Pubdate: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 Source: Press, The (OH) Copyright: 2005 The Press, Metro Press Contact: http://www.presspublications.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2511 Author: Pamela Case METH USE: SPECIFICS CHURN THE STOMACH Occasionally some things stick in my craw, and it is hard to feel much sympathy for certain accused defendants, even when they are legally exonerated. A couple of cases, one from the California Supreme Court and one resurrected by a federal court last month, reminded me of my craw obstruction. Gerardo Perez was arrested down in the Southland while carrying a shopping bag of red phosphorous and another of powdered iodine. Now, those are not exactly items you can pick off the supermarket shelf. In fact, though the chemicals have a devout following of users, they are heavily controlled, the main reason being that they are ingredients - or what are called precursor chemicals - used in the manufacture of methamphetamine. Perez argued in his appeal that he was just planning to sell the chemicals to someone else and that merely having the chemicals wasn't a crime, even though he knew they would be used to manufacture meth. The California Supreme Court agreed and reversed his conviction. The federal case involved a couple who shuttled between California and Hawaii. Rick and Brenda Vo tried to mail a package from Hawaii to California. When the shipping company opened the box to check for aerosol cans, it found a bag of white powder, later determined to be 15 pounds of methamphetamine. Testimony during the trial indicated that packages had gone both directions across the Pacific and that the Vos were serious players in the drug trade. The Vos were convicted - Brenda of conspiring to distribute the drug and her husband of aiding and abetting distribution. Rick Vo appealed, arguing that his conviction should be overturned because of technicalities in the trial. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed and upheld the conviction. What initially caused my heartburn was a case I read several months ago involving a California methamphetamine-addicted couple with a baby boy nicknamed Joey. See if this quote from the case of People v. Culuko doesn't stick in your craw also: "Somebody killed 7-month-old Joey Galindo Jr. by hitting him in the stomach. The blow was so hard that it ruptured an artery at the back of his abdomen, and he died of internal bleeding. At various earlier times, somebody had broken his leg and four of his ribs, smashed him in the face, and shaken his head so violently that the resulting bleeding in his brain might have killed him if the bleeding from the ruptured artery had not killed him first." We have all heard of the scourge of meth. Abstracts are easy. Specifics churn the stomach. When I checked the legal database for just California and the 9th Circuit, I came up with nearly 1,400 decisions involving meth users. Even a cursory search of the facts brings heartbreaking stories of high-speed car crashes, spousal and child abuse, violent crimes to support the habit, senseless murders induced by drug psychosis, premature births and drug-addicted babies. Several of the appeals in that database involve parents who lost rights to raise their children because meth was ultimately stronger than love. Experts now believe that 80 percent to 90 percent of the 20,000 San Joaquin Valley children in foster care today are there because of methamphetamine. If you do a little research on meth, you'll see how insidious the drug is to society. It was created in Japan in 1919 but was little used until World War II, when both Axis and Allied troops used doses to maintain their stamina in battle. Adolf Hitler was apparently a very heavy user, as was the Nazi SS, renowned for its vicious cruelty. After the war, the long-term effects of meth became clear and governments began to crack down, but by then the manufacturing process was public knowledge and those who wanted to find it, could. When the original ingredients became hard to get, chemists developed alternate recipes that made meth even stronger. The drug is highly addictive. It initially makes the user feel happy, energetic, strong and smarter than most everyone else. Ultimately it leads to heart and brain damage, psychosis, hallucinations, paranoia, anxiety, suicide, out-of-control rages and malnutrition. The meth rush literally burns out the body and mind like a Fourth of July sparkler. This is why these cases stick in my craw. When Perez and the Vos are obviously involved in the meth trade, we still have to put up with arguments about technicalities and completed-crime-versus-intended-crime arguments. Perez knew he was a middleman for making meth. The Vos' 15 pounds of meth equal about 7,000 street doses. I understand the legal arguments, but seeing the damage caused by meth to little Joey and other innocents, I have a hard time swallowing. Pamela Case, a local freelance paralegal, is among a select group of local residents rotating their columns in Saturday's Tracy Press. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh