Pubdate: Mon, 08 Dec 2003 Source: Hickory Daily Record (NC) Copyright: 2000 Hickory Daily Record Contact: http://www.hickoryrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1109 Author: JOSH YODER METH LAB SAFETY Officers Learn How To Fight The Illegal Drug Methamphetamine During A Statewide Conference This Week In Hickory. HICKORY - More than 150 law enforcement officers from across the state are at the Hickory Metro Convention Center this week for a seminar concerning the illegal drug methamphetamine. The federally funded conference, sponsored by the U.S. Bureau of Justice Assistance, is an awareness program focused on training officers for the investigation and management of clandestine meth laboratories. Methamphetamine, or crystal meth, is a highly addictive stimulant that can be manufactured in the home from everyday household products. Its production and abuse have become a growing problem for law enforcement - and society as a whole - in recent years. Methods for the production of the drug have changed, leading to the growth of the problem, said Van Shaw, assistant special agent in charge of the State Bureau of Investigation. "It's easier to manufacture now. You can make it on your stove with readily available chemicals," said Shaw, who is the coordinator of the SBI's Clandestine Laboratory Research Unit. So far this year, law enforcement officials in North Carolina have raided 173 meth labs, up from 98 in 2002. They raided 34 labs in 2001, Shaw said. The primary concerns of the three-day conference are to familiarize officers with the methods of investigating and dismantling the labs, and to promote officer safety. "Raiding a meth lab is like a SWAT team raid in a toxic waste dump," said Chief Agent Dr. John Duncan of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control. Duncan, one of the instructors of the seminar, said a meth lab raid is "probably the most dangerous thing a law enforcement officer can do, shy of disarming a bomb." In addition to facing possibly violent and armed subjects, the dangers of a raid include potential explosions, fires and exposure to poisonous gases that can cause serious immediate or long-term injuries, Duncan said. The manufacturing process of the drug produces 5 pounds of hazardous waste per every pound of the drug made. Among the byproducts are phosphene and hydrogen chloride gases, which are deadly if inhaled in substantial doses, officials said. The problem of meth is also an environmental concern, as the toxic waste materials are often disposed of in wooded or rural areas, or dumped into rivers and streams. "It's like having a dirty bomb in your back yard," said Thomas Keith, district attorney for Forsyth County. Special Agent Shaw said one of the goals of the program is to give officers the investigative training necessary to identify potential labs. "We're being more aggressive, acting on every tip we get," said Watauga County Sheriff Mark Shook, whose county leads the state in meth lab raids. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart