Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jan 2004 Source: Tullahoma News (TN) Copyright: The Tullahoma News 2004 Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=49033&BRD=1614&PAG=461&dept_id=161070& Website: http://www.tullahomanews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2031 Author: Wayne Thomas Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ALLEGED "TINKLE LAB" IS FOUND Bell alleges that he found what the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency calls "a tinkle meth lab" which means the drug is made from human urine, at a fire at a residence on Water Tank Road in Cowan. Franklin County Deputy Ross Peterson received a call from former Deputy Paul Sanson who now works for Rural Metro Ambulance Service that an individual wanted on sealed indictments was in the emergency room at Southern Tennessee Medical Center with burns to his arms and face. When Peterson arrived, he found Kenneth Darrel Hobgood, 43, and arrested him on indictments issued by the September 2003 term of the Franklin County Grand Jury of manufacturing of Schedule II, felonious possession of Schedule II and felonious possession of drug paraphernalia. Peterson then transported Hobgood back to where he had been living at 734 Water Tank Rd, Cowan that had caught on fire Wednesday morning. The Fourth District Fire Department had responded to a fire call of a travel trailer on fire at the address around 6:50 a.m. When the firefighters arrived, the trailer was fully engulfed. When Peterson and Deputy Seth Isbell arrived at the scene of the fire, he requested Sheriff's Investigator Lt. Robert Campbell to respond to the scene. "Lt. Campbell is a trained fire investigator and I wanted him to look at the scene," Peterson said. Peterson alleged that he "started to smell an odor that resembled that of methamphetamines." He then requested Bell, who is a certified meth lab technician, to respond to the fire. Bell and the other officers began to survey the property where the travel trailer was parked and they allege that they found items used in the production of methamphetamines. Bell decided that an allegedly methamphetamine lab had been in operation at the residence. He then requested assistance from the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency, which dispatched a hazardous materials unit to the scene. "We found a five gallon bucket with something that we later identified as human urine," Bell stated. "I have heard of people making methamphetamines by using urine, but I think this is the first time we have actually found one here." Bell explained that the "Tinkle Labs" are made with human urine. "The 'cookers' make the individuals who have allegedly been using methamphetamines to return with their urine. He (cooker) then goes to his 'lab' and through a chemical process retrieves extracts the drugs that didn't metabolize. As part of the deal with the alleged cooker the individual promise to return with urine for processing again. He then resells the processed product," Bell said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin