Pubdate: Mon, 08 Nov 2004 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2004 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Frank Main Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) TARGETING AN 'ALL-AROUND' MENACE He was unshaven. His wide-open eyes warily scanned the room, darting back and forth like a lizard's. He drummed his fingers on a table and tapped his toes on the floor. He was "tweaking." The young man's disheveled appearance and paranoid behavior -- a side effect from taking methamphetamine -- is becoming a disturbingly common sight in Chicago's Lake View neighborhood, police say. Methamphetamine, known as "ice" or "crystal," was found mainly in the gay nightclub scene on the North Side until a few years ago. But the circle of meth users is widening, as evidenced by a skyrocketing number of arrests for possession of the drug this year in the Town Hall police district on the North Side, officials say. "It's all around," said the man, who is gay. "You can stay high for two days, full of energy. And sex is great on meth." He first found his methamphetamine contacts in 2001 when he surfed Internet chatrooms. He met people who admitted to doing drugs and were willing to "party and play." Now he uses methamphetamine to stay up for 48-hour stretches and do computer work for his job. "I do more work than anyone else," he said. "But it's a real problem if you party on the weekend and need to work on Monday. You're extremely tired and irritable when you come down from it. All you want to do is sleep." And sometimes, you need to be rushed to the hospital. Emergency room admissions in the Chicago area because of methamphetamine abuse rose from three per 100,000 in 1995 to eight per 100,000 in 2002. Police crackdown Robert Stasch, a Chicago Police lieutenant who supervises plainclothes tactical officers in the Town Hall District, said his team is cracking down on methamphetamine to prevent history from repeating itself. In the 1980s, crack cocaine became popular on the West Coast. Then Chicago's gangs discovered it. By the early '90s, crack was king in Chicago and murders soared as dealers fought for street corner markets. "I believe that meth is the crack cocaine of the 21st century," Stasch said. "Our biggest fear is that gangs will start dealing this. The gang-bangers could stand out there for three days without sleeping and sell it on the corners. That is why we are concentrating on it now." This year, Town Hall cops have made 19 arrests for meth possession, compared with eight over the same period in 2003, Stasch said. "Our informants are telling us it is hard to penetrate the dealers because we have hit them so hard they are cautious about who they sell to," he said. Methamphetamine, made in clandestine labs everywhere from California to Downstate, is an off-white powder that is snorted, smoked or injected. A gram retails for about $330 here, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. It's more expensive per gram than crack cocaine, another stimulant. "But you will get a high that lasts four to five times longer than cocaine," Stasch said. "That's why it's popular." Lucrative product Methamphetamine is lucrative for dealers, attracting a wide cross-section of people to the business. On Friday, a Chicago Public Schools teacher was arrested with about $17,000 of methamphetamine in his apartment, along with the "date rape drug" GHB and drug paraphernalia, police said. "The guy who looks like Joe Schmo with the bookbag is the guy selling the dope," said Nenad Markovich, a Town Hall tactical officer. The arrests involve big money: On July 1, police arrested a man with $38,000 of methamphetamine, as well as other drugs, a gun and $5,000 during a traffic stop. The vanity plates on his Cadillac Escalade read: "ONTRPNR." Last year, a Hollywood movie executive was caught in a methamphetamine sting. Now he is in federal prison serving an 18-month sentence. He was convicted of smuggling about an ounce of meth from Los Angeles to Chicago. "Meth, as far as I am concerned, is an epidemic, not just in the gay community, but in the rural areas," said the executive, who requested anonymity, in a telephone interview from prison. "The drug is running rampant there [in Chicago]," he said. "People don't do coke anymore in the club scene. Why do a major amount of coke when you can do a line of meth?" FACTS ABOUT METH Cost: About $330 a gram in the Chicago area History: Popularized on the West Coast by the Hells Angels motorcycle club Appearance: Generally a cloudy white powder that can be snorted, smoked or heated for injection Potency: Extended highs that can last 48 hours Dangers: Addictive, can lead to erratic behavior and overdose Geography: Many Chicago Police arrests have been in the Lake View area, but fears are the drug could expand to other parts of city - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin