Pubdate: Fri, 22 Apr 2005 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Matthew Ramsey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) U.S. METH-LAB HORRORS EVERETT, Wash. -- Sgt. John Flood parks his 4X4 outside a boarded-up home in a quiet neighbourhood about 100 metres from a church. On the garage door of the tan rancher someone has written in black marker, "No meth here." In Everett, state restrictions on the sale of ingredients used to make meth have slowed the spread of so-called "super labs." In their place, a veritable forest of mini-labs, or so-called "Beavis and Butthead" operations, has sprung up. The tan rancher was a "Butthead" operation. A man moved in after his grandmother died, started a lab in the basement, was turned in by relatives and came back to torch the house to erase the evidence. The house is now condemned, the man is in jail and his family is stuck with the cleanup bill. Flood and his colleagues on the Snohomish county task force kicked in the doors of 95 meth labs like this in 2003, 51 in the county in 2004. (Meth-lab raids peaked in Washington in 2001, with 1,800. Last year, police took down about 1,350. In B.C. by contrast, the RCMP in 2004 raided 19 labs.) In B.C., individual police organizations take out labs in their own areas. The Snohomish task force, formed in response to an alarming proliferation of labs in the late '90s and early '00s, is an all-in-one force. The team does it all -- raids and cleanup. State authorities pick up the garbage for safe disposal. Flood's truck roars down the driveway at another boarded-up meth lab just 30 seconds away. This one is within spitting distance of a firehall, in what was once a family home. Neighbours peer into the yard, checking Flood out. A deputy found this operation when he came to evict a tenant. At the derelict house overlooking the train tracks by the Snohomish River, it's plain to see why the neighbours are so vigilant. Flood steps into the front room, his flashlight beam slicing into dank, filth-strewn corners. Two televisions, a sealed jug of some unidentified yellow liquid, garbage and dishes heaped in the sink. The place is due for demolition. Flood climbs back into the truck, giving the place one last look in his rear view mirror. "There is no saving it," he sighs. - ------ The Province is holding four community forums on the subject of crystal-meth abuse. Medical experts, victims, police, families and addicts will talk about prevention and treatment and answer questions from the audience. The first forum is in Kamloops on April 26. There will be a forum in Victoria on May 2, in Surrey on May 3 and in Vancouver on May 5. For details, go to: www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/features/crystalmeth/index.html - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman