Pubdate: Tue, 04 May 2004
Source: State, The (SC)
Copyright: 2004 The State
Contact:  http://www.thestate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426
Author: JENNY BURNS, The Associated Press

OFFICERS, RETAILERS MEET AT SUMMIT TO DISCUSS WAYS TO COMBAT ABUSE

Law enforcement officers told South Carolina's attorney general at a summit 
Monday that the state has a long way to go to combat methamphetamine use.

"It's not as bad as it is in other states, but we need to get ready to 
defeat this," Attorney General Henry McMaster said.

McMaster called more than 200 law enforcement officers and retailers 
together for the first ever statewide meth summit after hearing from 
officers that meth use is becoming a growing problem in the state.

Steve Surratt, a specialist with the National Drug Intelligence Center, 
said the state should keep statewide statistics on meth cases.

"In order to address the problem, you must have numbers on the problem," 
Surratt said. He pointed to North Carolina's State Bureau of Investigation, 
which keeps statewide meth lab totals.

South Carolina tracks some cases but does not keep count of meth labs 
cleaned up or unreported by county authorities, said Scott Bailey, special 
agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration.

DEA statistics show there were fewer than 10 meth labs in 2001, about 100 
labs in 2002 and 130 labs in 2003. The data show 100 already this year.

The problem in South Carolina is that no central agency has all the 
certified personnel needed for a meth bust, said Brian Cooley, an 
investigator with the Greenville County Sheriff's Office.

Cooley said one phone call in North Carolina to SBI brings everyone needed 
to do the job.

"The hardest part is not having the support at the state level," Cooley said.

North Carolina has been working on its meth problem since 1988, while 
McMaster said this is South Carolina's first statewide look at the problem.

Summit members were in support of a meth watch program similar to one 
started in Kansas, where retailers post "Meth Watch" signs on their store 
windows and near over-the-counter cold and allergy medicines, which often 
contain the primary ingredients needed to produce methamphetamine.

Retailers, from Wal-Mart to small businesses, have joined the program on a 
voluntary basis in Kansas and are trained to report unusual activity.

Assistant Attorney General Robert Hood said something similar already is 
happening in small S.C. towns, where retailers sometimes call local 
narcotics agents to report large purchases of cold medicine.

McMaster said he wants to approach retailers about the problem. He also 
wants to develop protocol for doctors who might come across a meth burn.

One audience member worried that residue left behind after a meth lab 
cleanup could make the area unsafe.

Department of Heath and Environmental Control spokesman Thom Berry said the 
responsibility to pay for the complete cleanup after the initial meth lab 
cleanup falls on the property owner, who often is in jail.

"The Legislature needs to take a long, hard look at everything (involved 
with meth)," DEA agent Bailey said.

A bill now in the Senate would make it illegal to have the products used to 
make meth with the intent of cooking it.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart