Pubdate: Mon, 19 Apr 2004 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Kimberly Hefling, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) MOBILE METH COOKS FLOCK TO HOTELS Motel Owners, Drug Investigators Cracking Down On Drug Labs EVANSVILLE, Ind. - Reed Skelton was relaxing in his hotel room on a Saturday night, drinking beer and watching porn, when the methamphetamine he was brewing exploded in the bathroom. The flash fire blew the window out of his room and severely injured him. In the chaos that followed, 156 guests were evacuated from the Baymont Inn and the sprinklers went off, contributing to about $120,000 in damage to the motel, police Sgt. Mike Lauderdale said. As the number of meth labs has spread in recent years from the West Coast and Southwest and infiltrated states such as Indiana and Kentucky, they are being found more in hotel rooms - perfect for "meth cooks" on the go. They are found not just in seedy motels but also in chain hotels that cater to business people and vacationers - much like the Baymont Inn, which is in a newly developed area on Evansville's west side. "It does create a mess, and to be honest with you, I'm surprised more people haven't gotten blown up or burned by these things," said Spencer County Sheriff Sheldon Tharp, who has found at least two meth labs in motels in his county this year. To get a room, the "cooks" often use stolen identification or pay with drugs or cash for the use of someone else's ID, said Armand McClintock, who oversees the Indianapolis office of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. Inside, the fumes from the cooking meth - made mostly with household chemicals such as drain cleaner - can be lethal, and the labs can explode. The waste from the production process is toxic. For every pound of drug made, there are typically five pounds of hazardous waste, McClintock said. The cooks usually get rid of it by pouring it down a sink or toilet. There are other hazards awaiting law-enforcement officers who raid such labs. Among them is the number of weapons the cooks tend to carry, but firearms are not the extent of it, Tharp said. In one case, a Doberman pinscher met Spencer County Detective Jeff Meredith when he responded to a call in February at the Scottish Inn north of Dale, off Interstate 64 about 70 miles west of Louisville. A woman fled the room, but a man on the bed had a sawed-off shotgun at his feet - and there was a pistol under his mattress and a rifle leaning against the heater, Meredith said. There was no shooting, though, which was fortunate. "They had more firepower than we had," Tharp said. Brad Meyers, the general manager of the motel, now called the 231 Ambest Plaza Motel, no longer has problems with meth cooks. He said the staff is more diligent in looking for signs of meth cooking and they report suspicious behavior. One sign is the smell of anhydrous ammonia, commonly used to make the drug. Another is the presence of broken light bulbs, which serve as containers for mixing ingredients. The staff also started to examine whether local people were frequenting the motel, he said. "That's something that immediately raises eyebrows," Meyers said. "That person very well could be doing something illegal." Sgt. Lauderdale, who is with the Evansville-Vanderburgh Joint Narcotics Task Force, said the explosion last year at the Baymont Inn could have been much worse had the fire hit several jars of flammable liquid in the room. "It would've taken out the back side of the motel," he said. Skelton, 24, was hospitalized with severe burns. After his release, he pleaded guilty to meth-related crimes stemming from the explosion and was sentenced in January to seven years in prison, to be followed by three years in a drug-treatment program. Tom Schroeder, a national spokesman for Baymont Inns, said the explosion appeared to have been an isolated incident and did not warrant a change in policy within the chain. Lauderdale said his task force found four meth labs, including that one, at hotels or motels last year. This year, officers responding to a report of domestic violence found one at the Holiday Inn Express at I-64 and U.S. 41 in Vanderburgh County. Authorities raided 93 meth labs last year in Vanderburgh County and 1,260 statewide. That compares with six labs found in Indiana in 1995. Of the 1,260 labs, 17 were found in hotels or motels, said Sgt. Todd Ringle of the Indiana State Police. Last year, 10,305 meth labs discovered across the nation were reported to the DEA, 309 of them found in hotel and motel rooms, according to the DEA's El Paso Intelligence Center in Texas. The numbers are not complete because not all labs are reported to the DEA. Officers with Lauderdale's task force have met individually with hotel owners and managers to teach them how to respond should they find a meth lab. Across the Ohio River, the Kentucky Hotel and Lodging Association had the Kentucky State Police speak on the same topic at one of the association's annual meetings. Last year, 10 labs were found in Kentucky hotel or motel room, according to the state police. One concern for hotel owners is how to clean a room where there was a meth lab, said Ray Gillespie, executive director of the association. Sometimes, curtains and carpet have to be stripped and the room gutted. "Apparently, normal household cleaning methods won't work," Gillespie said. Meyers, of the Ambest Plaza motel near Dale, said meth is a problem for hotel owners and the public alike. "We're all in this together," he said. "If everyone takes steps and encourages their staff to know what to look for, they won't have these kinds of problems because they'll be able to report them immediately." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin