Pubdate: Sat, 28 May 2005 Source: Bristol Herald Courier (VA) Copyright: 2005 Bristol Herald Courier Contact: http://www.bristolnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1211 Author: Matthew Lakin REAL DANGERS FACE OFFICERS IN METH LAB RAIDS MARION - Town police Lt. Darrell Hayden thought he knew the danger. He spotted the cooler sitting on the porch of a house in the Atkins community as he and other officers made a drug arrest. "We didn't have any training at that time," he said. "I tried to be safe. I stepped back and took my foot and opened it up." A cloud of gas erupted in his face. "I almost died," Hayden said. "I came to lying in my own vomit. And I don't know how long I lay there." That was about five years ago, when police, firefighters and rescue workers around Southwest Virginia knew little about a drug called methamphetamine and its dangers. They've learned quickly since then. They had no choice. "The seriousness and the danger level of this drug are just so far above what we've dealt with in the past," Wythe County Chief Deputy Doug King said. "There's not a wholesome ingredient in any of this stuff. Some of these substances are so toxic, you don't even bring them into the courtroom." Investigators who search a lab in protective gear step in puddles that melt their boots. Firefighters and rescue workers show up at a burning house or trailer with no idea what might be inside. State and national park rangers discover labs dumped in the woods. Officers serving court papers and social services workers checking on children sometimes walk in during a cook. "One of the most dangerous things a law enforcement officer in this area can do is walk into a cooking lab," Hayden said. Two styles of meth-making appear the most often. The "red P" method uses red phosphorus from matchbox strike plates to break down cold pills and convert pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient, into meth. Cooks heat the mixtures on stoves, over hot plates or in microwave ovens. The "Nazi" method uses anhydrous ammonia, a chemical found in refrigerants and commercial fertilizer, for the same purpose. Nearly all the labs found in Southwest Virginia, where it's easier to buy matches than anhydrous ammonia, tend to use the red phosphorus method, authorities said. Either combination can be deadly. "It's fire, it's explosives, it's chemical vapors," said Special Agent Mike Baker of the Virginia State Police. "You don't see any really old meth cookers. They're killing themselves and the people around them with it." Red phosphorus can degrade into white phosphorus, an explosive used in military grenades that catches fire on contact with the air. Cooks often smoke cigarettes while mixing such chemicals as acetone, starter fluid and lantern fuel. Authorities believe that's what happened earlier this year when a room at the Budget Inn in the Seven Mile Ford community exploded in flames. The fire gutted two rooms, damaged six others and did more than $100,000 in damage. Anhydrous ammonia becomes a gas when its temperature climbs above 28 degrees below zero. The gas catches fire easily and strips the moisture from anything it touches, searing lungs and burning through skin. One gallon of anhydrous ammonia in liquid form can produce up to 600 gallons of vapors. Cooks sometimes store it in propane tanks or even thermoses. Sometimes the containers spring leaks and shoot around rooms like pinballs. Federal agents and Russell County sheriff's deputies suffered burns and breathing problems in 2002 when they caught a whiff of the gas while raiding a lab in the Elk Garden community. Other dangers lurk in the labs as well. Various recipes call for ether, lantern fuel, iodine crystals, lithium batteries and hydrochloric acid. One gallon of ether can explode with the force of five sticks of dynamite. Lithium strips can catch fire from moisture in the air. Water just makes the fire burn hotter. Phosphine, a colorless gas sometimes produced during a red phosphorus cook, kills in doses as small as 50 parts per million and in as little time as 30 seconds. By the time an officer smells it, it's too late. When authorities discover a lab, only officers with special training go inside, dressed in astronaut-style hazardous materials suits with oxygen tanks. "We have to have at least four guys," said Sgt. Michael Conroy of the State Police. "Two suit up to go in. Then you have to have two on standby in case one goes down." Police seize any finished drug, then call in a contractor to dispose of the chemicals and toxic waste. Cleaning up a mobile meth lab from the trunk of a car can cost more than $6,000. So far, the region hasn't seen any deaths or serious injuries result from a lab. "We've been really lucky," said Baker, the State Police agent. Area agencies have begun offering training to help their workers recognize the signs of a meth lab - the acrid smells of ammonia and ether, the piles of matches and blister packs from boxes of cold tablets. Some, such as the Washington County Sheriff's Office and the Virginia Department of Emergency Management, visit churches and civic groups to offer tips on spotting labs. "We're just trying to show them things to look for," Washington County Sheriff Fred Newman said. Hayden, the police lieutenant, believes most officers today wouldn't make the mistake he made. "If you're not familiar with things, you get complacent," he said. "That's what I did." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)