Pubdate: Mon, 31 Mar 2003 Source: Oak Ridger (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Oak Ridger Contact: http://www.oakridger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1146 Author: Beverly Majors POLICE LIEUTENANT TELLS ROTARIANS ABOUT METH Oak Ridge Police Lt. Mike Uher told members of the Rotary Club of Oak Ridge Thursday how to make methamphetamine. Uher spoke to the club during its regular lunch session Thursday and talked about what chemicals are used to make clandestine meth labs. "I'll give you the ingredients to make meth but I will not give you the recipe," Uher told the group. Uher said a person can go to Wal-Mart and purchase $200 worth of legal products and use those products to make $2,000 worth of meth for the street. Uher said local methamphetamine manufacturers can be anyone's friends or associates who "make it, sell it, use it and take the money from selling it to buy more ingredients." Uher said he tells his officers that if they see packages of Sudafed and Drano and coffee filters in a car when it is stopped for a traffic violation, "arrest the driver." "If he doesn't have snot running out of his nose, he doesn't need four boxes of Sudafed," Uher said. He also said he tells his officers to use their own discretion and common sense when making an arrest. He said most of the officers know who the offenders are. Uher showed the group a cardboard box, about 20 inches by 20 inches, and said "this is a meth lab." The box contained all the basic ingredients to make meth. All the items were purchased at local businesses and were easily obtained. Uher described the methods for making meth: Red phosphorus method, the Nazi method, and methcathinone. He said the Oak Ridge Police Department is the only agency reporting seeing the methcathinone method. He said the method is the most common in this area and the most deadly. Answering questions from the group, Uher explained that the Nazi method got its name because "they were all on it." He said Adolf Hitler was a methamphetamine user. He also said that although the military and other groups use certain drugs described as "speed," there's a big difference in pharmaceutical and clandestine. Chief David H. Beams described that a lab becomes "mobile" because it can be moved quickly. He said people making meth do not stay in one place very long. "They get out of jail from a bust in Oak Ridge and go to Marlow," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens