Pubdate: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2004 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.indystar.com/help/contact/letters.html Website: http://www.starnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Ken Bode Note: Ken Bode, a former senior political analyst for CNN, is the Pulliam professor of journalism at DePauw University Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) HOMEMADE METH LEAVES SCARS ON RURAL INDIANA Three days before the election, Gov. Joe Kernan received a report from a task force set up to study the problem of methamphetamines in Indiana. The drug, which can be homemade in garages or barns or cooked outdoors in rural cemeteries, has reached epidemic proportions in our state. Vigo County Sheriff Jon Marvel says 85 percent of inmates in his jail are facing meth-related charges. Three days after the election, 4-year-old Tyler Fogarty became the poster boy for the problem. Summoned at 1:30 a.m. to his home in Roachdale, Putnam County police officials found the boy abused and unconscious, soaking in a bathtub where he was placed by his mother's boyfriend. Crystal meth was plainly visible in the house, and the boy died the next day. The boyfriend and the mother are in the Putnam County lockup, where Sheriff Mark Frisbie says that 90 percent of his law enforcement work now involves meth: people making it, taking it or stealing to get it. Six months ago, with the cooperation of the entire justice system in Putnam County, four DePauw students prepared a documentary on this dangerously destructive, homegrown drug. They worked their way up and down the courthouse from judge to prosecutor to public defender. They interviewed the sheriff, the drug cops, the probation officer. They talked to prisoners doing time in the county lockup on meth charges and to retailers who sell the ingredients. They learned about it from both sides of the law -- how meth is made and how easy it is to get the chemicals. "I can get it in half a day from Wal-Mart, Ace Hardware and anhydrous from the co-op, "a seasoned meth cook told them. "Meth? You can make it in your basement," says Judge Diana LaViolette. From those in jail waiting for trial, they learned how addictive it is. "Once you start making it, you don't want to do anything else," said one. "Every paycheck I got went straight to dope." They were also told how meth peddlers build a market: "Give it away the first time. 'Hey, you want to try this?' After that they're begging for it." Authorities call meth a redneck drug, abused mainly by white, blue-collar, lower middle-class people. And, while Indiana is supposed to be a rehabilitative state, we have no treatment programs for people incarcerated for meth or on parole. That leads to an extremely high percentage of recidivism. "I never had a meth addict that ever quit and didn't return to it," said parole officer Theresa Parrish. First offenders improve their skills in jail. Sheriff Frisbie told the students, "If you're a budding meth cook and you want to get better, get locked up." A repeat offender facing 10 years adds, "It's all they talk about in jail, all you hear, how to cook meth." Interviews with Family and Social Services professionals highlighted the explosion in child abuse and neglect cases involving parents making or using meth. In Putnam County, kids ages 13 and 15 were caught helping a woman cook the drug. That's where 4-year-old Tyler Fogarty comes in. Roachdale neighbors suspected drug use and child abuse, but no one reported it. In Putnam, officials plan to go town by town and hold meetings on meth. In the Roachdale VFW Hall, an 82-year-old woman told Frisbie, "This damned dope is floating all over Roachdale and nobody is doing anything about it." Frisbie has often said that the sheriff's department cannot cover every hill and hollow, that the first line of responsibility lies with neighbors. Report suspected drug activity so surveillance can be set up, he advised, take down license plates of suspect vehicles and don't be afraid to report it, the information will be kept confidential. That much might have saved Tyler Fogarty. Meth is a plague in small towns and rural Indiana, and it is spreading. The state task force reported that the number of meth cases has gone up 200 percent since 1999, and meth seizures jumped from 177 to 1,500 in the same period. This has cost the state $100 million. In Vigo County, Sheriff Marvel's jail budget has risen from $812,000 to $3.5 million. In his RV travels, listening to cops and county officials all over Indiana, incoming Gov. Mitch Daniels got an earful about how meth has become our No. 1 law enforcement problem. Kernan received the task report on meth; Daniels can act on it. Bode, a former senior political analyst for CNN, is the Pulliam professor of journalism at DePauw University. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin