Pubdate: Thu, 11 Mar 2004 Source: Times-Journal, The (Fort Payne, AL) Copyright: 2004 Times-Journal Contact: http://www.times-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1883 Author: J.D. Davidson, The Times-Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BARRON'S BILLS WOULD HELP IN METH BATTLE The DeKalb County Drug Task Force continues to battle record amounts of methamphetamine, it got a little help from Montgomery on Wednesday. State Sen. Lowell Barron, D-Fyffe, flanked by DeKalb County District Attorney Mike O'Dell, Deputy DA Ben Baxley and task force commander Darrell Collins, Barron announced legislation that would help with testing and cleanup costs that go along with busting a meth lab. The legislation would also help officials prosecute people who provide the chemicals used to make meth. "In the last two years, we have seen this deadly drug spread to epidemic proportions throughout Alabama," Barron said. "In DeKalb and Jackson counties, law enforcement officials seized a combined total of more than 200 labs last year. Sadly, it appears they could exceed that number this year." If the legislation, which cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, passes the Senate and the House and is signed by Gov. Bob Riley, it would require the courts to assess restitution for forensic analysis and cleanup against the person convicted of a controlled substance offense or of operating an illegal lab. "I believe the one who committed this crime, not the taxpayer, should pay for the costs incurred in cleaning up and handling this toxic material," Barron said. Barron also has two other pieces of legislation that would modify existing law. The first makes it illegal to possess any single precursor substance or substance with the intent to make a controlled substance. Currently, somebody must possess more than one substance before it is illegal. The second bill, according to Barron, closes a potential loophole and clarifies that merchants who sell precursor substances with knowledge of their intended illegal use are violation the law. "We must fight the manufacture and use of this deadly drug at all levels - from beginning to end, and that is what this package of legislation will do," Barron said. "We do not want to put additional inmates in our prisons, but we simply cannot allow them to continue to harm our society." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager