Pubdate: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 Source: Intelligencer, The (Wheeling, WV) Copyright: 2006 The Intelligencer & Wheeling News Register Contact: http://www.theintelligencer.net/news/feedback.asp Website: http://www.theintelligencer.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1633 Author: Betheny Holstein, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) EXPLOSIVE METH LABS THREATEN NEIGHBORHOODS GLEN DALE -- Methamphetamine labs are easy to set up and can be portable, which leads to many being located in neighborhoods, said Douglas Sturm, an expert on those who make the drug. The chemicals used to make the product also can be extremely toxic and explosive, which puts the surrounding community in danger, he added. Sturm, an officer with the Parkersburg Violent Crime and Narcotics Task Force, presented a program at John Marshall High School on the dangers of methamphetamine labs not only to the people involved with the production of the drugs but also for the members of the community who happen to be close to the lab's location. "When you think of a meth lab, you probably picture something like a high school chemistry lab, like an actual laboratory,"Sturm said. "But there is nothing complex about it. There are no high-tech gadgets or gizmos." A major problem with methamphetamine production is that most of the chemicals, the byproducts and the processes involved can produce large explosions, and Sturm said he has dealt with at least 15 fires and explosions that are suspected of being caused by meth labs. Sturm described the process of the manufacture of methamphetamine and how dangerous all the chemicals are that can be used in the process. Many of them will cause burns if they come into contact with the skin, and some of the byproducts of the chemicals are equally dangerous, he said. In fact, one of the byproducts is phosphine gas, which Sturm said is like mustard gas and can be fatal if it is not ventilated. Additionally, he described how few items are actually needed to make the drug, and he said most meth labs are very portable operations, which people frequently move from place to place to avoid detection. "These things are very compact, and very small," Sturm said. "If you walked into a place and didn't know what you were looking at, you wouldn't see it." Sturm said most people who make the drug do so for their own personal use and to sell enough to be able to buy new supplies to make more for themselves. Also, he pointed out that the people who use methamphetamine are equally divided between males and females, whereas with many other drugs, the user profile is dominated by men. "Meth is probably the most addictive drug out there," Sturm said. "I am not saying that if you try meth one time, you are addicted, but there is a strong possibility it could happen." The workshop was presented by the Marshall County Solid Waste Authority and the Marshall County Commission. Roger Frame, who serves on the solid waste authority, said the point of holding the workshop was to spread public awareness of the dangers methamphetamine labs pose. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman