Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jul 2006 Source: Longview News-Journal (TX) Copyright: 2006sCox Interactive Media Contact: http://www.news-journal.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1048 Author: Art Lawler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) EXPERTS: METH IS KING IN EAST TEXAS It's highly marketable, provides an intense rush and can be made inside a car, a bathroom or in the woods without attracting unwanted scrutiny. During the past five years, its manufacturers have increased the quality, the potency and the danger of the illegal drug. They've also attracted attention from law enforcement officers on the federal, state and local levels. Those officers say that as is the case in much of East Texas and increasingly in the rest of the country, meth is fast becoming the drug of choice in Gregg County. "Forty-nine percent of the organization's drug arrests this year have been meth-related," said Longview Police Sgt. Keith Sloan, field supervisor for the County Organized Drug Enforcement Unit. "We expect 60 to 70 percent of our arrests in 2006 to be meth-related." A year ago, crack arrests still topped meth arrests, 38 percent to 32.6 percent. CODE is on track to exceed 120 arrests from methamphetamine this year, he said. "We've seen an increase in meth in the last 12 to 18 months," said Longview Police Chief J.B. McCaleb. "Most of it has been crystal meth. Very little of the other forms (such as powder). It's now passed up crack here." While production is down in some parts of Texas, Sloan says the heavily wooded areas of East Texas provide lots of privacy for manufacturers. That, combined with interstate corridors that run east and west and north and south through the Longview area, will make it hard to get meth out of this part of the state anytime soon. The drug can be "cooked" in 30 to 45 minutes, depending on quality. "Unlike cocaine, which derives from the coca plant and is grown only in South American equatorial countries, methamphetamine is a combination of chemicals and other ingredients available anywhere," Sloan said. Longview might not be that close to the Mexican border, but U.S. 59 and U.S. 259 provide a corridor for potent meth being produced in that country, Sloan said. Longview is equally suited on a west-to-east path with drugs coming through the Juarez/El Paso area, on either Interstate 10 or Interstate 20, all the way through East Texas to Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina. Gregg and Harrison counties are greatly affected by those corridors, Sloan said. Houston and Dallas, he says, are the major distribution points for all drugs entering Texas from Mexico. He says that for every load of drugs that is found on the Texas-Mexican border, it's estimated that at least 10 to 15 loads enter undetected. "With no regulation or governmental control, the Mexican cartels are now moving away from importing cocaine from South America to exporting methamphetamine throughout the world," Sloan said. Though it was once called the poor man's cocaine, Sloan said the methamphetamine users no longer fit a particular stereotype. Its customers include men and women, and people who are white and black, rich and poor. One positive sign for law enforcement personnel is the cooperation of businesses that have taken ephedrine products such as Sudafed off open counters. Ephedrine is a key component in the manufacturing of meth. The products can still be purchased, but in stores such as Wal-Mart and Kmart, purchase records are kept. Sales are denied after roughly the equivalent of two boxes of Sudafed per month. Smaller retail stores often keep records at their checkout counters. "We used to see a lot of shoplifters with boxes and boxes of pseudoephedrine products," Sloan said. "But we're not seeing a whole lot of that lately." By making the ephedrine more difficult to obtain, law officers and retailers believe local manufacturing will be greatly affected. "We have about a dozen items that have pseudoephedrine in them," said a pharmaceutical spokesman for a Longview Wal-Mart store. "But you can't buy any of them without proper identification. I'm sure we've lost some sales, but not a great amount." Sloan says the Longview area is getting about half its methamphetamine product from Mexican cartels and other places, and is producing about half on its own. In the past, the majority of meth on the streets came from small drug labs because small-time operators could easily obtain all the materials they needed at retail outlets. Mexican cartels have a huge advantage because they can buy ephedrine in huge quantities at low prices without interference from the law. Even with the cooperation of the retail establishments, the local drug makers aren't out of business. The same kind of products can still be purchased from online pharmacies, though federal officials are trying to do what they can to crack down on those sites. "Everybody is in this fight to make this a better place to live," Sloan said. Law enforcement agencies in Longview and Kilgore work closely with Drug Enforcement Agency task forces from Tyler, as well as with Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents. ======= What Is Meth? - - The Office of National Drug Control Policy describes methamphetamine as a highly addictive stimulant that can be injected, snorted, smoked or swallowed. Methamphetamine users feel a short yet intense "rush" when the drug is initially administered. The effects of methamphetamine include increased activity, decreased appetite, and a sense of well-being that can last from 20 minutes to 12 hours. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath