Pubdate: Sat, 11 Jun 2005 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2005 Orlando Sentinel Contact: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325 Author: Amy L. Edwards, Sentinel Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) POLICE CONNECT RISING MAIL THEFT, DRUG USE When a law-enforcement officer pulled over Anthony Chandler in April for driving his motorcycle through a Lake Wales stoplight, the deputy said he found a pipe with traces of methamphetamine in Chandler's pocket and learned his drivers license was fake. Chandler also had more than 30 pieces of stolen mail, including thousands of dollars in checks written out to a local Christian camp, the deputy said. Authorities throughout Central Florida say the problem of mail and identity theft has never been as bad as it is now, with Polk County investigators estimating that 75 percent of their ID-theft cases involve drug abusers. Phoenix officials attributed a rash of mail thefts to meth addicts, while in Washington state at least 90 percent of identity thefts are perpetrated by drug users. The problem is thought to be so widespread that a U.S. senator introduced legislation in April calling on the federal government to study the link between methamphetamine users and identity theft. Drug users often steal hundreds of pieces of mail from private and community mailboxes, enabling them to steal money and fraudulently buy big-ticket items to support their addiction. The rapidly growing Four Corners area, where Lake, Polk, Orange and Osceola counties meet, has seen a rash of such thefts. "I haven't seen any [identity-theft] cases so far that I can recall that weren't drug-connected," said Mike Cusick, felony intake director for the State Attorney's Office in Polk County, where authorities say the problem has surged to unprecedented proportions. But now other Central Florida counties are feeling what might be the beginning stages of the same trend, authorities say -- that is, hundreds of reports of mail theft. Metro Orlando, for instance, had more than 1,000 cases of mail theft in 2004. "Before 2004, we didn't really have a problem," Postal Inspector Ed Moffitt said. Many who commit identity-theft crimes get away with little or no jail time. "The biggest challenge law enforcement is facing right now is enforcing all the laws," said Jay Foley, co-executive director of the Identity Theft Resource Center. "Who do you want off the streets more: the guys with the guns or the guys with the ink pens? That's where they are going to focus their efforts." Rampant problem Thieves steal mail not just from private mailboxes on roadsides, but also from post offices and community, or cluster, mailboxes. Some thieves rent a post-office box under a fake name and at night open their mailbox and reach in and around, grabbing mail from nearby boxes. They'll take anything in the hope it has something they want: credit-card applications, blank or written checks, money orders or personal documents with account or Social Security numbers. With such information in hand, and computer software, a scanner, a good printer and transparency overlays, an identity thief creates new checks with someone else's account number -- and a drivers license with the thief's face but someone else's name -- and then take off spending. In Polk County, once considered the methamphetamine capital of Florida and still an area of heavy meth use, mailbox theft is a persistent problem. Methamphetamine is a highly addictive drug that allows users to stay awake for several days. "Have you ever met a meth addict? Besides the rotting teeth and leather skin, their minds are sharp, staying up for days and hacking the Internet," said Robert Siciliano, of IDTheftSecurity .com. "Identity theft is becoming an international organized crime. Meth addicts and identity theft go hand in hand." In nearby south Lake County, a rash of mail thefts that began in October hasn't ceased, either. "The Four Corners area has just been beat with mail theft," Lake County sheriff's Sgt. Christie Mysinger said. The Orange-Osceola State Attorney's Office has not tracked the link between mail theft, identity theft and methamphetamine abuse, but director of investigations Randy Means said he does not dispute that it exists. In 2004, there were 648 reported thefts in Seminole and Volusia counties. Orange County had 328 thefts, and Osceola had 347, though that count includes some south Orange thefts. Highlighting the growing problem of meth abuse, the number of drug labs seized by law enforcement in Florida jumped from 23 in 1999 to 170 in 2003, federal Drug Enforcement Administration officials said at a conference Friday in Orlando. Detective Rodney Chauncey of the Polk County Sheriff's Office, the county where meth drives a majority the postal thefts, said he's never seen identity theft and fraud -- and the crimes associated with the two -- "as bad as it is now." "It progressively gets worse," he said. "It never gets any better." A few secure boxes likely won't stop the persistent thieves who may stay up all night going mailbox to mailbox. Winter Haven resident Glen E. Snell was convicted in 2003 on more than 40 identity-theft-related charges. Investigators said he stole garbage bags full of mail, made fake checks and drivers licenses, and obtained credit cards using different victims' names. There were at least 66 victims in Snell's case, the Polk Sheriff's Office reported, with more than $15,000 stolen from their accounts. Like many identity thieves, Snell has a long criminal history -- including methamphetamine use. Bill would begin study Even though there has been no official study linking the two, many law enforcers and prosecutors say a majority of identity-theft cases are related to drugs, particularly methamphetamine. U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., recently introduced a bill requesting that the federal government conduct a study that might link the two. If that bill is passed, and a link is confirmed, the bill also calls for Congress to consider increasing criminal penalties. Said Cantwell: "These two crimes are undeniably connected, and one won't go away without fighting the other." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin