Pubdate: Tue, 30 Aug 2005 Source: News Tribune, The (Tacoma, WA) Copyright: 2005 Tacoma News Inc. Contact: http://www.tribnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/442 Author: Adam Lynn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) I-5 YIELDS OUT-OF-STATE METH Drug Bust Uncovers Manufacturing Network Connected By Interstate Undercover detectives busted a sophisticated methamphetamine trafficking operation in South Tacoma last week in what authorities said Monday is a disturbing new trend. Supplying meth to Pierce County users no longer is the sole purview of local "cookers" who whip up small batches of the highly addictive drug in storage sheds or kitchens in the South Sound area, said law enforcement officials. More and more, meth is coming into the South Sound via Interstate 5, which connects local dealers with a vast manufacturing network in California and Mexico, they said. Capt. Mark Couey of the Washington State Patrol said up to 75 percent of the meth currently being consumed in Washington is coming from outside the state. The number of meth labs reported in Washington is down nearly 70 percent since 2001, Couey said, yet meth-related deaths and traffic accidents continue to rise. More than half of the drug cases forwarded to the Washington State Patrol's crime laboratory involve meth, he said. James Boyle, deputy director of Pierce County Alliance, a local drug-treatment provider, said his programs are crammed, and that he's seeing more people, especially women, from all walks of life addicted to the drug. "There are still a huge number of referrals," he said. The reason, authorities said, is out-of-state meth. "What we're seeing is more and more foreign-based traffickers," Couey said. "They're 'muling' their product up I-5. It's a disturbing trend." That is forcing local law enforcement agencies to change tactics in their battle against meth, which spawns other crimes, such as identity theft and burglary, said Pierce County Sheriff Paul Pastor. The focus on eradicating and cleaning up small cooking operations in Pierce County -- which has met with some success -- is shifting to "more complicated investigations" targeting the "violent entrepreneurs" who bring meth into the county from other states and countries, Pastor said. The new law enforcement effort will have to include more partnerships among local, state and federal agencies to identify traffickers and create plans to stop them, the sheriff said. Friday's bust in South Tacoma is a good example of what local law enforcement is up against, Pastor said. A months-long investigation culminated with the arrest of four people and the seizure of 6.5 pounds of meth, 6.8 pounds of cocaine, four cars, $13,000 in cash and one pistol, Couey said. Authorities displayed the seized drugs, cash and gun at a news conference Monday for reporters to see and photograph. It was not a record bust but big enough to let authorities know that traffickers see Washington as a lucrative market, Couey said. "This won't be the last," he said. To combat it, authorities need the help of treatment providers and the public, Pastor said. Treatment providers must work to help people addicted to meth break the cycle of addiction, while the public must let users and pushers know meth is not welcome in Pierce County, the sheriff said. "It affects all of us. It plagues all of us," Pastor said. "We have to work on supply. We have to work on demand." - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman