Pubdate: Thu, 18 Mar 2004 Source: Herald-Citizen (TN) Copyright: 2004 Herald-Citizen, a division of Cleveland Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.herald-citizen.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1501 Author: Mary Jo Denton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SPECIAL UNIT FIGHTS METH ON MANY FRONTS Last year, the 13th District Drug Task Force was awarded a $500,000 federal grant to fight the growing problem of methamphetamine in this area. While that's a lot of money, it's nothing in comparison to how much it is beginning to cost for society to deal with all the consequences of meth abuse, officials say. Meth is a drug that hooks 99 percent of users the first time they use it, and it leads to mental illness, brain damage, and death in many cases, according to District Attorney Bill Gibson. The addiction is so sudden and so severe that the threat of prosecution and jail time makes no difference to users, the DA said. "They say it takes a full year just to 'dry' a meth addict out and that you can't even start to rehab him until that period is over, and meth addicts who lose their children over their habit don't even care about that loss," said Cookeville Police Chief Bob Terry. "The idea of going to jail is not a deterrent to meth addicts because their brains are so damaged they can't comprehend that in jail they won't be able to get the drug," said Gibson. So while half a million dollars to fight the problem in this judicial district is certainly going to help, it's just a start and using that money wisely is job number one, say Gibson and Terry, both of whom serve on the Drug Task Force board. "Just going out there and making arrests is not going to make a lot of difference, at least not until laws get changed," said Gibson. "That's why we have taken a multi-pronged approach to the fight." Their goals range from prevention through public awareness to bringing about new state laws that could make a difference. They started by forming a "SMART" unit at the Drug Task Force, a name that means Stop Meth Abuse In Rural Tennessee. They hired an investigator/coordinator to keep up with all the cases and help officers get their meth cases to court. Dolores Gibson holds that position. They also hired a full-time meth case prosecutor, and that is Assistant District Attorney Gary McKenzie. And they are putting a substantial amount of time, money, and work into training police officers to handle meth cases properly and into the prevention side of the problem, including trying to get new state laws on the books and simply trying to inform the public of "how this drug impacts people," as Chief Terry put it. "We are getting ready for a training session in April in which 40 officers from this district will become certified to handle meth lab investigations, making sure that all environmental and safety regulations are met when a lab is discovered," said Dolores Gibson. "Officers working these cases are at great risk, not just from the chemicals and fumes, but from meth abusers who may be very paranoid and may have guns due to that paranoia," she said. The SMART unit is also working with the Business Media Center at Tennessee Tech to produce a CD rom containing all sorts of information on the meth problem. That and other training and education materials being developed will be distributed to schools, to motel owners (who sometimes unwittingly rent rooms to meth cookers), and to businesses, health care agencies, and other organizations needing to know more about the problem of meth. The SMART unit is also studying the problem of creating laws adequate to deal with the meth problem. "The whole justice system is weak when it comes to the meth problem," DA Gibson said. Among the justice system problems: * Meth is cheap and easy to make from ingredients commonly used for other purposes, thus making it harder for law officers to catch someone "growing" or "importing" an illegal drug. * Meth cookers usually get addicted quickly and instead of selling the drug just consume it themselves, becoming "their own best customers," as Chief Terry put it, and also making it hard for undercover cops to infiltrate an operation. * Sometimes the evidence in a meth case (chemicals, etc.) is so dangerous it can't be brought into a courtroom, thus requiring detailed video taping and photographing at the scene before hazardous materials cleanup specialists remove the items. * State lawmakers, due to budget constraints, are reluctant to make new laws that will increase jail time, which is costly to taxpayers. "We want to take the time to do research and study all possibilities on what would be best in the way of new laws," DA Gibson said. SMART Coordinator Dolores Gibson said she will be keeping close track of all the unit's work, documenting cases, trends, and results so that "we can apply for grant funds next year to continue this project." She said one major goal that interests her especially is to make sure citizens of this area realize "the extent of the problem." She wants everyone to know just what bad things can happen to meth users. She recounts some of the horror stories she has encountered in training sessions she has attended: "At one conference, we listened to a businessman who did manage to kick his meth habit -- but not before losing his business, his family, and basically, his mind. "It was as if his brain was dead. You could ask him a question, but you had to repeat it over and over. He couldn't get it." At another conference, she heard about a school teacher who had tried meth because someone told her it would give her lots of energy for doing her housework and other chores. "She found it was an energizer all right -- but she got addicted, lost everything, and went to prison." And officials working with the meth problem in some areas have reported instances of teenaged girls trying meth as a way to lose weight, Gibson said. For these and hundreds of other good reasons, the SMART unit hopes to get funded for years to come in order to fight the meth curse. And they have high praise for Congressmen Bart Gordon and Lincoln Davis for helping this area get the grant and for State Senator Charlotte Burks, who is working to make new state laws to deal with the meth problem. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh