Pubdate: Sat, 24 Dec 2005 Source: Janesville Gazette (WI) Copyright: 2005 Bliss Communications, Inc Contact: http://www.gazetteextra.com/contactus/lettertoeditor.asp Website: http://www.gazetteextra.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1356 Author: Mike Heine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) IS METH INFESTATION LIKELY IN SOUTHERN WISCONSIN? It's only a matter of time, authorities say, before methamphetamine-a powerful, illegal stimulant-arrives in southcentral Wisconsin. Meth already has infected northwestern Wisconsin, where the number of meth cases has increased tenfold in 10 years. Authorities say it's not common in Rock or Walworth counties. Yet. The spread of methamphetamine, a highly-potent and addictive stimulant, has authorities and state officials concerned they will relive an era similar the cocaine craze that swept the country in the 1980s. Only this time, the consequences could be worse. "What the Drug Enforcement Agency predicted more than 10 years ago is taking place," said Jim Copple, a drug expert with SAI, a multi-faceted consulting company. "It is sweeping the Midwest and it is moving east. "It is an epidemic." Some consider methamphetamine-known commonly as meth, crystal meth or speed-as "the poor man's cocaine." It's generally cheaper to buy, has a longer-lasting high and more serious side effects than cocaine. It leads to a multitude of health problems for addicts and to community problems for residents living in areas where methamphetamine is available. When meth is produced locally in homemade labs, toxic waste is left behind. It's something you definitely don't want around your neighborhood, said Mike Myszewski, director of the narcotics bureau in the Wisconsin Department of Justice. "Eventually, we believe Mexican cartels will start moving meth in addition to, or as a substitute for cocaine," Myszewski said. "It may not happen next week, next month or next year. That's anybody's guess. But the situation is somewhat analogous of what crack cocaine was in the early 1980s. "You know it's going to come. "You know it's a problem. "You know it's going to hit." Moving Meth Years ago, meth crept across the Mexican border into the southwestern United States. From there, the homemade drug made its way into California and headed north and east. During the last 10 years, it arrived in the Midwest, becoming popular in Minnesota and Iowa. Methamphetamine first arrived in Wisconsin via traditional drug-trafficking corridors, particularly along Interstate 94 from Minneapolis, Myszewski said. It started in the northwestern Wisconsin because the drug market was less saturated and because the sparse population made it easier to hide the stinky labs and dispose of the resulting toxic waste, Myszewski said. Until recently, locally made methamphetamine accounted for about 80 percent of the meth used in northwestern Wisconsin, according to the Wisconsin Attorney General's Office. The number of local labs fell, however, because new laws limit availability of over-the-counter cold and flu medication containing pseudoephedrine, a chemical necessary for making meth. Authorities believe meth imported from Minnesota, Iowa and some from Chicago now accounts for about 95 percent of the drug in Wisconsin, Myszewski said. Attorney General Peggy Lautenschlager said meth is spreading throughout the state via gang trafficking. "As a result of the increase in meth coming in from outside the state-primarily Mexican national meth-what we're seeing is more and more urban meth," Lautenschlager said at a recent press conference. "It's coming from more and more traditional drug sources." The imported meth is filling the void left when the local labs stopped production, Lautenschlager said. "It's a plague on rural America at this point," Myszewski said. "Eventually Mexican gangs and other gangs will bring it to the urban areas. The profit motive is extreme. "The only thing that really prevented it from happening so far (in southern Wisconsin) is customer resistance. People using cocaine are happy using that drug. They haven't seen a reason to change." Local plague? Not yet No one is really sure if and when methamphetamine will arrive en mass in southcentral and southeastern Wisconsin. Rock and Walworth county authorities report just a handful of minor possession arrests in recent years. Walworth County has, however, uncovered several small labs and one waste dump since 2003, according to figures from Lautenschlager's office. The most recent discovery of meth activity in Walworth County was a dumpsite near the village of Sharon. Sgt. Jeff Patek of the Walworth County Drug Unit said the site had some elements signifying it might have been a working lab. "We've had at least one or two labs per year in the last two years," Patek said. Rock and Green counties have reported no lab discoveries in recent years, according to Lautenschlager's figures. Controlling the problem Fighting the spread of methamphetamine needs to be a multi-faceted approach, Lautenschlager said. It takes education, money, new laws and regional partnerships, she said. The Oct. 1 passing of Wisconsin's pseudoephedrine control law took away easy access to one of the key ingredients in making meth. That has been one factor in reducing the number of labs in the state. Police found more than 100 labs found in Wisconsin in 2002, but the 2005 total is expected to be fewer than 70 labs, Lautenschlager said. The law also allows law enforcement officers to focus on investigating imported methamphetamine, Lautenschlager said. Lautenschlager said enforcement is only part of the solution. "Putting Sudafed behind the shelves in pharmacies is not going to fix the meth problem," she said. "Making laws to protect children will not alone fix the meth problem. Hiring more officers is not going to fix the meth problem. Treatment is not going to fix the meth problem. "It needs to be addressed in a multi-faceted, community-based way." Copple said communities should be prepared for the potential invasion of methamphetamine. If they don't, the consequences could be devastating. "While the numbers of users may not be the highest compared to cocaine, heroin, marijuana and alcohol, it is the No. 1 law enforcement problem facing our communities," he said. "It is severe and it is acute." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman