Pubdate: Mon, 22 Aug 2005 Source: Log Cabin Democrat (AR) Copyright: 2005 The Log Cabin Democrat Contact: http://thecabin.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/548 Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ARK. SHERIFF EXPLORES LINK BETWEEN METH AND ARROWHEADS SEARCY, Ark. - The time consuming and methodical motion of searching for arrowheads on farmland and in river beds seems to appeal to methamphetamine addicts, a sheriff says. White County Sheriff Pat Garrett says after more than 100 search warrants, he has come to expect arrowheads, many thousands of years old, when he storms the home of suspected meth makers. "I noticed it when I first started. It just seemed there were always Indian arrowheads and I couldn't figure it out," Garrett said. Tony Young of Velvet Ridge says the sheriff is on to something. "You get kind of wired on that stuff and you need to have something to do," said Young, who is in the White County jail awaiting trial on methamphetamine charges. Young, 36, sold his arrowhead collection to a local dealer for $1,250 - enough to pay for a defense attorney. He said "head hunting" filled his need for activity when he was on meth. "You just get to walking and looking at the ground," Young said. "You get to looking and an arrowhead catches your eye." Many nights Young found himself in fields full of fellow arrowhead hunters. Now Young is in jail, surrounded by fellow inmates who say they also searched for arrowheads before they were incarcerated. "The strangest things you find out there is other dopeheads," said Young, who added that drug dealers and users often trade the arrowheads among themselves. But local farmers find the groups of drugged arrowhead searchers an annoyance. "To me arrowhead hunting is the same as me going to a stranger's garden and picking his tomatoes," said Jerry Smith, who farms in nearby Bradford. "That land and what's on it belongs to me." The searchers also may be threatening the integrity of archeological sites, said Arkansas State archeologist Ann Early. "It is very troubling for a variety of reasons that the culture of meth use has embraced the idea of collecting relics," Early said. "I know that people using methamphetamine are out collecting at sites. Some have been digging at rock shelters in the Ozarks." While surface hunting for arrowheads is legal, trespassing and digging through archeological sites is illegal, Early said. In April 1998, two Bentonville men were charged and later convicted of murder for leaving two young children in a hot unventilated car for about eight hours while they hunted for arrowheads. The men were under the influence of drugs at the time, police said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth