Pubdate: Sat, 22 Feb 2003 Source: Curry Coastal Pilot (OR) Copyright: 2003 Western Communications, Inc Contact: http://www.currypilot.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1721 Author: David Courtland, Pilot Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) AUTHORITIES CRACK DOWN ON POPULAR DRUG Methamphetamine, Curry County's most popular street drug, is the driving force behind most of its crime and its greatest public safety threat, say two of the county's top cops. "A high percentage of our arrests for burglary, theft and assault are meth-related," said Curry County Sheriff Kent Owens. "You go to a house to serve a drug search warrant, and you solve several burglaries," added Brookings Police Chief Chris Wallace. That's a big change in the nature of both local crime and the criminals, say Owens and Wallace, who spoke Thursday morning in Wallace's office. "It used to be a lot of users held down jobs," said Owens. "They didn't have to go out and break into cars to support their habits." That made it easy to keep track of the few chronic lawbreakers in the area, said Owens, because they were basically the same handful who didn't work. "We usually knew who those people were," said Owens. "There wasn't the violence, the intimidation, the crimes weren't necessarily associated with drugs." Unlike the days of flyovers that uncovered marijuana fields, police now rely heavily on informants, requiring lots of time and manpower to make sure they are protected. "Before meth we never had to run undercover or use informants," said Owens. "Now, you can be working a number of cases, and not clear any of them because you can't burn your informant." Since the 1990s, when meth's popularity began catching on, meth-driven crimes have not only become overwhelmingly common but violent. Users can't hold down a regular job, so they have to resort to crime to support their habit, said Wallace. "When (police) go into their homes, it's much more dangerous, they've always got weapons," said Wallace. "Every cop they see is out to get them the potential for violence is higher." Even traffic stops become more dangerous, said Wallace, using an intoxicated driving arrest made by Officer Donnie Dotson made last year as an example. While walking the handcuffed driver back to his patrol car, the man rammed Dotson right into the path of an oncoming car. "If it hadn't turned out to be a deputy with defensive driving skills, he'd have been hit," said Wallace. The drug causes the kind of dissociation that occurs with sleep deprivation — paranoia combined with a sense of invulnerability. "It gives them a sense of power; they stay up for days, said Wallace, "then crash, then they're up and running again." Owens says he suspects this has also lead to a lot of unreported sexual assaults. "Guys on meth go looking for younger girls who like to party," said Owens. "Because it gives them access to alcohol, and for fear of reprisal, assaults don't get reported." But none of this means the typical meth user is easy to spot, said Wallace. "The average person won't see them, they can appear to be a normal person," said Wallace. "When they become dangerous is when they need money." Meth users can turn violent quickly, even when they don't plan to. "They may not intend to kill somebody, they just want money," said Wallace. "But that's when they can turn violent and deadly." "Meth is bad stuff," Owens said. "It's like pouring battery acid on your brain." Wallace noting his officers are the only ones in Curry County available 24 hours a day, seven days a week says he has made the fight against meth users a top priority. "We are going to battle this by dedicating all the resources of this department," said Wallace. "I've educated my officers from top to bottom zero tolerance is what people are going to see." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D