Pubdate: Sun, 08 Aug 2004 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2004 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Amneris Solano, Staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) LAWMEN SEEK TO HALT LABS FOR METH Lawmen in the Cape Fear region say they hope tougher laws on methamphetamine will deter people from making the drug. State lawmakers have toughened punishments for people who produce meth, make it in front of children or who are caught with ingredients to make the drug. The laws take effect Dec. 1. Attorney General Roy Cooper and other lawmen pushed for the harsher penalties in an effort to fight the spread of methamphetamine in North Carolina. Meth traffic has grown statewide in recent years, and lawmen say the labs pose environmental and social dangers. "The previous law amounted to pretty much a slap on the wrist," said Phillip Little, the chief deputy at the Bladen County Sheriff's Office. "The punishment was not consistent with the impact it was having on society." Little, a past president of the N.C. Narcotics Officers Association, said the organization lobbied for the stricter penalties and has tried to educate people about the drug's risks. One of the changes deals with the child endangerment aspect of the drug. It will soon be considered an aggravating factor for someone who is convicted of making meth where a child lives or for exposing a child to the drug. That could affect the sentence the person receives. Children Involved Last year, children were found in 25 percent of the meth labs discovered in the state, according to the state Attorney General's Office. "It's a sad part of these things when you find them (children) in those homes," said Harnett County Sheriff Larry Rollins. Rollins said his department has not found any children in meth labs that his officers have raided. But social workers said they later learned that children had been living in the homes. Over the past few years, social workers in Harnett County said they have taken at least four children from homes where meth labs were operating. In one home, the lab was in the attic. Explosive Chemicals Chemicals from meth labs, experts say, can be explosive and lead to illnesses in people who make the drug or who live and work nearby. "I can't stress the dangers of a meth lab enough," Little said. "There is just a smorgasbord of chemicals and combinations of chemicals that will harm you." State lawmakers have increased prison time for those who are convicted of making or packaging meth. Under the new law, a person convicted of producing meth could serve up to 17 years in prison. Now, lawmen say, a first-time offender would likely not have had to serve time in prison. "Hopefully it will increase the liability and keep people from setting up these labs," said Jimmy Thornton, the sheriff in Sampson County. The state also added a penalty for a person who makes a dose of meth that results in someone's death. The producer could be charged with second-degree murder. "That ought to tell you how potent this stuff is," Thornton said. Lawmen in North Carolina found nine meth labs five years ago. Last year, the number surged to 177. As of Wednesday, 202 meth labs had been raided by the State Bureau of Investigation this year. More meth labs have been found in Harnett and Sampson counties than any other county in the Cape Fear region. Dealers use the labs to "cook" meth. The drug, which is often called "crank" and "ice," is a stimulant that causes a feeling of euphoria and can keep the user awake for up to three days. It has been called poor man's cocaine and, lawmen say, part of meth's appeal is its accessibility. "Some people put it in the same context as the old bootleggers making whiskey," Rollins said. Instructions on how to make the drug can be found on the Internet. It can be made using common household products, such as batteries and allergy medicine. The punishment for a person who possesses ingredients to make meth also has increased. If convicted, an offender could get up to four years in prison. "That makes communities safer," Rollins said. "You catch them before they start." Tougher Rules Lawmen say more needs to be done. Law enforcement agencies want to get cooperation from businesses and companies that sell products used to make methamphetamine, authorities said. Lawmen have asked business owners to be leery of customers who buy certain chemicals and products in bulk. "We need to look at limiting possession of certain amounts of the precursor chemicals," Little said. "We've come a long way. But I'm sure we are going to need to continue to work." They say lawmen, firefighters, school officials and social workers as well as the public must learn what signs are indicative of a meth lab and its dangers. "Home health workers and fire departments will often encounter a lab before law enforcement," Little said. By having that knowledge and keeping a watchful eye, they could save lives if they were to uncover and report a lab, Little said. Lawmen and firemen in North Carolina have been injured going inside meth labs. In April 2002, two Erwin police officers were hospitalized after being overcome by ammonia fumes during a raid on a meth lab. The state has added an additional 60-month sentence if an offender is guilty of making meth and it results in the injury of a law enforcement officer or an emergency medical worker. Mutual Aid Lawmen in rural departments such as Sampson and Harnett counties say they must depend on federal and state agencies to help uncover the labs. Finding the labs takes manpower and resources that rural departments do not have, they said. Last month in Sampson County, lawmen found a meth lab in a home near Roseboro while serving a search warrant. Thornton said deputies had to wait for SBI agents before entering the lab. Once inside, he said, agents seized 22 containers of chemicals used to make meth. He said it cost the state and federal governments $7,500 to dispose of each container - a price tag a rural department could not afford. "We've got a serious problem," Thornton said, "and I don't say that lightly. We are going to do whatever it takes to deal with the meth problem in this community." One way rural departments can fight the trend is by training their officers to dismantle the labs. In October, Rollins said, he plans to send members of his special response team to a school that will allow the officers to raid labs without having to depend on the SBI. "We'll be able to do our part for this community to stop it as soon as we know about it," Rollins said. 2005 Operation He hopes the team will be active by the beginning of next year. Once the team is operational, Harnett will be the first county in southeastern North Carolina to have officers trained to raid labs, Rollins said. "We will be able to have our team go and secure it," he said. "What happens now is that once our guys get the info, we have to notify the SBI. The bureau is over tasked because there is just too much of it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake