly dangerous problem. They complain that they have to spend too much time cleaning the labs up, because the chemicals are hazards to neighbors. But they say they still believe at least 85 percent of Iowa's meth comes from out of state. Ken Carter, director of the Iowa Division of Narcotics Enforcement, said agents base their estimates on drug seizures and interviews with the dealers they arrest. Carter said out-of-state meth tends to be about 25 percent pure, while homemade meth is about 75 percent pure. But he said Iowa still sees huge shipments of the Mexican version. The explanation may be that the small, local labs can't supply nearly enough of the drug to keep up with Iowans' voracious appetite for the drug, he said. Carter laughed when told of quietly voiced suspicions that his agency overestimates interstate trafficking in order to snare federal grants. "I get that federal grant money because of our runaway lab problem," he said. Even some police are skeptical, however. Ron Voshell, an Oelwein officer, said he sees nothing but homemade crank. "I'm telling you right now there's methamphetamine being cooked in our town that will be used right here by our citizens. I've never heard anyone say they got Mexican meth. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek