Pubdate: Mon, 27 Sep 2004 Source: Daily Post-Athenian (Athens, TN) Copyright: 2004 The Daily Post-Athenian Contact: http://dpa.xtn.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1673 Author: Ben Benton, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BREDESEN HEARS METH HORROR STORIES CLEVELAND - Almost everyone in East Tennessee would agree that methamphetamine is one of the most serious problems the state - and the Southeast - has ever faced. The shocking revelation of a 12-year-old user, a user's confession and a legislator's account of his childhood as a relative of a user were stories heard Thursday when the Governor's Roundtable on Methamphetamine Abuse was held at Cleveland State Community College. That the roundtable discussion was so candid indicates how deeply the meth problem is beginning to affect every citizen of the state. The solution to the problem is multifaceted and could include strictly limiting access to ingredients used, harsher state penalties, more resources for treatment and a statewide public meth awareness and education campaign, according to panelists at the roundtable. Legislators, attorneys, prosecutors, a former addict, law enforcement officers and health professionals from across Southeast Tennessee met here Thursday with Gov. Phil Bredesen to discuss potential ways to address the state's continually growing methamphetamine problem. Limiting access to psuedoephedrine, or over-the-counter medications containing ephedrine, would be the most damaging blow to meth manufacturing in Tennessee, according to a consensus among those present. However, help for users of methamphetamine also drew considerable discussion. Bredesen opened the meeting with a question and continued questioning the panel throughout the almost two-hour discussion, asking about specific problems in the Bradley, Hamilton, Polk, McMinn area. Members of the DEA, TBI, U.S. Attorney's office, and 10th Judicial District Attorney General's office were representing prosecutors in the region. Local Children's Advocacy Center Director Teresa Grant told about the impact of meth use and manufacturing on the children in the region. She told Bredesen a case she called an "eye-opener" crossed the CAC's doorstep a couple of months ago. "We're seeing the first 12-year-old as a user," Grant said. According to Grant, the child was ingesting the drug by snorting it. Grant went on to describe CAC's involvement with younger children who have experienced a home life so rife with meth they know the ingredients and the manufacturing process. "They can tell you what goes in it. They can show you where their burns are." Grant said the Tennessee Department of Children's Services works hard to put children referred to the CAC in safe living environments when parents have been arrested on meth charges. "While using the drugs, the parents pose a much greater danger," she said. Children of meth users and cookers live in a world where the drug is a priority, and the children's health suffers, their education suffers and the emotional damage could linger a lifetime, Grant said. "And if your parents cooked that night at the foot of the bed, how can they focus when they go to school the next day?" Grant said training specific to the methamphetamine problem should be implemented statewide to everyone who can become involved in a meth abuser's life. State Sen. Jeff Miller (R-Cleveland) observed that the children in the region are becoming victims of the meth epidemic at the increasing rate. Miller said enacting legislation to require limited access to medicines containing ephedrine and pseudoephedrine should be a priority when the General Assembly next convenes. Miller said requiring a store's customer to sign their name or provide identification of some kind to make a purchase of ephedrine products was a "small price to pay." "I think we need to do something in January," he told Bredesen. State Rep. Chris Newton (R-Turtletown) suggested bolstering meth enforcement by reinforcing the TBI with increased focus on drug enforcement, specifically targeting meth. He said adding drug agents to the TBI ranks should be a priority. Law enforcement in McMinn and Meigs counties have complained for the past several years that state law doesn't match needs in drug cases. Panelists discussed the "revolving door" that emerges when a meth user get busted for possession, makes a small bond, then goes out and furthers his habit, gets arrested again, makes another bond, continues using more and more meth, or becoming a "cooker" in some instances, and is always making bond while the addiction grows worse. "We'll still be processing the lab and they're already getting out (on bond) and are waiting for us to finish so they can get back in their house," said one agent. A drug case can take six months to a year from the time of the arrest to be resolved in state criminal courts. Most meth arrestees continue using meth, deepening the addiction as each case drags through the court system, only to end with a small amount of jail time and probation. State law enforcement's only recourse has been federal court. U.S. Attorney Paul Layman, of the federal office in Chattanooga, said federal court's caseload has "multiplied" with dockets swelling with meth cases. The U.S. Attorney's office qualifies states cases before accepting them for federal prosecution. "If there's an explosion or fire, we will almost always take the case," he said. Layman said cases will be federally prosecuted when a child is injured, child pornography is present, the defendant has multiple meth arrests and convictions, and when certain firearms are present. "Those are some of the examples of cases we take," he said. Shari Tayloe-Young of 10th District Attorney General Jerry Estes' office in Cleveland told of a "Drug Court" developed within the district hoped to help improve prosecution of drug cases. Young said she supported the idea of restricting access to meth ingredients. "What we're seeing is (ingredients procured at) Wal-Mart, Kmart, and places like that," she said. She said limitations on access to ephedrine-containing medicines would be a step in the right direction. "But you've got to have the education to go with that," Young said. Public Defender Charlie Corn told Bredesen he believed a public awareness television campaign should be launched statewide. Bredesen said after the roundtable he believed some combination of incarceration and treatment was one legislative avenue that lawmakers might use to address the meth problem. He said he recognized probation was not the best solution for meth abusers. The woman who had been incarcerated in federal prison suggested no soft treatment for meth offenders. "In no time, it destroyed me," the woman told Bredesen. "Had it not been for my arrest, I have no doubt in my mind I would be dead." She said users of meth begin to have no conscience. She said her 56-month stay in federal prison was what she needed to kick the habit through 500 hours of drug treatment. David Brown, a counselor for Counsel for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services in Chattanooga, said problems with TennCare coverage don't extend to meth addiction treatment. He said CADAS was "inundated" with meth users. Bredesen said he would take the information gathered at the roundtable for use in formulating new ways to attack the meth problem. Bredesen commented that Oklahoma was among the first states to effectively strengthen its drug laws. Newton said a close family member used cocaine and followed the same sort of path through addiction heard in descriptions of cases from other members of the panel. "That's why I'm sitting here today," an emotional Newton said of his support for anti-drug legislation. "That's real to me, having seen it as a young person. This has really hit me hearing (the former meth abuser) talk." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek