Pubdate: Mon, 24 Mar 2003 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2003 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Scott Charton, Associated Press Writer THEFTS OF LEGAL FERTILIZER FOR USE IN METH PRODUCTION PRESENT CHALLENGE TO POLICE PILOT GROVE, Mo. - It has become a routine part of patrols for rural law enforcement: checking on farm cooperatives that have large stockpiles of anhydrous ammonia, a fertilizer often targeted for theft by makers of the illegal drug methamphetamine. The Missouri State Highway Patrol estimates there is a theft of anhydrous ammonia at least once a night in Missouri, a state where the fertilizer is legally used to improve crops and illegally converted to an ingredient of meth. Some farms have been hit on consecutive nights. At the Pilot Grove Co-op in west-central Missouri, there were 13 reported thefts of anhydrous ammonia last year alone, said Cooper County Sheriff's Department Maj. Jerry Wolfe. "The fact is that officers cannot be everywhere, and this is a legal product for farmers, so even though we have regular patrols, thefts still keep happening," Wolfe said Wednesday. Anhydrous ammonia is dangerous to handle and can cause explosions, burns and breathing problems. Last month, a Springfield man was sentenced to 12 years in prison for the November 2001 explosion of an anhydrous ammonia tank used for making meth. The explosion happened in the back of his vehicle, and a passenger who was badly burned died a week later. Dealing with anhydrous ammonia thieves can also be dangerous for police and other first responders. In 2001, for example, two Vernon County deputies were treated for breathing problems after a suspect they were pursuing turned and threw liquid anhydrous ammonia onto them. The same year, the 230 residents of Old Monroe were briefly evacuated when an anhydrous ammonia cloud formed from a meth lab. Five firefighters were treated for breathing problems. Anhydrous ammonia is used by meth makers "just as you would put water into instant oatmeal -- and it takes about that much skill," said Sgt. Jim Wingo of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, training coordinator for officers busting clandestine drug labs. A Cooper County sheriff's deputy got lucky recently when he and a Boonville police officer did an early morning walking inspection of the Pilot Grove Co-op. They flicked on flashlights and confronted two men trying to siphon anhydrous ammonia from a tank. The pair and an accomplice waiting in a getaway vehicle were charged with multiple felonies, including theft and illegal possession of anhydrous ammonia. "The officers were in the right place at the right time, but of course we cannot be everywhere and this is a growing problem," Wolfe said. Wolfe said farm cooperatives in Cooper County reported more than 40 anhydrous ammonia thefts last year. Five years ago, such thefts were almost unheard of. Pat Oswald, assistant manager of the Pilot Grove Co-op, said he can tell when someone has jumped the facility's locked fence to steal the fertilizer because hoses for siphoning are tossed on the ground during quick getaways. "I'd say we see something like this every two weeks," Oswald said. "There are ways to lock these tanks, but not locks that a $10 set of bolt cutters cannot get through." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek