Pubdate: Thu, 03 Nov 2005
Source: Phoenix New Times (AZ)
Copyright: 2005 New Times, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/640
Author: Paul Rubin
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

Series: The Perfect Drug

METH FATALITIES

Methamphetamine is number-one with a bullet when it comes to violent 
death in Phoenix

The six members of the Phoenix Police Department's C-32 homicide 
squad, plus their sergeant, gather at a midtown diner for their usual 
early lunch.

It's 11 a.m. on May 6, a mild day for Phoenix when the temperature 
will only reach 81 degrees.

Three of the detectives are on call until the following dawn, which 
means that any murder within the city's limits between now and then 
will be theirs to try to solve.

One of the cops, 27-year veteran Alex Femenia, will be the detective 
assigned to head the case if someone dies violently, which he is 
certain will occur.

"It's a Friday in May in Phoenix," says the detective, who looks and 
sounds much like Dennis Farina of Law & Order fame. "The beer will be 
cold and the meth will be flowing. Somebody's bound to get whacked. 
I'd bet on it."

Sure enough, about 5:20 p.m., a pizza deliveryman dials 911 with an 
emergency: A heavyset Latino is unconscious and bleeding profusely in 
the middle of North 87th Street, a residential neighborhood in west Phoenix.

The neighborhood's Block Watch coordinator, Fay Russell, runs out of 
her nearby home to assist the injured man. She instantly recognizes 
the victim as someone she'd just seen in the front yard of a 
neighbor's home, horsing around with a boy who lives there.

Russell feels for the man's pulse, which is weak.

"Can you hear me? Can you hear me?" she asks him.

He tries to speak, but it comes out garbled.

Then, according to her account, he takes his last breath and dies.

Joey Borunda, age 34, of Tolleson, is later officially pronounced 
dead at a hospital.

An autopsy will confirm that Borunda has died of blunt-force trauma 
to his face after someone took an object -- possibly a lead pipe -- 
and smashed it into his face.

"This one has meth written all over it," Femenia pronounces, as he 
and two other detectives scan the crime scene, just north of Thomas 
Road. "Meth for sure, maybe some Bud Light, and definitely a lot of rage."

The cops identify two suspects before Borunda's substantial pool of 
blood has even dried.

Their names are Mario and Michael Ortega, two brothers in their early 
30s whose mother owns the house where Joey Borunda and 9-year-old 
Mario Ortega Jr. were fooling around just before Borunda got whacked.

The brothers have well-documented, violent criminal histories, and 
records indicate they are chronic abusers of methamphetamine and 
other illegal drugs.

Mario Sr., the elder of the two, is known as "Bear," while his 
brother answers to the nickname "Psycho."

"The brothers have been a pain in everyone's butt for years," Block 
Watch leader Russell tells Detective Femenia. "They've always dealt 
drugs out of their house, and there's violence there all the time. 
The police have been out here many, many times. They're a blight on 
our neighborhood."

Bear's girlfriend Cynthia Tovar lives at the 87th Street home with 
her four children by him, but she later swears to Femenia that she 
hasn't seen either brother for weeks.

The leads in the murder case, while tantalizing, aren't enough for 
police to make any arrests. Bear and Psycho, however, are jailed on 
other charges, including possession of meth.

Femenia gets a crack at the pair after their arrests. In separate 
interviews, both swear they don't know who killed their longtime pal.

Borunda's family and friends mourn his loss. They say he was a decent 
man who loved his six children, despite longstanding issues with meth abuse.

But he'd been in trouble with the law for years. In 2002, one of his 
sisters asked a county judge for leniency after Borunda's felony 
conviction in a case involving meth and guns.

"I understand my brother is not the angel or possibly the ideal 
citizen," she wrote. "However, he isn't the hardcore criminal [that] 
appears on his record. He has been a victim of situations and doesn't 
know when to step back or say no. . . . He needs to start a new life 
away from his old friends and environment."

The judge sentenced Joey Borunda to 18 months in prison for 
misconduct involving weapons. And Borunda never did find that new 
life after his release.

It comes as no surprise to Alex Femenia that toxicological testing by 
the county Medical Examiner's Office reveals the presence of a large 
amount of meth in Borunda's body.

"Seems like every victim we're seeing these days has that crap in 
them," the detective says when he gets the postmortem report.

Not every victim died with methamphetamine in him or her, according 
to a New Times computer-assisted analysis of every autopsy performed 
in Maricopa County since January 2004.

But the statistics confirm what Femenia and his colleagues on the 
city's down-and-dirty murder beat increasingly have been seeing: The 
incidence of meth-related deaths in Maricopa County, homicide and 
otherwise, is on a precipitous rise, with no end in sight.

That said, it's impossible to know exactly how many people have been 
committing murder while under the influence of meth. For one thing, 
most homicides in the city of Phoenix remain unsolved, and even those 
cases that are cracked often don't immediately result in arrests.

That means authorities aren't able to test a suspect's blood for meth 
or any other substance in a timely manner, if at all. But in many 
cases, such as in the May 10 execution of Phoenix police officer 
David Uribe, detectives become aware that methamphetamine is a big 
piece of the investigative puzzle.

The evidence is overwhelming that the accused cop killers were meth 
freaks for whom the drug long had been a way of life.

The fact that Maricopa County's murder rate continues to be one of 
the nation's highest isn't exclusively because of the onslaught of 
meth use. Alcohol, crack cocaine and other variables also have caused 
citizens to become instruments of violence. But the impact of 
methamphetamine in the stark world of homicide cannot be denied.

"It's all about meth," Detective Femenia says. "Yeah, there's alcohol 
mixed in, and crack cocaine still pops up here and there. And 
sometimes, someone just gets pissed off at someone else and kills 
them. But we know what we're seeing in terms of an increase in 
murders where meth is involved, and it ain't pretty."

One of many cases in which meth allegedly provided the actual motive 
for murder happened in September 2004, when three young Phoenix 
residents were shot to death in their condo near Seventh Street and 
Bethany Home Road.

A year later, last September 13, police arrested 22-year-old Michael 
Craig Walton on first-degree homicide charges. Prosecutors have 
alleged that Walton murdered the trio after smoking meth with them, 
then stole the remaining stash and some money. (The murderer also 
shot a pit bull in the head, but the dog survived.)

Toxicological testing by the medical examiner confirms that the 
victims -- two men and a woman -- had used meth shortly before they 
were murdered.

"This is a perfect example of the violence that goes hand-in-hand 
with that kind of drug," Phoenix police Detective Tony Morales said 
shortly after the murders.

New Times' research on death by meth shows that far more murder 
victims have been dying with methamphetamine in their blood this year 
than last year. This year's victims have had meth in them more than 
any other substance, including the traditional standbys alcohol and cocaine.

For example, last May -- the month that Joey Borunda died -- eight of 
21 murder victims in Phoenix had meth in them when they died, or 
almost four in 10 victims. By comparison, only two of Phoenix's 13 
murder victims died after ingesting meth in May 2004.

The New Times research suggests that the May 2005 statistics are no aberration.

Of the 115 murders in Phoenix in the first six months of this year, 
38 people -- at least one in three victims -- had methamphetamine in them.

That was a distinct increase over the approximately one in four of 
the murder victims during the first six months of 2004 that had 
ingested meth, or 26 of 110.

During the first half of this year, 22 of the 115 murder victims died 
after using cocaine, 26 had been drinking alcohol and 32 had nothing 
in their systems. (Toxicological tests on 11 of the 115 victims 
remain unavailable, so overall numbers aren't precise. In some 
instances, victims had more than one substance in their bodies when they died.)

In other words, methamphetamine is number-one with a bullet when it 
comes to murder in Phoenix.

And consider this stunning fact:

All but three of the 22 people shot by Phoenix police in 2004 (14 of 
whom died) had meth in them at the time.

And every one of the eight people shot by the Phoenix cops in the 
first six months this year (six of whom died) had consumed meth 
shortly before they were shot.

Those few who engaged in violent clashes with city police and didn't 
have meth and/or alcohol in their systems had long histories of 
serious mental illness.

That list includes Douglas Tatar, who murdered police officers Jason 
Wolfe and Eric White in August 2004 at the Northern Point Apartments 
in north Phoenix. The 29-year-old Tatar committed suicide at the scene.

The New Times research also shows that people dying of meth-related 
reasons who haven't been murdered has been rising at a faster pace.

Forty-nine people in Maricopa County died in the first six months of 
this year of methamphetamine overdoses, meth-related heart attacks 
and hemorrhages.

That was almost double the number of similar deaths for the same 
reasons from January through June 2004. It's been a dramatic upswing, 
even when accounting for Phoenix's 3 percent increase in population 
from 2004 to 2005.

"Deaths from methamphetamine use have been on a very steady rise for 
about five years or so," says Norm Wade, Maricopa County's chief 
toxicologist. "But what's really troubling is, we've been seeing a 
much higher incidence in the last year or so. I'm not just talking 
about homicides. A rule of thumb is, if you want to survive for a 
while and you have any kind of medical condition at all, don't do meth."

Dr. Frank LoVecchio says 95 percent of the people checking into 
Banner Good Samaritan Regional Hospital's emergency room complaining 
of shortness of breath and showing signs of agitation and excited 
speech are on meth.

"It's almost all methamphetamine right now, far more than crack or 
anything else," says LoVecchio, the medical director of Good Sam's 
Poison Control Center and an emergency-room doctor at the hospital. 
"We see meth overdoses on a regular basis, and in all ages and ethnic 
groups. People will come in denying at first that they've ingested 
anything, before they may finally own up to it."

Norm Wade also points out that "the coming-down phase," when meth 
users must endure the crash of crashes, sometimes has proved too much to bear.

"Sometimes suicide apparently seems like the best option to these 
folks," he says.

Nineteen people in Maricopa County committed suicide under the 
influence of meth in the first six months of 2005, compared with 13 
during the same time period in 2004.

Another 27 people under the influence of meth died in accidents of 
one sort or another from January through June of this year, an 
increase of seven over 2004. Those accidents included car and 
motorcycle wrecks (most of them single-vehicle), bicyclists and 
pedestrians hit by cars, and drownings.

People on methamphetamine this year have died in hot tubs, in their 
backyards, in motel rooms, in ditches, and on the toilet.

The oldest person with meth discovered postmortem in his system was a 
66-year-old Phoenix man who succumbed in his backyard.

The youngest was a 14-year-old Phoenix boy who also died at his home.

Other recent typical examples of death by meth:

A 15-year-old Mesa girl under methamphetamine intoxication after 
attending a party.

A 54-year-old Tolleson farm worker who suffered a cerebral hemorrhage 
with a load of meth in him.

A 35-year-old man under the influence of meth who leaned against a 
metal storage shed electrified by a live wire.

A 17-year-old Tempe boy who hanged himself in his bathroom while 
coming down from a dose of meth.

A 34-year-old woman awaiting a liver transplant who smoked too much 
meth and suffered a fatal brain aneurysm.

Transients have died of methamphetamine abuse, as have middle-class 
citizens with decent jobs. Even the occasional person of means has 
fallen victim to the drug.

Also, if the incidence of meth-related deaths in the first half of 
2005 is a fair indicator, Valley Latinos are embracing the drug in 
numbers not seen before.

Thirty-four of the 38 Phoenix murder victims who died with 
methamphetamine in their systems through this June were of Latino 
descent. That's almost nine of every 10 cases.

Beyond ethnic origin, the number of people over the age of 30 dying 
of meth-related causes has grown.

"I recently signed off on a 63-year-old woman with a heart condition 
who died with a great deal of methamphetamine in her," county 
toxicologist Wade says. "And this isn't nearly as uncommon as most 
people might think."

Wade says he and his peers have identified an increasing number of 
older people whose bodies haven't been able to withstand the 
onslaught of a methamphetamine high -- and low.

Probably most disturbing of the deaths by meth have been the five 
babies that were stillborn or died moments after their births in the 
first half of 2005. All turned out to have methamphetamine in their 
tiny bodies.

The Phoenix mother of Caleb Davis "had a history of drug use and no 
prenatal care when she reportedly described having cramps at a 
friend's house and delivered the child stillborn" last March, a 
medical examiner's report says. Caleb also had an adult-size dose of 
methamphetamine in his system, which pathologists blamed in part for his death.

A Mesa baby named Joseph Reising lived for just 15 minutes last April 
after he was born more than three months prematurely. Joseph also had 
meth in him. Official cause of death: "Complications due to maternal 
[methamphetamine] use."

And in May, Baby Girl Atkinson was delivered stillborn at a Phoenix 
hospital after her mother said she hadn't felt the fetus move for 
more than a day. The official cause of death was "placental 
abruption," the early separation of a normal placenta from the wall 
of the uterus. The mother later tested positive for methamphetamine, 
as did Baby Girl Atkinson.

Two other babies with meth in their bodies, Teresa Aguilar and Baby 
Nissen, died in Maricopa County during the first six months of this year.

None of the five mothers has yet to be arrested for their roles in 
their babies' deaths.

It's long past time to toss out the stereotype of the typical 
methamphetamine user.

You know, the young pimply faced white loser dude who spends his days 
bouncing off the walls of his single-wide in Apache Junction.

These days, it's clear that all manner of people are indulging in the drug.

Obviously not everyone who gets high on meth turns violent. But 
Phoenix psychiatrist Jack Potts, who has interviewed hundreds of 
tweakers incarcerated on criminal charges in the past decade, 
testified earlier this year that meth "contributes to and causes 
aggression. It causes an increase in violence in users."

Potts' observations are supported by recent studies, including one at 
the East Bay Community Recovery Project in Oakland, California.

"[Meth-abusing] participants reported high levels of psychiatric 
symptoms, particularly depression and attempted suicide," that study 
concluded, "but also of anxiety and psychotic symptoms. [In addition, 
participants] also reported high levels of problems controlling anger 
and violent behavior, with a correspondingly high frequency of 
assault and weapons charges."

The studies confirm what police in Phoenix and elsewhere have been 
seeing since meth took over a few years ago as the hard-core drug of 
choice: People on the drug tend to get violent and fatally stupid 
when confronted by the cops.

Some clashes between the police and their meth-infused suspects since 
the start of 2004 have been classic suicide-by-cop scenarios -- where 
the suspect points a weapon at an officer as if to expedite his own demise.

Yet other clashes have happened by chance, as in March 2004, when 
convicted felon Marty Baker tried to take a Phoenix cop's gun from 
him during a routine stop. The cop shot him to death. Afterward, 
authorities learned that Baker was on meth at the time.

The following month, Phoenix residents Adam Feenaughty and Rejane 
Burgoyne stepped into a stolen car at a motel off Interstate 17. It 
so happened that members of a Phoenix police auto-theft task force 
were watching, and approached the pair.

The driver, Burgoyne, allegedly tried to run down the cops, who fired 
and killed both men.

Both dead men had meth in them.

Just three days later, Phoenix police responded to a call about a guy 
inside a home on North 40th Place who was acting crazy. The cops 
found Daniel Lepker, who threatened them with knives and an ax.

An officer used a Taser on Lepker, to no avail. The suspect then 
jumped through a neighbor's window wielding the ax. He pointed what 
two cops later said they'd believed was a semi-automatic pistol at them.

They fired at Lepker, killing him instantly. The suspect's "pistol" 
later turned out to be a pellet gun. His postmortem turned up a 
mammoth amount of methamphetamine in his body.

Before the week of April 24, 2004, ended, Phoenix police had killed 
two more men, Frank Romero and Rudy Chavarria, in separate incidents. 
They had large amounts of meth in them.

By the end of 2004, two more men lost their lives after consuming 
methamphetamine and getting into fatal run-ins with cops.

Though the number of Phoenix police-involved shootings has been down 
this year (thanks in part to the successful deployment of 
controversial Taser shocks), every such clash through June had been 
with a suspect on meth.

In early January, meth user Edward Laborin committed suicide on North 
59th Drive after he pointed a handgun at police. An officer shot 
Laborin in the buttocks just before the 24-year-old killed himself.

The most controversial of this year's police shootings of suspects -- 
the May 3 death of another 24-year-old, Keith Graff, at a north 
Phoenix complex -- had an almost-certain meth angle.

Graff died of cardiac arrest after police shocked him with Taser guns 
for a deadly 84 seconds, far longer than the norm. Though 
toxicological results of Graff's blood, urine and bile samples 
haven't been released, court records show he'd long been a 
methamphetamine abuser.

In July 2002, the former U.S. Army soldier admitted to Phoenix police 
after getting stopped in a stolen truck that he'd just smoked meth. 
That led to a nine-month jail term for car theft. And in June 2004, 
police found meth in Graff's possession, and he was facing a prison 
sentence at the time of his death.

Graff's survivors have filed a wrongful-death civil lawsuit against 
the Phoenix Police Department in connection with the clash.

Just one week after Graff's death, Phoenix Officer Uribe died after 
he was shot from close range during a routine stop of a late-model 
Monte Carlo near the intersection of 35th Avenue and West Cactus Road.

Donnie Delahanty, now facing the death penalty in the murder with 
co-defendant Chris Wilson, allegedly told several friends in the days 
preceding the killing that he'd shoot any cop who stopped him in his car.

Delahanty and Wilson weren't arrested for a few days after the 
senseless slaying, which cast a pall over the community. The pair 
weren't tested for drugs after their arrests, and any methamphetamine 
in their systems at the time of the murder would have dissipated by then.

The motive for murder remains a mystery, as the men hadn't done 
anything overtly wrong that day other than driving with stolen 
license plates. But they also were admitted tweakers who had been 
running meth back and forth from Phoenix to Tucson at the time of the shooting.

Delahanty had the following exchange with Detective Jack Ballentine 
shortly after his arrest:

"You know what you been livin' in, bud?" Ballentine asked the 
19-year-old Phoenix man during an intense interview at the downtown 
police station.

Delahanty shook his head in the negative.

"You been livin' in a tweaker's world. And what's the main thing that 
happens in that world? What's it called? [How] does everybody get 
when they're tweaking?"

Delahanty continued to stare blankly at the detective as his mind 
stretched for the right answer.

Finally, he said, "Have to go to jail?"

"No, not that," Ballentine replied. "It's paranoid. Right?"

"Yeah!"

"Paranoia runs [you] crazy," the detective continued.

"Yup!" the accused cop killer agreed.

Delahanty and Wilson have pleaded not guilty.

A well-publicized shootout at Sky Harbor International Airport last 
July 8 also had strong overtones of methamphetamine abuse.

Three Phoenix officers were wounded by gunfire during an extended car 
chase with 35-year-old Jason Eugene Lee, who was driving a stolen 
2004 Ford Mustang. The chase ended after Lee's car tires blew out 
when he drove over concrete curbs at the airport.

Lee then shot himself to death. He was armed with a .12-gauge shotgun 
and a .45-caliber handgun.

Toxicological tests revealed that he'd ingested a huge amount of meth 
(more than any other individual in the New Times mortality database) 
shortly before the shootout.

Another high-profile case with methamphetamine written all over it 
was the shooting last August 3 of two law enforcement officers about 
to take Joseph Spano into custody at a west Phoenix probation office.

Spano shot and seriously wounded a county probation officer and a 
deputy U.S. marshal during the clash. The 25-year-old later killed 
himself with his weapon as Phoenix police closed in on him near downtown.

At the time, Spano was on probation after serving more than seven 
years for armed robbery, and was about to be re-arrested after 
testing positive for methamphetamine.

Detective Femenia still hasn't gotten the break he needs to arrest 
anyone in last May's head-bashing murder of Joey Borunda. But he's 
not done trying.

The detective remains convinced that one or both Ortega brothers, 
Bear or Psycho, is good for the killing. Femenia quips that the 
brothers are the deans of the "Ortega Crime Academy," also known as 
the "Ortega Institute of Meth-Related Criminal Acts."

The detective spoke in August to a few dozen of the Ortegas' worried 
neighbors at a Block Watch meeting.

"My goal today is to stir things up here," he told the gathering at 
the nearby Our Lady of Guadalupe monastery. "I know that our victim 
in this crime isn't a saint. But our philosophy is that every victim 
deserves our best effort, and that's why I'm here. This was a 
senseless killing. Someone went into a sudden rage. Meth was involved 
in this killing."

A woman asked if methamphetamine is worse than the other illegal 
drugs out there.

"It's worse than anything we've seen," Femenia immediately replied. 
"Some years ago, it was PCP, Sherm, crack cocaine. Let me tell you, 
people on meth act extremely unpredictably. It's just as if they're 
possessed. I mean it -- possessed."

The detective turned to the nun hosting the event, and said somewhat 
sheepishly, "Excuse me, Sister."

She smiled and told him it was okay.

"I believe in evil," he continued. "I believe that evil exists. And I 
think that meth can inject a big surge of evil in certain people."

After Femenia concluded, a woman warned him that "the Ortegas have a 
pretty rough reputation around here with the meth and everything. You 
have your work cut out for you."

"I know," the detective said.

Baylee Powell contributed to this report.