Pubdate: Fri, 01 Oct 2004 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Deborah Yetter, The Courier-Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) STUMBO SAYS NEW KBI WILL FOCUS ON METH INVESTIGATIONS FRANKFORT, Ky. - Kentucky Attorney General Greg Stumbo said yesterday he is reorganizing his staff to create the Kentucky Bureau of Investigation and plans to focus on slowing methamphetamine use. Following the announcement, Lt. Gov. Steve Pence, who is state justice secretary, accused Stumbo of having a political agenda. He also said the KBI may duplicate the work of agencies such as the Kentucky State Police. Kentucky Bureau of Investigation Attorney General Greg Stumbo said the new bureau: Will be headed by Commissioner David James, a former Louisville police officer who joined Stumbo's staff in January as chief investigator. Will have 35 investigators. Will be funded from the attorney general's existing $23 million annual budget. Will focus on methamphetamine crime but will not duplicate the work of other law enforcement agencies. Shortly after they took office, Pence, a Republican, asked Stumbo, a Democrat, to defer creating the KBI. Yesterday, Stumbo defended the creation of the agency as critical to help combat drugs and said his motive is not political. "I have no plans to run for governor at this time," Stumbo said. "It's going to take all of us using our resources to make a dent in this terrible problem we have in Kentucky," Stumbo said of illegal drug use. The KBI will be made up of the 35 sworn law enforcement officers in his office and will require no additional revenue, Stumbo said. His budget is $23 million a year. Stumbo said the KBI would not duplicate the work of other law enforcement agencies nor take away from the officers' other responsibilities for investigating public corruption and Medicaid and welfare fraud. Pence said he wondered whether Stumbo might be trying to attract attention as a possible candidate for governor. "I don't think this is going to assist in the fight against drugs at all," said Pence, a former federal prosecutor who led a recent statewide study of how to tackle the drug problem. "I think this is the beginning of the Democratic primary for 2007." Creating the KBI had been a campaign pledge for Stumbo, a former state representative from Floyd County and majority floor leader in the House. But it had been a point of contention between Stumbo and Pence. In January, shortly after Gov. Ernie Fletcher took office, Pence asked Stumbo to hold off on plans for the KBI until a drug summit Pence headed had finished its work and recommended a plan. Stumbo, who worked on the summit, agreed but said yesterday the drug summit released its report in August recommending more treatment for drug abusers, an expanded drug court and better coordination of effort. The plan didn't include a recommendation for the KBI. Former Louisville police officer David James, who joined Stumbo's staff in January as chief investigator, will get a new title as KBI commissioner. He will oversee 35 investigators divided among four units: Public Corruption and Special Investigations; Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Control; Welfare Fraud; and Drug Investigations. Four will be assigned to the drug unit, James said. The attorney general's office had 33 investigators and added two by eliminating one management position, James said. Stumbo said the goal is to look at all drug crimes, including trafficking in narcotic painkillers such as OxyContin, a big problem in his home area of Eastern Kentucky. But a key focus of the unit will be to take on the state's growing methamphetamine problem, he said. His unit won't try to investigate all meth crimes, Stumbo said, saying that's the job of state and local police. Rather, he hopes to pinpoint major suppliers of so-called precursors, or common ingredients used in methamphetamine such as pseudoephedrine and ephedrine, found in cold medicine, as well as other stimulants used in diet pills or over-the-counter "energy" pills. Stumbo said his investigators will work with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and attempt to identify wholesalers or retailers dealing in unusually large amounts of the drugs. He said a similar effort in Oklahoma by state authorities working with the DEA was successful at slowing the diversion of such substances for meth labs. Stumbo said a DEA investigator already is working with his officers on the project. Bobby Otero, diversion supervisor for the DEA in Louisville, said such efforts have been effective in other states and his office is working with Stumbo. Otero said the DEA will work with the state to review records of registered dealers and also follow up on tips about unregistered suppliers. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek