Pubdate: Thu, 21 Jul 2005 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2005 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Amneris Solano METH LABS MAY SIGNAL EPIDEMIC CLINTON - The evidence pointed to a rolling methamphetamine lab in May when a man crashed his SUV into a Clinton gas station. What police uncovered were the remnants of a lab. They found a bag of meth, two propane tanks and gloves inside the SUV. The incident marked one of the first times a meth lab or a portion of a lab had been found within the Clinton city limits. Others have been found in rural areas of Sampson County. More crystal meth labs have been found in Sampson than in any other county east of Interstate 95 so far this year. The labs were initially more predominant in the western part of the state but have become more common in the east. "It's getting to be a big problem around here," said Clinton police Detective Chris Cantrell. "We haven't seen the full blown evidence of it yet." Lawmen, legislators and social workers say they have united to fight the trend. Authorities say their efforts have led to the discovery of nine methamphetamine labs in Sampson County since January. Lawmen suspect there are more and that Sampson is not alone. "It's everywhere," said Sheriff Jimmy Thornton. "They are not all concentrated in one little spot." Typically, meth labs flourish in rural areas where the chemical smell generated during production and the traffic of drug dealers and buyers are harder to detect, said Van Shaw, a special agent with the State Bureau of Investigation who handles clandestine lab busts. Eventually, the more experienced cooks learn ways to mask the odor and begin to move their operations into cities. Police believe the man who crashed into the Clinton gas station had been running a meth lab, but they couldn't charge him with making meth because all the ingredients were gone. He was charged with other offenses. At the time, the man was high on the drug and had two propane tanks floating in icy water in the back of his SUV. Meth cooks store one of their ingredients, anhydrous ammonia, in propane tanks and pack the tanks in ice to prevent the vapor pressure from building and the tank from rupturing. Police said the man had gone to the station to steal brake fluid for the SUV. Meth labs pose health and environmental risks, authorities said. People should be aware of the dangers and report any suspicions to police, said Cumberland County Sheriff Moose Butler. Over the past several years, lawmen in Cumberland County have discovered at least four meth labs, Butler said. The most recent was found in a trailer off I-95 about a year and a half ago, Butler said. While drug agents have not had any reports of meth labs in the county this year, he said, they suspect that some could be out there. His deputies are instructed to look for signs of meth labs when they conduct other investigations, Butler said. Knowing what to look for is crucial to uncovering the labs. Cheap materials Part of meth's appeal, authorities say, is that it is cheap to make and the materials can be bought at a drug store. Instructions to make meth can be found on the Internet. "You can do it in a bucket so it's not like it takes an elaborate system to produce it," said Thornton, the Sampson County sheriff. Meth usually comes as a white powder and can be snorted or smoked. The drug affects the nervous system and causes sleeplessness and loss of appetite. The cost of the drug varies but it usually sells for $100 per gram. The drug can spread fast, Shaw said, because meth cooks teach others how to make it. The concept seems odd to some people, Shaw said, because they perceive it as teaching the competition. But most people who make meth use it. "You may be out or missing a chemical," he said, "and now you have friends to go to. It's not a comparative thing because the market isn't there." The only other lab discovered in the Cape Fear region this year was in Harnett County. Statewide, more than 200 meth labs have been uncovered since January. Most of the labs were found in the western part of the state. Five years ago, lawmen predicted that methamphetamine traffic in North Carolina would grow. The SBI raided nine meth labs in 1999 and 322 in 2004. Attorney General Roy Cooper estimates that nearly 500 labs will be discovered in the state this year. He said the state is doing what it can to stop the trend. State lawmakers have toughened penalties for people who produce meth, who make it in front of children or who are caught with ingredients to make the drug. They want to limit access to cold medicines that contain pseudoephedrine - a key ingredient in meth. State lawmakers are considering a bill that would require cold and allergy medicines that contain pseudoephedrine to be pulled from store shelves and put behind the pharmacy counter. Stores that do not have pharmacies would have to move the medicines to a customer service counter. "You have to take steps to prevent the criminals from getting the ingredients," Cooper said. States such as Oklahoma that have stopped carrying pseudoephedrine tablets on store shelves have reduced the number of meth labs by 80 percent, he said. Meth task force In 2004, Sampson County created a meth task force composed of about 20 county and school officials, lawmen, social workers and public health and mental health workers. The task force developed a plan that identified four goals: early intervention, raising public awareness, writing a response plan and training. Since it was formed in November, the group has developed a protocol for caring for children who are found inside meth homes, started a Web site and distributed fliers to schools, churches and civic groups explaining the dangers of meth. And as the county jail fills with meth users, the task force is searching for ways to get people help before they are arrested. "Mom and pop" meth labs account for about 15 percent of the state's meth use, said J.W. Simmons, chairman of the Sampson County task force. The drug continues to be imported from Mexico and from large labs on the West Coast. That's why the task force is finding ways to help the drug-addicted while fighting the spread of the meth labs. "The more people we put in the jail," Simmons said, "the more burden we have not only on the families but on society." While drug users are committing crimes, he said, jail may not be the best place because they are not getting the help they need. Simmons, a certified law enforcement officer, is the director of lifelong learning at Sampson Community College. Getting help The task force plans to establish avenues for drug users to get them help through counseling. Addiction is a disease, Simmons said, and should be treated as such. Jack St. Clair, the director for Eastpointe Area Mental Health which serves Sampson County, said it usually takes six months to a year for someone to go through a drug abuse program, but the state lacks resources for people who need long-term care. St. Clair, a member of the Sampson County Meth Task Force, said the group is searching for money to establish programs that provide intervention and prevention. While the majority of drug users who seek help at Eastpointe are not addicted to meth, St. Clair said, it is only a matter of time before they start treating more meth addicts. "We know it's here," he said. "We know it's an epidemic that's just at the back door." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)