Pubdate: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 Source: Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA) http://www.thedesertsun.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061218/NEWS08/70121003/0/TOPICS Copyright: 2006 The Desert Sun Contact: http://www.thedesertsun.com/opinion/lettersubmitter.shtml Website: http://www.thedesertsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112 Note: Does not accept LTEs from outside circulation area. Author: Marie McCain Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH LURKS EVERYWHERE Don Keating's daily fight against methamphetamine begins at his front door in the historic Warm Sands neighborhood of Palm Springs. For three years, he has found remnants of the drug on his sidewalks and streets, sometimes right in his front yard. A hypodermic needle here. A prone addict in the midst of a mind-numbing high there. "I left my ex of 20 years because he got hooked on this stuff," Keating said. "It's horrible, and once it has a hold on you, it takes over." No part of the Coachella Valley is immune to the growing meth problem. Meth has been found in some of the best-heeled communities in the region - from a middle-class neighborhood in Palm Desert to the tony enclaves of Rancho Mirage and Indian Wells to one of the nicest resorts in Palm Springs. The availability is indicative of the region's changing role in the nationwide scourge that is meth, police and drug enforcement experts say. Gone are the days when meth cooks came to the valley to manufacture their toxic concoctions in the seclusion of the desolate desert plains. The Coachella Valley is now a major point for distribution of meth to the rest of the state and the country, narcotics investigators say. The effects can be seen and felt in several ways: More crime, more money. Recent federal statistics reveal that auto-theft rates in some parts of the valley went up 73 percent over the previous year. Burglary rates increased as much as 57 percent. Local law enforcement authorities attribute much of the increase to meth addicts who steal to pay for their next fix. As the crime rate increases, so does the cost of insurance. Even if you aren't a crime victim, living in an area that's considered high risk means you'll pay more for insurance. Over-extended public services. In the first nine months of 2004, 74 children were rescued from meth labs in Riverside County, officials say. Desperate to find ways to comfort children found at meth labs, the county has acquired four converted recreation vehicles to act as shelters for these children while their parents or caregivers are being arrested. State and county social service agencies are flooded with children whose parents are incapable of taking care of them because of meth. Ultimately, taxpayers fund the care of these children. And as their numbers grow, so does the need for money to support them. Authorities say the manmade stimulant is cheap when compared to such other drugs as cocaine or heroin. It gives the user a quick and intense high. According to addiction experts, the initial rush experienced by its users can equal 10 orgasms. Smuggled into the valley Increased police pressure has forced many of the major meth producers into Mexico, where drug enforcement laws are less stringent. As a result, the drug is now smuggled across the border into the Coachella Valley. In 2003, recognizing that they had a problem, federal and local officials agreed to convert a locally run narcotics task force into an arm of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. They based it in Palm Springs. "I can't begin to tell you what we know about this area," said Steve Azzam, an assistant special agent in charge of the DEA's Riverside district office, which oversees the Coachella Valley. This area, he said, is "a distribution hub. Once it's in the valley, it can go anywhere. There's Highway 86. Highway 111. Interstate 10. Anywhere," he said. "We've made a lot of significant takedowns, but there is still much to do." He said the unit works with both state and local investigators, blending federal resources and tactics with the insights and familiarity of the locals. It's a significant move, officials said, considering the fiscal belt-tightening going on in Washington, D.C. - not to mention the increases locally and nationally in property crimes. "Much of the crime that takes place in this area and in other parts of the valley can be attributed to addicts looking for ways to pay for meth," said Indio Police Chief Brad Ramos. Addicts: All walks of life Experts consider the manmade drug the great equalizer. Rich. Poor. Black. White. Latino. Asian. Male. Female. Straight. Gay. Meth does not discriminate. Law enforcement and drug counselors agree, meth addicts come from every walk of life, particularly in the Coachella Valley. Keating is a community activist who continues to fight the drug's influence in his Warm Sands neighborhood. He has learned that sometimes things have to get really bad before they can improve. At its worst, Keating said, Warm Sands was racked by petty thefts, property damage and drug deals made out in the open - one man was even beaten and mugged. All the crime made older residents afraid to walk their dogs. It was enough to make a person move - but Keating hasn't, and he said he won't. He'd rather stay and fight. "Why should I move? I'm tired of this," he said. A year ago, he began talking with John Hanson, a retired architect, who just moved to the neighborhood. The two men compared notes and figured they'd take a stand. Even the neighborhood's world-renowned, award-winning resorts, known for their exclusivity and gay-friendly atmospheres, weren't immune to the problem. Keating and Hanson believed some of the dealing may have been done by people employed at the hotels. "You'd see the deals going on," Keating said. "They weren't ashamed, or concerned, or hiding." Both Keating and Hanson said they informed the owners of those resorts, but only recently has anything been done. "Something had to be done. Everyone in town knows about this area - that it's drug-infested," said Hanson. "But that didn't stop me from wanting to live here." Hanson and Keating are founding members of the Warm Sands Neighborhood Organization, a kind of neighborhood watch group focused on decreasing crime in this area. Hanson said he was attracted to the quaint architecture of the neighborhood, which features single-story cottages tucked amid palm trees and flowering shrubbery. "I realized my neighborhood was going to be destroyed if I didn't do something about it," he said. Law enforcement agencies agreed and took action. In the past three months, two meth busts have been made at one of the hotels in Warm Sands, resulting in the arrests of three hotel workers. Meth was one of the drugs confiscated. But authorities already had been busy with meth-related crime in the valley. In August at a Motel 6 on South Palm Canyon Drive in Palm Springs, two people were stabbed after smoking meth with a stranger who then attempted to rob them, according to police. And later that same month in Palm Desert, sheriff's deputies arrested three people for alleged possession of more than a half-pound of meth with intent to sell. The drug was valued at $8,500. The three were staying in a room at the Courtyard Marriott on Frank Sinatra Drive. In September, middle-class residents of the 77-800 block of Michigan Drive in Palm Desert began their Labor Day weekend watching narcotics investigators raid a neighbor's apartment where meth allegedly was being sold. A month later, not far from an up-and-coming area of North Palm Springs, where the homes are newly built and a golf course is under construction, residents awoke to find their neighborhood inundated with police cars, yellow crime scene tape and plastic-clad hazardous materials workers removing toxic chemicals from a neighbor's house. An active meth lab was discovered there. Prevalence of meth grows Since 1998, nearly 100 clandestine labs have been discovered in the valley. Besides Palm Desert and Palm Springs, labs and other meth-related activities have been uncovered in La Quinta, Rancho Mirage, Indio, Bermuda Dunes, Cathedral City, Indian Wells and Desert Hot Springs, according to law enforcement statistics. Five years ago, a working meth lab was found inside a unit of the then-Mecca Vineyards Apartments on Gemini Street in Indio. That discovery triggered a lot of changes for the apartment complex, which now participates in the Indio Police Department's Crime-free Multi-housing program. That is a renter's version of the Neighborhood Watch organizations that rely on citizens to watch out for crimes in their neighborhoods. Since that time, the complex has changed management companies and has been renamed the Summerfield Apartments. When he learned that a meth lab had once been inside one of the units, property manager Porfirio Landin said he was shocked. "I was very surprised," he said. "I've been managing properties since 1993, and I'd never come across anyone having something like that in a rental with so many other people around." Landin added that his apartment complex has instituted a zero-tolerance policy for any drug activity, which means a tenant will be evicted if found to have violated that rule. It applies to the tenants and their guests. "This drug is where people are, plain and simple," said James Valle, a criminal intelligence specialist with the Inland Narcotics Clearing House. That is an arm of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department and the California Department of Justice that analyzes criminal statistics. From 2003 to 2004, property crimes in the Coachella Valley jumped 53 percent, according to the FBI Uniform Crime Report. It's an increase that mirrors national statistics. According to the National Association of Counties, based in Washington, D.C., 70 percent of the 500 law enforcement agencies included in the group's nationwide survey on meth said the drug is a direct cause of increases in burglaries and robberies in their areas. And more than 50 percent said it factored into many incidents of domestic violence, assault and identity theft. "Not a night goes by," said Cpl. Dennis Gutierrez, a spokesman for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, "when deputies don't encounter somebody who is either high from it or has committed some kind of crime because of it." Coachella Valley: Distribution hub for meth Federal drug enforcement officials say the Coachella Valley is a vast distribution hub where drug traffickers can supply meth to not just other parts of California but also to the rest of the country. Much of the meth that comes into the valley originates in Mexico and enters the United States at the Calexico border, about 90 miles from the southeastern corner of the Coachella Valley. Calexico's border facility is the third largest in the United States. Each day, approximately 16,000 vehicles pass through Calexico's 10 primary vehicle lanes, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials. Built in the 1970s, the facility has a multi-pronged enforcement strategy. In addition to the staff in the primary vehicle lane booths, there are other officers roaming the traffic lanes with dogs trained to detect contraband U both drugs and people. "We see narcotics smuggled in the same compartments over and over again," said Bruce Whitford, passenger branch chief for U.S. Customs and Border Protection. "There are only certain areas where you can hide drugs and people." Source: U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Customs and Border Protection The Methamphetamine trail The meth trade in the U.S. began as an industry staffed by outlaw bikers who cooked up their toxic concoctions in small town kitchens, bathtubs, garages and basements throughout California. They transported the drugs in the crankshafts of their motorcycles - hence the drug's nickname "crank." Over the past 20 years, it has become a multi-million dollar industry, largely run by Mexican drug cartels. The cartel chemists cook their products in "super labs" - named for their abilities to produce amounts of the drug in excess of 10 pounds. Cheap and easy to make, the drug consists largely of household items, many already found in our homes, said Commander Fred Fierro, of the Coachella Valley Narcotics Task Force. That group investigates street-level drug sales throughout the valley. The remaining ingredients could be easily purchased at local convenience stores - before the meth epidemic swept the country. Today, the precursors - pseudoephedrine, the active ingredient in cold and sinus medicine, hydrogen chloride gas and anhydrous ammonia - used to make the drug are strictly regulated, Fierro said. Source: Coachella Valley Narcotics Task Force A path of destruction Not only has meth become the No. 1 drug of choice in the Coachella Valley, its popularity has spread across California and the United States. And as the process of cooking has been refined, so has the drug's quality. Known initially as the "poor man's cocaine," meth is now more available and more affordable than cocaine or crack. It also has evolved from a granulated substance into a more potent and more addictive form called "ice." It is "ice" that is crossing the country. From the Coachella Valley, meth moves east, where its value increases exponentially. Even though super labs - sites that produce upward of 10 pounds of meth at a time - have been found in large cities, meth-making is still a largely rural venture. As a result, the drug is not as readily available in large quantities in parts of the East. A pound of meth will fetch about $5,000 locally. But that same pound is sold for $25,000 in places like New York City, Atlanta, Boston and Washington, D.C., said Fred Fierro, commander of the Coachella Valley Narcotics Task Force, which operates out of Palm Springs. It investigates street-level drug sales throughout the valley. What happens after it moves east translates into the simplest form of economics: supply and demand. "Since it's more addictive, you're back more often," Fierro said. "And each time the craving is harder." Source: Coachella Valley Narcotics Task Force