Pubdate: Mon, 07 Mar 2005 Source: Bolivar Commercial, The (Cleveland, MS) Copyright: 2005 The Bolivar Commercial Contact: http://www.bolivarcom.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1775 Author: Aimee Robinette, BC Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) POLICE PLEASED METH BILL SIGNED Methamphetamine has become such a problem in Mississippi it warranted its own bill, which was signed by Gov. Haley Barbour on Thursday. House Bill 607 requires retailers to store cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine in locked display cases, behind the counter, within 30 feet of a store cashier or under video surveillance. The bill also limits the amount of the cold tablets sold to a customer to no more than two packages per transaction or six grams of pseudoephedrine or ephedrine. Cleveland Police Chief Drew Warren said on Tuesday that local pharmacy store employees are tuned into the covert operations of meth making. In fact, Kroger has locked away pseudoephedrine and ephedrine pills for "many, many years." Kroger is very conscientious about materials which could be utilized for drug use, including "rolling papers" that may be used to smoke marijuana. The store doesn't stock "rolling papers." "When it started to be an epidemic we started locking the cold pills away," said Glenn Hill, the store manager in Cleveland. If someone needs medicine for the actual problem of a cold and sinus, they will have to go to the pharmacist. Most pharmacists say that if someone really needs the product for its created purpose, they won't have a problem with the extra step. While law enforcement officers are glad to see the bill become a law, they also know that those who really want the pills will try and figure out a way to get them. "I think the bill is going to work," said Charles "Buster" Bingham, the narcotics investigator with the Cleveland Police Department. "It will help out law enforcement tremendously. It can't do anything but help us out." Bingham said it won't stop those who want to make meth, but it will make it more difficult for them to acquire some of the ingredients. On Tuesday, before the bill was ever signed, two men were arrested after a high-speed car chase that began at Wal-Mart. Danny Campbell, of Lyon and Carl Burleson, 30, of Clarksdale, were charged with possession of precursors with the intent to manufacture meth. The Cleveland Police Department responded to a call that a man was possibly stealing pseudoephedrine pills. The man was in the outside parking lot, and was acting strangely. He appeared to be cutting off the safety belts in the shopping carts. The men drove off as the police attempted to stop them, and during the chase Burleson and Campbell threw suspected precursor materials for making meth out of the car. That was the most recent case, but the drug task force of Bingham and Narcotics Investigator Joe Smith with the Bolivar County Sheriff's Department, stay busy year round with meth situations. Last year the duo made 11 arrests in 12 days, a staggering ratio. Of those, an arrest was made when a man and woman from Popular Bluff, Mo., were arrested for possession of a precursor with the intent to manufacture. The couple was detained at Radio Shack and were suspected of shoplifting. It's common for manufacturers of meth to go to other counties to buy their precursors as they believe no one will know them and not think much of their buying pseudoephedrine or other materials. The very next night in Bolivar County, two adults and one juvenile were also arrested and charged with manufacturing methamphetamine. The group was in the process of manufacturing when the officers caught them. These are just three of the vast number of arrests made in Bolivar County with methamphetamine involved. It's not that our local law enforcement isn't making a difference. They take this very seriously, but when one meth situation is taken off the streets, 10 more are there to take its place. That's why "the meth bill" is so important to law enforcement. Meth arrests are common in the Mississippi Delta with all its wide open spaces. Meth labs are typically "roaming labs" as the process of making meth emits a distinct odor of annhydrous ammonia. A typical crime scene when meth is concerned takes about 10 to 16 hours to process. Samples must be logged and photographed, and once this is completed a clean-up crew must come to the site to dispose of the hazardous materials. Officers must expect the unexpected when approaching a crime scene as the people who are under the influence of this particular drug are paranoid, restless, jumpy and possibly have been up for days at a time. The average person might think a drug user is not very smart, however, some of the people who manufacture meth are actually cunning and smart, according to Bingham in a previous interview. They pay attention to what the newspapers say and what the police do, and once the officers , they will change their modus operandi. Bingham remembered the first meth bust in Cleveland, which took place in a business called The Cable Guy on April 29, 1999. A meth lab was being operated inside the business, which was a trailer one of the employees was living in and using to manufacture. Since that first incident with meth, the officers from both the sheriff's department and surrounding city departments have had extensive training on the subject through seminars, classes and - most importantly - on-the-job training. Officers must make sure they know how to handle all the components used in meth manufacturing as there are substances, like acid and certain bases, that shouldn't be mixed. Bingham said they use protective clothing and gloves depending on the situation. Those protective gears are vital when dealing with closed quarters and the volatile chemicals. They also use protective gear when taking samples of the precursors to prevent chemical burns. Officers use self-contained breathing apparatus, Dragen Pumps, which test the atmosphere to see if it is safe for them, and also combustible Gas Indicators, which lets the investigators know the level of explosive limits of certain volatile gases. The Dragen Pump has an alarm to show oxygen levels and the chemical level of possible explosion hazards. Police now have to be more than just an enforcer of peace, they also have to be chemists and explosive experts. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek