Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jan 2005 Source: Paris News (TX) Copyright: 2005 Paris News Contact: http://www.theparisnews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/997 Author: Mary Madewell, The Paris News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) RED RIVER VALLEY PLAGUED BY METH An epidemic is spreading through the Red River Valley, threatening even the lives of those engaged in the fight to rid this medical menace from the streets. No pill offers a cure. In fact, over-the counter medicines have contributed to the spread of the epidemic as they are used to manufacture methamphetamine. The problem is severe and dangerous for both users and law enforcement officers engaged in the fight to curb the manufacture, sale and use of the street drug that grows in popularity. Sometime manufactured in a motel room or city residence, meth as it is commonly known is more often "cooked' in remote rural locations using readily obtainable materials. Once the addictive drug used by Adolf Hitler's Germany to keep Nazi soldiers alert, meth has become a street drug of choice in the United States. Despite the combined efforts of city, county, regional and state law enforcement agencies and officers, the Red River Valley has become a major meth lab locale. The street drug is being produced on both sides of the river despite efforts to stop its proliferation. "Meth labs have been steadily on the uprise for at least the last eight years," Lamar District Attorney's Office Investigator Chris Brooks said. The investigator is one of only five local law enforcement officers certified to perform on-the-scene clearance, a requirement before law enforcement officers can enter a highly toxic methamphetamine laboratory for detailed investigation. "Any one of its ingredients will kill," Brooks said of red phosphorus, anhydrous ammonia, alcohol, methanol, iodine, lye, sulfuric acid, muriatic acid, lithium and pseudoephedrine hydrochloride. All are ingredients in one of three meth production methods. A high concentration of toxic chemicals inhaled from a methamphetamine laboratory is harmful. One breath can cause trouble, including damaging the liver. Pseudoephedrine, the active ingredient found in Sudafed, Claritin-D and other common cold remedies is a key ingredient used in all meth cooking operations. The proliferation of meth labs caused Oklahoma to restrict over-the-counter sales last year, but lawmen say the new laws sent meth producers across the state line to buy, or in many cases steal, cold tablets. But legislative help may be on the way in the Lone Star state, where laws have been proposed in both the Texas Senate and House to curb over-the-counter sales of pseudoephedrine-containing tablets and to increase criminal penalties for meth production, sales and use. "There is not a law enforcement agency in the state of Texas that would not appreciate help on this, because it is a statewide problem," Brooks said. Recognizing the problem as well as sales losses due to theft, most major pharmacies in Paris already have taken action to prevent theft and reduce mass sales of pseudoephedrine-based product. Cold tablets have been taken off shelves. Customers are required to come to counters to make purchases, and some stores now limit the number of packages that can be purchased at one time. Although regional authorities have broken up several large-scale operations and have seized meth worth more than $1 million on the street, Lamar District Attorney Gary Young said most of the cases he has seen have involved small-scale operations. "There is no profit in it," Young explained, as he spoke of the smaller meth labs. "Usually they are users who make it to sell, to make more, and to use more." "It's a downward spiral that leads to other crimes such as thefts and assaults," Young concluded. Methamphetamine is sold on the street for about $100 a gram. That's an amount approximately equal to a single package of Sweet 'N Low. "There's a bunch of it (methamphetamine laboratories) out there," assistant Regional Drug Task Force Commander Tommy Moore has said of meth labs. The Paris Police Department and the Lamar County Sheriff's Office are teamed in a drug task force with sheriff's departments in Fannin, Delta, Hopkins and Franklin counties as well as police departments in Bonham and Sulphur Springs. Meth lab busts are common, but Moore said locating manufacturing sites can be difficult because cooking operations are such that "they can cook the methamphetamine in a matter of hours and be gone." As in Paris and Lamar County, methamphetamine has become the No. 1 illicit drug in Choctaw County, according to a narcotics officer who asked not to be identified. "By far, marijuana is pretty well a thing of the past here," the narcotics officer said. "Marijuana is minor stuff anymore. The meth problem is an epidemic. In the old marijuana days, it would take 'em all summer to grow a marijuana crop. They can cook up a batch of meth in three hours." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake