Pubdate: Wed, 16 Aug 2006 Source: Wisconsin State Journal (WI) Copyright: 2006 Madison Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.madison.com/wsj/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/506 Author: Jason Stein Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CANDIDATES SHARE METH-BEATING PLANS Recently released state figures show a heartening drop in methamphetamine labs in the state - part of a national trend that could cut down on deadly explosions and help the environment. But that progress in the fight against the dangerous, addictive drug leaves state Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager and the three other candidates for her job to debate another issue: how to fight the out-of-state trafficking of the drug that now accounts for almost all of the meth seized in Wisconsin. That's making the struggle against meth more like the fight against other drugs, such as cocaine and heroin - a campaign against sophisticated, sometimes international, traffickers, experts said. "There are, in fact, fewer meth labs popping up around the state, but that's not the same as saying the meth abuse problem has gone away," said Mike Scott, director of the Center for Problem-Oriented Policing affiliated with UW- Madison. "As important as it is to reduce the local production of meth, one likely consequence is there's going to be more meth that's produced elsewhere and trafficked into the state of Wisconsin." An addictive stimulant with devastating effects on both users and their communities, meth is found more in the northwest and western parts of the state than in south-central areas such as Dane County. But its frightening effects and the possibility of it spreading into other areas have made it one of the key issues in the race for attorney general, an office that supports local police in combating drugs. State Department of Justice figures show a drop in the number of in-state meth labs - often little more than a tiny operation improvised in a bathtub or car trunk - broken up this year. In the first half of 2006, authorities dismantled 22 meth labs in Wisconsin, putting the state on track to come in below last year's total of 56 meth labs and possibly the fewest labs found since the 38 discovered in 2000. Scott said the likely explanation for the drop in lab discoveries is there are fewer of them to find since they peaked at 112 shut down in 2003. Lautenschlager attributed the decrease in part to increased enforcement. It may also be an effect of a new state law that makes it more difficult to obtain the cold medication pseudophedrine, a key chemical in the production of meth. The drop is part of a national trend and has real benefits, since the labs use toxic chemicals that can explode, poison or burn and pollute the environment, said Scott, who's published a guide for law enforcement on fighting the drug. But sophisticated labs in places such as Mexico have taken up the slack with highly addictive forms of meth, said Dean Roland, sheriff of Burnett County in northwest Wisconsin. "The quality of methamphetamine that's coming out of Mexico is higher, with no increase in cost," said Roland, a Republican. "Our usage is still right up there. That hasn't diminished any, but our (local) labs have." State Crime Laboratory analysis of seized meth has shown the share of the drug made outside Wisconsin has risen from about 85 percent to 95 percent, Lautenschlager said. Lautenschlager, a Democrat, is optimistic about the effects of enforcement efforts, saying that local law enforcement is seeing fewer new users in northwest Wisconsin and that figures here compare well to those of other states. She pointed to the number of meth cases handled by the crime lab, which dropped from a record high 726 in 2005 to a projected 522 this year based on the first half of 2006. "You see those areas where the numbers are going down are where we've had the most intensive efforts on our meth initiative," she said. "I think that's why we can be optimistic." All three of Lautenschlager's challengers dispute that. They say Lautenschlager hasn't done enough to fight meth use, which rose rapidly during her first years as attorney general. "It's not subsiding. It's changing," Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk, a Democratic primary challenger, said of the problem. Waukesha County District Attorney Paul Bucher, a Republican candidate, agreed, saying he hears from sheriffs and district attorneys in northwest Wisconsin that the problem is still daunting. "I don't dispute the (Department of Justice) numbers. I dispute the conclusion," he said. But the bigger dispute is over what to do about meth trafficking and abuse. Lautenschlager said her office has staff in regions with high levels of meth abuse and has been working with and training local police and social service agencies to make arrests, expand treatment and protect children endangered by addicted parents. Falk said the attorney general can do more, including lobbying the federal government to designate western Wisconsin a federal high-intensity drug-trafficking area, which would mean more federal money for meth enforcement, and working to increase funding for treatment programs. "We need to hold (abusers) accountable and we need to provide treatments so they don't reoffend," she said. J.B. Van Hollen, a Republican candidate and former U.S. attorney for the Western District of Wisconsin, said the federal drug-trafficking designation carries with it more red tape than money and resources. "A lot of money goes into bureaucracy," he said. Van Hollen said he'd use his contacts as a former district attorney and U.S. attorney to work with more local law enforcement groups and states to fight trafficking into Wisconsin. Van Hollen's Republican opponent Paul Bucher said he'd create a meth task force in northwest Wisconsin and shift existing resources in the department to assign three more agents to that area. Bucher also wants to restore the Division of Narcotics enforcement within the Department of Justice, which was made a bureau and folded into another division by Lautenschlager as a cost-saving measure. Ultimately, voters need to understand that fighting meth trafficking is a federal and even international issue that goes beyond what state officials can do on their own, Scott said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman