Pubdate: Wed, 09 Aug 2006 Source: Daily News-Record, The (VA) Copyright: 2006 The Daily News-Record Contact: http://www.dnronline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1519 Author: David Reynolds Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) POLICE SAY MEXICAN METH MAJOR PROBLEM FOR THE AREA HARRISONBURG -- Four illegal aliens charged with conspiring to deal 500 grams or more of methamphetamine are scheduled for trial in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia in Harrisonburg later this month. The illegal aliens, from Mexico and El Salvador, are among seven defendants charged in an alleged drug conspiracy from which officials say they seized 11 ounces of meth and 23 firearms. Most of the guns were seized from one defendant who is a U.S. citizen, according to court records. If convicted of federal drug conspiracy, the defendants would face a minimum of 10 years in prison and more if they have prior felony convictions, officials say. From State To Federal The case is set for trial Aug. 23-24, more than six months after state and federal authorities seized $25,000 worth of methamphetamine, two firearms and $1,000 from an apartment in the Chestnut Ridge complex in Harrisonburg, according to a statement from the RUSH Drug Task Force. Days earlier, police raided a room at the Magnolia Motel in Rockingham County and seized 21 firearms, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and 2 ounces of meth from co-defendants, the statement says. The task force and agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs and Enforcement, and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms participated in the raids. Since the February raids, the case has gone from having five defendants to seven and from state to federal courts. The most recent federal indictment includes Joel Guillen-Castellanos, 20, an illegal alien from El Salvador, and his brother Ivan Guillen-Castellanos, 22, who was in the country on a work permit when arrested. Three other defendants -- Zacarias Meza-Duran, 23; Guillermo Meza-Duran, 21; and Juan Casteneda-Renteria, 19 -- are from Mexico. The five foreign defendants are in the custody of the U.S. Marshals service pending trial, according to court records. The two others charged in the indictment, Eric Clark Turner, 39, and Kimberly Dawn Litten, 35, are on bond awaiting trial, according to court records. Turner is from Rockingham County. It's not clear where Litten resides. Both are U.S. citizens. Most Meth From Mexico Investigators don't know where the methamphetamine seized in the case originated, said Special Agent Tom Murphy, coordinator of the RUSH Drug Task Force. But meth from Mexico is a major problem for police in this area and around the country, he said. "Eighty percent of all the meth in the U.S. is coming from Mexico," Murphy said. "It's at least that here, if not more." The prevalence of Mexico-based meth is due in part, he says, to a decline in domestically manufactured meth. New laws that restrict sales of the drugs' prime ingredients, ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, have put a crimp in domestic production, law enforcement officials say. But those ingredients are still readily available in Mexico, Murphy says. "Since they have an unlimited supply, they can make as much [meth] as they want and bring it across to the U.S." "Superlabs" in Mexico manufacture 60 to 100 pounds of meth a day, he said. And by using low-level smugglers or "mules," the organization can continue, even after border agents arrest smugglers, Murphy said. "There's no question," he added, "that most of what we're fighting in this area is methamphetamine coming from Mexico." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman