Pubdate: Sun, 21 Mar 2004 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2004 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Authors: Greg Lacour and Alice Gregory, Staff Writers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH IS INVADING CAROLINAS Frightening, Devastating, Spreading Methamphetamine has started what officials fear will be a long and devastating burn through the Carolinas. Just three years ago, law enforcement found 42 clandestine meth labs, mostly in the rural N.C. mountains and South Carolina's Upstate. Last year, they uncovered 304. Now officials are preparing for the drug to spread deeper into the Piedmont, bringing the potential to ravage more families and communities. Shannon Sawyer's experience with meth illustrates why police and social workers call the drug one of the worst problems they've seen in the Carolinas. Sawyer, 32, first used methamphetamine at a party about eight years ago. Back then, it was hard to find in Robbinsville, in the far west corner of North Carolina. It cost the same as cocaine, but it produced a longer and more potent high. By 2000, Sawyer was using daily, and his wife started, too. They ignored their four children, and the family lived without electricity for months. Shannon Sawyer lost 80 pounds. When their destructive ride with meth ended, the Sawyers had each served prison time, and their children were in foster care. "You would think that a person could will themselves to stop," Shannon Sawyer said. "But it becomes bigger than you are." Police have made occasional meth arrests in the Carolinas since the 1980s. But already this year, 58 meth labs have been found in North Carolina, with 27 in the 10 counties bordering Tennessee. In South Carolina, there have been about 75 busts this year. Now recovering, the Sawyers are trying to get their children back, and they worry about what meth is doing to other families. Meth has become such a problem in Robbinsville -- population 780 -- that their preacher mentioned it in a recent Sunday sermon. Residents no longer leave doors unlocked and power tools in their yards. Addicts are stealing cold medicine, which is used to make meth, from the Family Dollar. "I'm amazed," Shannon Sawyer said, "that it hasn't killed somebody." Spreading Eastward Methamphetamine -- also known as crank, crystal, glass and speed -- is a powerful stimulant that targets the brain's pleasure center, giving users a prolonged, manic high. A Japanese pharmacologist developed meth in 1919, and German and American soldiers used it in World War II to combat fatigue. But it didn't become a street drug until the 1970s, when biker gangs in California were among the first to set up labs. Bikers and long-haul truckers who used it to stay awake carried it East. It hit the Midwest in the 1980s and the Southeast in the 1990s. Meth has generally followed a pattern, taking hold first in rural areas where it's easier to hide odors and waste from labs. For about $400, meth manufacturers, or "cooks," can buy everything they need from hardware or grocery stores to make $6,000 of the drug. They mix highly flammable chemicals -- including lighter fluid, kerosene, lye, lithium from batteries and red phosphorus from the striker plates of matchbooks -- to produce powder or crystals in five or six hours. When finished, cooks dump the waste in toilets, yards, garbage and streams. Last month, a Dumpster in Asheville caught fire as sanitation workers moved it, not knowing it contained gallon jugs of meth lab waste. Waste dumping is especially dangerous in rural areas, where most residents depend on wells for their drinking water, said Van Shaw, who runs the N.C. State Bureau of Investigation's Clandestine Lab Response Unit. The SBI doesn't know of anyone getting sick from contaminated water, Shaw said, but agents have seen dead grass and other plants where cooks have dumped waste. Cooking can contaminate a home and everything in it. The fumes also damage respiratory systems -- especially in children, who are more prone to develop chemically induced asthma and pneumonia. Last year, law enforcement officers found a total of 69 children living in 177 homes where meth labs were busted in North Carolina. According to a 2002 U.S. Justice Department report, 35 percent of children from meth homes tested positive for the drug through secondary exposure, Shaw said. Children born to meth-addicted mothers go through withdrawal just like adults. For weeks, even months, they're in pain and inconsolable. Social workers in Watauga County, which has had the most lab busts in North Carolina, frequently destroy children's clothes, blankets and toys to reduce the risk of exposure to contaminants lingering in the fabric. "With all the normal things that went with crack -- home invasion, robbery, burglary -- (meth) adds an environmental threat to anybody exposed to the cooking process," said SBI agent Rick Hetzel, who's helped bust dozens of labs. "Nothing is properly disposed of. It's as bad as anything you're going to see. I can't think of anything worse." Takes Root in Rural Areas The drug worked its way into Georgia and Tennessee in the late 1990s and, recently, into the rural Carolinas. Recipes have spread by word of mouth and occasionally via the Internet. The rural N.C. mountains and S.C. Upstate offer features that once attracted moonshiners: forbidding terrain and independent folks who mind their own business. With about 8,000 residents in the far west corner of the state, Shannon Sawyer's home county of Graham is among the smallest of the 10 mountain counties. In his early 20s, Sawyer began to abuse alcohol and cocaine. In the mid-'90s, a friend offered him a line of meth at a party. Sawyer said he started using "just to fit in with the crowd." At that time, meth cost about the same as coke, $100 per gram. A line of coke got him a half-hour high. A third as much meth lasted three hours. "Two to three days after you quit, you're still going," he said. "Hyped up" on meth, Sawyer said, he could work construction jobs for about 13 hours a day and then spend a few more hours in his cabinet shop. He also had an increased sex drive. Sawyer fits the profile of the classic Carolinas meth user, officials said. He is young, white, a small-town resident with limited education and a blue-collar career. Sawyer said he understands why users become cooks. The prospect of easy money and an accessible supply is hard to resist. "I feel like we're going to see more of it," Caldwell County Sheriff Gary Clark said. "It fits right in with the times. ... Folks are out of work, and they see an opportunity to make money selling something that, unfortunately, is sought-after right now." N.C. officials haven't even begun to estimate how much meth has cost taxpayers over the last two years in overtime, lab work, care for children and other costs, the SBI's Shaw said. At least one member of the SBI's lab unit must be present at every bust in the state. The SBI has equipment and training most sheriff's offices don't have, and it administers federal money used to clean up meth lab sites. Cleanup sometimes involves tearing down a house and hauling the soil away for incineration. Cleanup alone costs from $3,000 to $50,000 per lab. North Carolina spent $329,300 cleaning up meth labs last year, according to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. South Carolina spent $314,200. Those numbers are expected to rise; Tennessee recorded more than 500 busts and spent $934,930 last year. Even with the federal government picking up the cleanup tab, the effects of meth use are straining the budgets of small counties. County social services departments are spending an increasing amount of money on foster care, attorneys' fees and expert witnesses for meth-related child abuse cases. Toll on Children Some of that money has gone to care for Shannon and Kathy Sawyer's children. Their 1-year-old son lives in a Graham County foster home with his 3-year-old sister.Graham County Department of Social Services expects to spend about $84,000 on foster care and $59,000 on attorneys' fees this year, largely a result of meth cases. That's about 15 percent of the $952,000 the county spends on social services. In many counties, children from meth homes are taken to hospitals for respiratory, neurological, liver and drug testing. But smaller towns, such as Robbinsville, have no local hospital. Social workers there have resorted to taking kids to their own homes to shower and change clothes. "It really puts a major burden on a poor county," DSS Director Bobby Cagle said. Adult users are part of the burden, too. North Carolina's state-run drug treatment centers can't keep up with the crush of users, said Flo Stein of the N.C. Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services. For the Sawyers, it all ended in early 2003, when Graham County authorities arrested them. Shannon Sawyer was caught during a February raid, and Kathy was arrested in March when officers found meth in her car during a traffic stop, Detective Scott Caldwell said. Now, the couple attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings on Mondays, counseling sessions on Fridays and church whenever they can. "Eventually," Kathy Sawyer said, "we both sobered up enough to realize they could take our kids, and that we might never have them again." While Shannon Sawyer was in prison last year, his 14-year-old daughter from a previous marriage was severely injured in a wreck while joyriding with a man twice her age. She's recovering in a rehab center in Arkansas. Shannon can't shake the guilt over his absence. He remembers his daughter saying she'd like to try meth to understand why he abandoned his family. He has a new goal to fight the temptation to use again. "That's a definite motivator, trying to get those kids back," he said. "It's a terrible thing to say, because we both love our kids very much, but when you're at the height of an addiction, your love is the drug." [sidebar] HOW BAD IS METH? Methamphetamine's potential for harm extends far beyond users. . Toxic fumes from meth labs can cause respiratory illness, especially in children. . Chemicals used to make meth are flammable and sometimes explode. . Dumping lab waste can pollute the environment. . Fighting meth is straining budgets in smaller Carolinas counties. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake