Pubdate: Sun, 08 Feb 2004 Source: Huntsville Times (AL) Copyright: 2004 The Huntsville Times Contact: http://www.htimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/730 Author: John Anderson ILLEGAL DRUG TRADE KEEPS FORENSIC LAB BUSY Scientist Identifies 'White Powder' And 'Pink Pills' For Police As long as Ed White can remember, he's been fascinated with the guts of stuff. "Always as a child, I liked to see how things worked," White, 48, said after giving a detailed explanation of a piece of $85,000 quilt-box-size, high-tech lab equipment that's been given the appropriately gee-whiz name GC Mass Spectrometer. That's why White enjoyed those most basic "what-makes-it-tick" classes in high school, chemistry and biology, and earned a double major in those two subjects when he graduated from Troy State University in 1981. Also no surprise: White's favorite TV character is "Quincy," the title character in the long-running drama about a forensic crime lab in Los Angeles. And that's why Ed White is a natural fit as chief of the drug chemistry section at the state's regional forensic evidence lab in Huntsville. After all, the lab's reason for being is to use state-of-the-art equipment to poke, slice, dice, shake and otherwise probe whatever law enforcement agents run across, but can't precisely identify, when investigating crimes ranging from DUI to murder. "It's just a challenge to find out what's in that white powder," White said, describing a substance he's often asked to test, which almost always he determines is cocaine. "White powder" is usually about as specific a labeling he'll find when opening a box of evidence to be tested. A few examples of how police identify materials they bring to the lab: "15 pink pills"; "2 green and white pills"; "one brown and white pill." White sees a lot of drugs under his high-powered microscope and in the lab's other high-tech detection equipment. The most common remains the same as when White began working at the Huntsville lab in 1982: marijuana. But cocaine, the long-running No. 2 illegal drug, is rapidly being overtaken by the increasingly abused stimulant, crystal methamphetamine. White credits, or blames, the drug's popularity on how easy it is to make. "You can go to a Wal-Mart and get everything you need," he said. Awaiting testing by White and his colleagues are 105 boxes filled with suspected parts of area meth labs. Illegal drugs in general continue to be on the rise here as in the rest of the country, if White's workload is any measure. Despite an increase in staff and a quantum leap in the productivity of forensic lab equipment during his 21 years working here, the Huntsville lab's backlog of suspected drugs to be tested has jumped from 300 to 1,300 cases. Police brought in about 115 items a week to be tested by the drug lab when White began working there in 1982; they now bring in on average about 350 items a week, he said. "I've stayed busy," White said. "You always stay busy with drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom