Pubdate: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 Source: Sand Mountain Reporter, The (Albertsville, AL) Copyright: 2004 Sand Mountain Reporter Contact: http://www.sandmountainreporter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1713 Author: Steven Stiefel, Sand Mountain Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) REALTORS EDUCATED ABOUT METHAMPHETAMINE With the growing use of crystal meth, Marshall County District Attorney Steve Marshall and Marshall County Drug Enforcement Unit Commander Rob Savage educated realtors on how to know if a home has been used as a meth lab. Marshall told the Marshall County Board of Realtors the word "lab" may sound scientific, but those making methamphetamine can cook it in any home, barn, motel room, storage building, old campers or in the trunk of their cars. "You might ask, 'What does meth have to do with realtors?'" Marshall said. "The answer is 'a lot.' Meth is a big liability issue when showing a home and you will see labs through properties you deal with or rent." He told the group what clues to look for. This included "unusually strong odors, either a caustic odor or ammonia smell." Marshall said it smells like a chickenhouse while Savage described it as being "like putting too many chemicals in the pool." Finding several discarded boxes of sinus medication containing Ephedrine is also a red flag because Ephedrine is the most common precursor used in making meth. Another giveaway is the remnants of torn matchboxes, with a large number of matches usually discarded while the contact strips are scraped and filtered for their red phosphorus. Bottles of Iodine are also suspect. "Now, I'm not telling you to walk up to someone at the store and tell them you are going to call the D.A. because they have a product with Ephedrine in their shopping cart," Marshall said. "When buying those products in quantity, there is probably something wrong." It is not uncommon to find discarded soft drink bottles on the side of the road or at a house in need of cleaning up, but Marshall said the bottles can present a health risk if touched. He showed a slide picturing a 20-liter bottle with a tube connected to it, used by a local meth cook as part of the meth-cooking process. "Don't touch it, don't deal with it and don't handle it," Marshall advised. "If you see a propane tank with a discolored valve looking aquablue, that is an indication of using anhydrous ammonia, which can liquify your lungs on contact. Fires at a residence are another sign, as well as frequent burning of trash in the yard." Savage told the realtors they should call his office at (256) 571-7714 or their local law enforcement agency if they suspect a property is contaminated. The MCDEU has worked 80 meth labs so far in 2004, at a cleanup cost of $35,000 each. The real cost, however, is paid by the property owner. He told the group they should also take care when calling on homes because meth users are typically paranoid with violent tendencies. We are seizing guns with every arrest and cameras in raids. (Users) think they have got to have the cameras to see if we are coming after them. (Savage) can tell you horror stories about serving warrants. I won't apologize for the tools our drug unit uses. I want those guys to have the best equipment available because the bad guys are just as well-armed." Marshall said the Department of Human Resources is forced to take more and more children from households where parents are meth addicts. "Children are the true victims of all this. We don't know the long-term effects on children who have been around these chemicals. That is what should concern us all," he said. Marshall said the meth situation is not going to be solved with badges and guns. "We can have more of an impact on meth if more high school students graduate, if the median income goes up, if moms and dads talk more to their children. The people we deal with are not afraid of jail or the future. It's all about getting the next hit." He cautioned against the stereotype that meth is the result of Hispanics coming to Marshall County. "This is a white, rural phenomenon," Marshall said. "We would have a problem if there were not one Hispanic here. One reason we see so much is we are almost a hub of distribution, a trafficking route for drugs from California, Texas and Mexico, where 90 percent of the meth sold on the street comes from. The local cooks are making for themselves because they can't afford to buy from someone else." Marshall also believes there is somewhat of a family tradition spilling over from the days of cooking moonshine in rural places. Whatever the case, the authorities hope to enlist the help of realtors and the public in watching for clues about possible meth use. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake