Pubdate: Thu, 01 Apr 2004 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2004 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Russ Rizzo, News & Record METH LAB THREAT GROWING IN STATE GREENSBORO -- Methamphetamine is a growing killer that threatens all of North Carolina. And the Triad is not exempt. That was the message state Attorney General Roy Cooper told about 100 social workers, police officers, and medical officials at a daylong conference on the drug's effect on communities where it is produced. Methamphetamine has challenged police nationwide because it is simple to make, with ingredients found at most drug stores. The chemicals involved are explosive and toxic, adding to the dangers normally associated with street drugs. "Most people don't know about meth," Cooper said Wednesday. "They will." Greensboro learned the dangers of home drug production three years ago when police found a man bleeding and nearly unconscious at Stonesthrow Apartments on Holden Road. He had been making Ecstasy, which has many of the same chemicals found in methamphetamine. Neighbors were evacuated for three days, and it took a week to decontaminate the apartment. Triad police have found meth labs in houses, apartments and mobile homes. Last year, three were found in Guilford County. Seven were found in Randolph County, the most in the Triad. The majority of meth labs in North Carolina are in the west, often hidden in remote areas in the Appalachians. Across the state line, Tennessee police found 499 labs last year. Cooper and others see the threat heading east. "It's moving in from the mountain areas," said Detective J.E. Armstrong with the Greensboro narcotics unit. Last year, 177 meth labs were found in the state; 98 were found in 2002. Just nine were found in 1999. "This problem is going to be in every county in North Carolina if it's anything like it is in surrounding states," Cooper said. Armstrong wasn't surprised to hear the SBI has found 70 labs already in 2004, putting the state on pace to discover 100 more labs than last year. A major reason for the boom, he said, is how easy it is to make meth: Recipes are readily accessible on the Internet, individual ingredients are legal. "It's like baking a cake," Armstrong said. The lab itself is a menace, he said. At worst, the chemical process can result in an explosion. At the least, it will produce toxic waste. The chemicals used in a meth lab can cause long-term mental and physical problems. Children were found in about a fourth of all labs found in the state last year, Cooper said. He is asking for about $38,000 for sessions similar to Wednesday's program at the Guilford social services complex, where social workers learned how to identify children who may be exposed to a meth lab. Cooper also wants almost $900,000 in new federal and state funds to hire more SBI agents and buy more equipment to uproot meth labs. He is pushing for tougher punishments for people who make the drug. But given the ease of setting up a methamphetamine operation and the addictive nature of the drug, Armstrong said, it is easy to see why North Carolina is on the brink of an epidemic. "If a crack head could make all the crack they wanted, where would they stop?" Armstrong said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake