Pubdate: Sun, 05 Jun 2005 Source: Daily Citizen, The (Dalton, GA) Copyright: Daily Citizen 2005 Contact: http://www.northwestgeorgia.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1929 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BATTLE AGAINST METH NOT OVER The massive law enforcement sweep aimed at curtailing methamphetamine production in Northwest Georgia on Friday captured national attention. It was about the only thing reported on the front page of this newspaper. More than 200 law enforcement officers cooperated in the raids, which targeted owners and employees of independently owned convenience stores believed to be providing the key ingredients for the making of meth. More than 40 people were arrested and charged with violations of federal statutes. The feds seem to have built a powerful case, as each of the targets had been under careful investigation for almost a year. So, meth is no longer a problem in Northwest Georgia? Of course not. Not even close. While Operation Meth Merchant may make it tougher in the short term for "mom and pop" meth manufacturers to fill their shopping lists, many law enforcement officers acknowledge (off the record) that the much more serious problem in this area is the organized methamphetamine rings, many of which are based in Mexico. Most of the meth sold on the street here comes from Mexico and is shipped into the U.S. through a sophisticated transportation network. State legislators patted themselves on the back for "getting tough on meth" during the last legislative session, but the laws they passed (which go into effect in July) will do little good. For instance, a store owner may be limited in how much of a cold medicine (containing the key meth ingredient pseudoephedrine) he can sell to an individual customer, but what will keep that same customer from going to two or three other stores until he has the amount of material he needs. Lawmakers in this session felt the need to "do something," which they did. But their "something" is next to useless as the new laws again target the small-fry producers, the kind of knuckleheads who cook meth mostly for personal use and sometimes blow up their bathroom in the process. If tougher law enforcement can reduce the manufacture and use of meth - there is no guarantee that is the case - then Friday's activities were probably an effective first step. But a lot of the low hanging fruit is gone now. As law enforcement officials move their attention to the core problem - smart, organized, experienced and ruthless drug gangsters - the job is going to get a lot tougher. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl