Pubdate: Fri, 05 Mar 2004
Source: Comox Valley Record (CN BC)
Copyright: 2004 Comox Valley Record
Contact:  http://www.comoxvalleyrecord.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/784
Author: Bruce MacInnis
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

'CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER', SAY RCMP

A small quantity of "crystal meth" recently seized by police is likely the 
first trickle of a flood of illegal methamphetamines expected to reach the 
Valley in the near future, RCMP Const. Dean Maxwell says.

Mounties found cocaine and a small quantity of methamphetamines in the 
man's possession when they arrested him on March 1, Maxwell said.

Methamphetamines are already being mass-produced by illegal laboratories in 
Washington State, and will likely replace cocaine and heroin as prime 
"drugs of choice" on Vancouver Island and elsewhere in B.C., Maxwell said.

Methamphetamines can be manufactured by extracting chemicals from a variety 
of over-the-counter medicines and common household chemicals including lamp 
oil, drain cleaner and acetone, police say.

Many commonly-used ingredients are more available in Canada than the U.S. 
because of less restrictive pharmaceutical laws.

Consequently, Washington producers frequently order raw materials from 
Canada for their labs.

Maxwell said there is a "very clear and present danger" of methamphetamine 
labs in the Valley, but declined to say whether police have evidence that 
the drug is being produced here.

The influx of "designer" drugs is likely related to a growing presence of 
organized crime on Vancouver Island in the Valley, according to Maxwell.

Maxwell did not identify groups which appear to be moving into the local 
drug scene, but said they appear to be affilliated with "outlaw" biker gangs.

Methamphetamine labs are small and mobile. Supplies and equipment for a 
complete lab can be carried in the trunk of a car and set up virtually 
anywhere, and a wholesale quantity of the drug can be produced within 24 
hours, he said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom