Pubdate: Sat, 13 Nov 2004 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2004 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Glenn Smith, and Nita Birmingham Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BEHIND CLOSED DOORS Authorities Finding More Meth Labs In Lowcountry On a brisk December day, residents huddled outside their tidy Mount Pleasant townhouses, watching incredulously as men ensconced in white protective suits and gas masks hustled tubs of equipment from a neighboring home. Word spread that police had discovered a drug lab brewing a powerful stimulant called methamphetamine inside the tasteful wood-and-brick home. The incident led local newscasts, and those familiar with the drug marveled at the find. Didn't outlaw bikers make meth out in the desert somewhere? The drug was mainly a West Coast problem, wasn't it? Not anymore. The discovery of clandestine labs has become almost commonplace in the Lowcountry. Since January, police in Charleston, Berkeley and Dorchester counties have arrested more than 30 people in connection with at least 21 meth labs operating in those areas. Dorchester County deputies most recently found three clandestine labs in one day. Authorities warn that the problem is going to get worse, driven by demand for a highly addictive drug that can be produced quickly almost anywhere with minimal investment and sold at a hefty profit. Locally, clandestine labs have been discovered on stovetops, in hotel rooms, on a 30-foot power boat and in the bed of a pickup truck, the product "cooking" as the driver motored along.Law enforcement agencies, taxed by the hours of manpower needed to dismantle a lab, are struggling to fight back. Patrol officers who make traffic stops are looking for signs of meth use or production. Authorities alert local retailers about items that could indicate a meth operation when purchased together or in bulk. Dorchester County Sheriff's Cpl. Randy Botten, a narcotics agent, gave one of the office's first public presentations on meth to Crimewatch coordinators Thursday night. Sheriff Ray Nash is talking about holding a town hall meeting. The sheriff's office hopes to launch an education project called "Meth Watch" by next year, Botten said. He'd even like to shoot an educational commercial. "Methamphetamine, I think, will be the root of all evil if it gets a stronghold," Botten said. John Ozaluk, agent in charge of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration offices in South Carolina, said the state is "ahead of the curve" in recognizing the methamphetamine menace and moving to address it. Later this month, the DEA and other agencies are sponsoring a four-day conference in Myrtle Beach on the meth problem and ways to attack it. "Already this year, we are averaging a lab every couple days," Ozaluk said. Lab seizures statewide increased from 10 in fiscal year 2000-01 to 254 in the federal fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, according to the DEA, which spent more than $406,000 last year cleaning up meth labs in South Carolina. Five pounds of waste is generated for every one pound of meth produced, Botten said. Methamphetamine is made from common household items such as denatured alcohol, boxes of matches, ammonia, lye, tincture of iodine, lithium strips from batteries and over-the-counter medications containing pseudoephedrine. Some of the ingredients are highly volatile and may ignite or explode if mixed or stored improperly. Fires and explosions are common when meth "cooking" goes wrong. Last year, an investigator was injured in a meth lab explosion in Greenville that sent shards of glass into his face, Ozaluk said. Authorities suspect the blast was sparked when the officer's sweat interacted with a moisture-sensitive chemical in the lab, he said. In October, a former North Charleston resident twice arrested during police raids at methamphetamine labs died after an explosion occurred while he was cooking a batch of the drug in a trailer in the Tennessee woods. Just breathing certain chemicals can be hazardous. Inhaling phosphine gas, chlorine gas and anhydrous ammonia can cause irreparable damage to a person's lungs or central nervous system. Deputies from Charleston and Berkeley counties have been overcome by fumes in lab raids. A Berkeley narcotics agent picked up a jar of meth, "and the bad guy knocked it out of his hand, and it just missed his face. Had it hit his face, it would have frozen his lungs and he would have been dead," Maj. Ricky Driggers said. In most cases, unprotected uniformed officers are the ones to stumble across meth labs while investigating unrelated calls, Ozaluk said. "It's very dangerous for the first responders who go into these meth labs not knowing what they have," he said. The Berkeley County Sheriff's Office is adopting a new standard operating procedure for deputies because of the growth of meth. "We're educating our deputies on what to look for because it's so dangerous and so deadly," Driggers said. These are not your high school science labs stocked with tubes, beakers and burners. Local narcotics agents frequently find coolers, Mason jars, Pyrex dishware and Coleman gas canisters, what Botten calls "single-cook" labs. They are makeshift operations that produce enough meth for personal use and enough to sell so the individual can continue to make the drug. Botten estimates an average expenditure of $289 yields about $2,000 worth of meth. Cooks often steal many of the ingredients, which further increases the profit margin, Botten said. "The first time is the best high they'll ever get on this drug, so what they'll do is continue to chase it," Botten said. "It's a nasty drug," said Sgt. David Robertson, a narcotics unit supervisor for the Charleston County Sheriff's Office. "If you've ever seen anybody on crystal meth, they are very paranoid, very hyper, they don't sleep, and it's very addicting. And like anything else, when the money runs out, they start doing other things to get it." Recipes are passed from cook to cook and are found on the Internet. The DEA found a recipe scribbled on a phone bill. Some states have discussed enacting stiffer penalties for meth makers, and others are trying to make it more difficult to obtain ingredients for the drug. In Oklahoma, for instance, officials say the availability of meth has dropped significantly by placing over-the-counter medications that contain pseudoephedrine behind pharmacy counters and requiring purchasers to show photo identification. Driggers supports requiring a signature to buy the medications. "If we adopt this nationwide, you'll see a big decrease in meth labs," Driggers said. He'd also like legislators to pass a law enabling police to charge individuals for having the items used to make meth. Botten said Georgia and Tennessee have enacted these "precursor laws," and he hopes South Carolina will do the same. SIGNS OF A METH LAB -- Unusual odors (ether, ammonia, acetone or other chemicals) -- Excessive amounts of trash, particularly chemical containers (alcohol, lye, drain cleaner), coffee filters or pieces of cloth that are stained red and duct tape rolls -- Curtains always drawn or windows covered with aluminum foil or blackened on residences, garages, sheds or other structures -- Evidence of chemical waste or dumping -- Frequent visitors, particularly at unusual times - -- Extensive security measures or attempts to ensure privacy (no trespassing or beware of dog signs, fences, large trees or shrubs) -- Secretive or unfriendly occupants. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin