Pubdate: Sat, 08 Feb 2003 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2003 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Note: The Journal does not publish letters from writers outside its daily home delivery circulation area. Author: Jim Sparks, Journal Reporter Note: Journal reporter Paul Garber contributed to this story. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH MENACE Firefighters and Law-Enforcement Officers Are Being Given Special Training to Prepare Them for Hazards During Raids BOONE - They knew it was coming. Investigators with the State Bureau of Investigation and local law-enforcement agencies could track the steady march of the methamphetamine problem as it moved east like a bad-weather system. States such as Missouri, Kansas and Michigan were overwhelmed by the spread of methamphetamine - and the small clandestine labs where it is produced - in the mid-1990s. Methamphetamine threatened to overwhelm law enforcement in some Midwestern states. In Missouri alone, officials had more than 2,700 meth-related cases in 2002. By the late 1990s, problems associated with the drug's growing popularity began showing up in Tennessee, Georgia and Kentucky. It was only a matter of time before it spread into North Carolina. In 1999 - the first year that the SBI began keeping statistics - agents were called to seven lab sites. Since then, that number has increased more than 900 percent. And with at least 19 meth-lab cases so far this year, law-enforcement officials expect to respond to more than 200 such sites by year's end - two-thirds of them in the western half of the state. "The fact that we're going to be inundated with this problem is unavoidable," said Van Shaw, the agent in charge of the SBI's clandestine meth-lab response program. "But at least we have a plan of action in place and won't have to put one together under fire like so many other states. I'll put our program, equipment and training up against anybody." New hazards The problem seems to be hitting three Western North Carolina counties - Rutherford, McDowell and Watauga - especially hard right now. More than a quarter of the meth labs found in North Carolina in 2002 were discovered in those counties. And so far this year five of the 19 labs raided in North Carolina were in Watauga County - four in the last three weeks. Part of the reason for the increased number of raids is the fact that more labs are in operation. And part of it is that local law-enforcement agencies are more attuned to the problem and are aggressively pursuing leads. "We've been trying to get information on some of these operations for two and a half years," said Watauga Sheriff Mark Shook. "Now we're getting people willing to come forward and help us. It's making a difference." Preparing volunteer firefighters and local emergency response personnel is the next challenge. Heat, smoke and fire are constant hazards in fighting house fires. A more ominous threat looms for firefighters now, though. The proliferation of clandestine meth labs has compounded those risks. Firefighters now have to worry about a witch's brew of chemicals and unexpected explosions when they run into burning buildings. When members of the Deep Gap Volunteer Fire Department rolled up to a mobile-home fire Jan. 26, they fought it just as they would any other. The crews followed standard procedures, pulling on airpacks and fighting to save as much property as possible. Only after the fire was extinguished did anyone realize that the house contained a lab and all the chemicals needed to manufacture methamphetamine. Five firefighters were taken to the Watauga Medical Center complaining of respiratory ailments and chest pains after coming in contact with toxic fumes. "The days of normal firefighting are over," said Chief John Rawls. "Things have definitely changed and we're going to have to approach them differently from now on." In the wake of that incident, Shook and other Watauga County officials want to make sure that emergency personnel are trained to deal with similar situations. SBI experts taught training sessions last week for more than 125 county emergency workers. Captain Jack Huskins of the Deep Gap Fire Department was grateful for the information - he was one of the five firefighters hospitalized two weeks ago. "I wish we'd had this a couple weeks ago," he said. "That fire was just one of those things like a snake in the grass. It jumped and bit us and we didn't even know it was there." It's been around since the '30s Methamphetamine and the clandestine labs where it is manufactured are not new. The drug, a stimulant that works on the central nervous system, was used as a decongestant in the 1930s. During World War II, the United States and Germany used to keep troops alert. Truck drivers and motorcycle gangs started using it in the 1950s and it picked up the nickname "speed" in the 1960s when it spread to hippies. In the '70s and '80s, meth picked up another nickname - "redneck cocaine" - because of its increased use in rural areas in the western United States. In the '90s, meth found yet another following among young, white blue-collar workers. The appeal of the drug is simple, authorities say. Whether smoked, injected or snorted, it increases the heart rate, blood pressure and body temperature and produces a sense of euphoria for hours - much longer than the rush associated with crack cocaine. And at a cost of about $100 a gram and $2,800 an ounce, it is cheaper than powder cocaine. Because of the increase in demand, suppliers had to find new ways to manufacture meth. When labs were first discovered in North Carolina, authorities typically encountered sophisticated large-scale operations that were set up in barns or outbuildings in isolated areas. Now, though, investigators have to contend with box-top production labs found in cars and campers and kitchen-counter labs set up in houses. The labs, which consist of beakers, tubing, plastic containers and a heat source such as a stove or propane burner, are easily moved. As a result many operators still set up shop at night in rural areas when those living nearby are asleep and less likely to notice the noxious odor produced during the cooking process. Small-scale production of the drug has grown in part because meth can be made using common chemicals such as ether, red phosphorus found in match books, and antifreeze. These substances are mixed in different combinations to extract controlled compounds such as ephedrine, which is commonly found in cold and allergy medicines and a basic compound used in meth production. Though meth recipes are widely available on the Internet, most of the cooks who make the drug are learning from someone else, the SBI's Shaw said. "This knowledge is spreading by word of mouth and on-the-job training," Shaw said. "It's estimated that each person who knows how to cook meth teaches at least five others. That's (another) reason this drug has spread so quickly." Human costs are high The highs come with a price tag for users and those who have to contend with the problems caused by its production. Methamphetamine destroys dopamine, a chemical in the brain that helps control movement and emotions. Extended abuse can trigger signs of Parkinson's disease, said Todd Clark, the clinical supervisor of substance-abuse services of Davidson County Mental Health. Meth addicts can develop symptoms similar to those of crack abusers, Clark said. They can be jittery and impulsive, and sometimes they develop shakiness in their extremities. Diana Quealy-Berge, who teaches addiction classes at Appalachian State University and saw many meth cases while working in Wyoming, said that the physical effects of the drug can be devastating. "It's one of the most frightening drugs I've dealt with," she said. Because it is a stimulant, many abusers get very active and agitated. Many stop eating. In addition, the toxic chemicals used to make meth may play a role in abusers' physical deterioration. Telltale signs that she has seen in abusers are rotting teeth, brittle and thinning hair and weight loss. "Nobody starts using any drug thinking they'll become an addict," Quealy-Berge said. "They all think 'It won't happen to me.' But it does." The meth habit is said to be almost as hard to break as crack addiction. "We've seen studies that say that one of every two crack users will use it until their death," Clark said. "Methamphetamine users are right up there below crack." The risks are more immediate for firefighters and law-enforcement officers who get called to meth lab sites. The chemicals commonly used in meth production are toxic and potentially lethal, according to the Justice Department's National Drug Intelligence Center in Washington. When mixed, the household chemicals can damage the central nervous system, liver and kidneys and burn or irritate the skin, eyes, nose and throat. In addition to the five Deep Gap firefighters, at least two other law-enforcement officials in the region have been injured in incidents involving meth labs. Two undercover drug investigators in Davidson County were treated last summer after being overcome by a cloud of vapors that formed during a meth-lab cleanup. They were standing about 50 yards away from the site in a run-down house on Bud Kanoy Road between Lexington and Thomasville. They were not wearing Hazmat gear, as the officers inside the house were. The vapors made it difficult for the detectives to breathe and led to irritation in their throats and noses, said one of the detectives, who asked not to be identified because he works undercover. The detectives were taken to Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, where they were treated and released after about an hour. "It was not enough to cause permanent damage, but the risk was there," the detective said. Environmental damage In preparation for the wave of meth-lab raids, the SBI has been training local law-enforcement officers, EMS technicians and firefighters about what to do in case they are called into a situation that might involve drug production. Every place where methamphetamine is produced is a hazardous-waste site, said Dave Gaddis, an assistant DEA special agent in North Carolina. Every ounce of methamphetamine produced creates five ounces of hazardous waste. And for every lab that is found, dozens go undetected. "This is bad enough as a drug, but when you consider the environmental impact, this is really nasty stuff," Gaddis said. The DEA pays for the chemical cleanup and disposal at sites that the SBI determines were used for meth production. The cleanup and disposal process usually costs between $5,000 and $10,000. And that doesn't account for contamination left behind for landlords and local officials. According to the National Drug Intelligence Center, chemicals left behind and the fumes produced can permeate walls, carpets and plaster. Meth cooks often pour leftover chemicals down household drains, toilets or directly onto the ground. "A big concern for us are the children living in these places," said Shaw of the SBI. "As meth cooks, it can contaminate . places a toddler may crawl through every day." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake