Pubdate: Sun, 10 Apr 2005 Source: Leader, The (NY) Copyright: 2005, The Leader Contact: http://www.the-leader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2108 Author: Bryce T. Hoffman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) STEUBEN AVOIDS METH EPIDEMIC The warnings have come one after another, usually in alarming terms such as "epidemic" and "devastation." Methamphetamine, we are told, is a monster at the gates. All indications so far suggest Steuben County is keeping that monster in check. The number of meth-related arrests in the past year can be counted on one hand. The number of addicts seeking treatment is similarly low. Experts say it is anybody's guess how long the defenses will hold. "There is a lot of buzz in the law enforcement community," said Assistant District Attorney Brooks Baker. "It has the capacity to become our biggest drug problem very rapidly. It's so close that it is clearly going to be an issue." The drug - sometimes called "poor man's cocaine" - is a powerful stimulant that provides users with a rush of euphoria and invulnerability. Long-term side effects can include paranoia and brain damage. Among its chief attractions to addicts and pushers alike is that it can be made cheaply with household chemicals in clandestine "labs" and sold at enormous profit. By one government estimate, a $500 investment can yield methamphetamine worth $30,000. Its makers tend to favor rural areas where they can cook the drug without having the pungent, ether-like odor attract attention. They also prefer easy access to anhydrous ammonia, a farm chemical used to make the drug. Steuben County fits that profile exactly. "I guess you could say it has the topography," said Joe Veon, interim director of the Mercycare Addiction Treatment Center in Hornell. The inpatient drug rehabilitation center treats more than 250 patients a year from throughout Western New York. Fewer than 10 patients last year underwent treatment related to methamphetamine and none were from Steuben County, Veon said. "We're not seeing a lot, which surprises me," he said. "I had expected an epidemic." two meth labs in 2004 - one in East Corning and the other in the town of Hartsville. Neither resulted in a drug conviction. The man arrested in the Hartsville case, David T. Shepherd, was sent to prison in March for illegally possessing a vehicle identification number. The other suspected meth-maker, Louis A. Paulo, of Corning, went back to the lockup on a parole violation. Neighboring counties have enjoyed less good fortune. The Sheriff's Department in Bradford County, Pa., on March 31 marked the first anniversary of the slayings of Deputies Michael VanKuren and Christopher Burgert. They were fatally shot in a Wells Township junkyard while trying to serve a warrant on a suspected meth manufacturer. The northern Pennsylvania county has encountered more problems since then. In March, a Bradford County man and his daughters were charged with operating a methamphetamine lab. In February, a foursome from Towanda, Pa., was arrested near the Arnot Mall in Big Flats on meth-related charges. "It is a monumental problem in Bradford County," Baker said. "It's there in a way that's just plain scary." Meth labs pose a distinct set of hazards because the manufacturing process produces volatile chemicals and toxic by-products. A 2004 report by the New York State Commission of Investigation estimates each pound of meth generates six pounds of toxic waste. In New York state, nearby Tioga and Chemung counties rank first and third for meth production, U.S. Sen. Charles E. Schumer said in an August tour of the Southern Tier. Police took down a combined 44 labs in those counties in the past five years, he said. The comparatively low number of busts in Steuben County, immediately to their west, may paint a misleading picture, Steuben County Chief Deputy Joel Ordway said. "Our informants give us accurate numbers," he said. "The meth is here. Pennsylvania folks know that New York doesn't have laws that can hammer them. Right now our hands are tied." The laws in New York make prosecuting meth dealers a difficult proposition because officers have to catch them with the finished product in hand, Baker said. There is no statute barring anyone from possessing any one of the ingredients used in the drug's manufacture - even though police insist there is no legitimate reason for someone to have 1,500 tablets of pseudoephedrine, Ordway said. A package of stricter legislation is now making its way through the state Legislature. It would create new felony charges for owning any one ingredient with the intention to make meth and impose stricter standards on property owners who allow meth production. One of its sponsors is State Sen. George H. Winner Jr., R-Elmira. "While you (in Steuben County) are fortunate, the fact that the surrounding areas have a larger presence of this means it's probably coming your way," he said. "I don't like that they're producing a lot of this in my district. That's not something I want to hang out as a tourist attraction. I'm being facetious, but it's a problem here and somebody's got to lead the charge." For now, crystal meth trails far behind crack cocaine, alcohol and marijuana among the drugs of choice for Steuben County abusers, Ordway said. Most of the energy of police is still going toward those problems, he said. That does not mean that methamphetamine is floating under the radar, however. "As we get the community aware of what meth is, what it smells like, and those things that go along with meth labs, it may well blossom," Baker said. "We're going to see more and more of it, there's no question." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin