Pubdate: Wed, 04 Feb 2004 Source: Mitchell News-Journal (NC) Copyright: 2004 Mitchell News-Journal Contact: http://www.mitchellnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1777 Source: Mitchell News-Journal (NC) Author: John Silver Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) STATE LOOKS TO GET TOUGHER ON METH It's time to get tough on criminals who manufacture and distribute methamphetamines says N.C. Attorney General Ray Cooper. Cooper unveiled a preliminary report last week on the progress N.C. has made in fighting the epidemic that has, along with prescription drugs, become one of the main concerns for rural counties. Though the report stated that N.C. has met the drug challenge with multiple arrests, on many levels, Cooper says, the state can do more, such as inflicting harsher penalties, promote more public awareness and education and better training on the local level. Among the highlights of the plan, Cooper proposes a shift from probation to stiffer penalties for making and distributing meth. Too often, defendants get probation and return to court weeks or even days later with similar charges. On the public front, Cooper's report recommends videos, brochures and a website to educate and offer specialized training for people who are most likely to come in contact with meth labs. He recommends that landlords and garbage collectors should be able to identify the "tell-tale signs of a [meth] lab" from inspecting a tenants garbage. The report also recommends more serious child endangerment charges instead of just neglect. Mitchell County Sheriff Ken Fox said the new plan should help local law enforcement in their continued efforts to slow down a growing problem. "Tougher drug laws will only help us and they'll be more of a deterrent to people making meth if their looking at some prison time rather than probation," Fox said. With the arrival of new anti-terrorism laws, some prosecutors have tried to charge meth manufacturers with producing a weapon of mass destruction, due to the highly toxic and potentially explosive nature of the ingredients used to produce the drug. Watauga County District Attorney Jerry Wilson charged 10 people with producing a weapon of mass destruction in connection with methamphetamine production. But Superior Court Judge James Baker dismissed the charges as pertaining to anti-terrorism laws. Fox believes Bakers dismissal is a sign that the state simply needs tougher, more clearly stated penalties. "We have got to hit this problem from both sides," Fox said. "With education and with harsher penalties." Fox believes if more people were aware of the ingredients alone, they might think twice. Meth includes chemicals such as lithium, muriatic acid and red phosphorus. "I've been to meetings where I saw people who said 'If I knew what was in it, I would never have done it,'" he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom