Pubdate: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 Source: McDowell News, The (NC) Copyright: 2006 Media General Inc. All Rights Reserved Contact: http://www.mcdowellnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1765 Author: Richelle Bailey METH GETTING THE BOOT Drug Ops Have Cut Numbers Drastically Operation Speedflick. Operation Roadrunner. Operation IceMelt. Operation Ice and Iron. They're all responsible for taking methamphetamine out of homes in McDowell and across the western region. U.S. Attorney Gretchen C.F. Shappert of the western district of North Carolina, joined by agents with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the N.C. State Bureau of Investigation, McDowell County sheriff's deputies, Marion police officers and other regional law enforcement, held a press conference in Marion Thursday as part of the U.S. Justice Department's National Methamphetamine Awareness Day. McDowell has led the state the last two years in the number of meth lab busts, according to SBI statistics. The purpose of Thursday's event was to generate awareness about the damaging effects of meth abuse on individuals, families and American communities. Meth is an illegal stimulant drug that has acute toxic effects and can produce long-term physiological problems. In 2005, the DEA and SBI, working with local law enforcement, focused on meth lab conspiracy cases which targeted repeat offenders who were "cooks" and those involved with them who obtained chemicals and/or distributed meth. These law enforcement efforts, combined with new state pseudoephedrine legislation that came into effect in January, has led to a halt in the growth of clandestine laboratories seized in North Carolina for the first time since 1999. As of Nov. 27, 183 labs had been seized statewide in 2006, compared to 300 labs as of Nov. 23, 2005. The number of labs seized in McDowell County has been stable since Aug. 1. "We are here today in McDowell County to highlight law enforcement's cooperative efforts locally against those who would produce or cook methamphetamine in the western part of North Carolina. We also want to warn anyone who would smuggle in or distribute imported methamphetamine in our western counties that these concentrated law enforcement efforts will continue," Shappert stated. "We want the hard-working and law-abiding citizens of every diverse group of people living in McDowell County and in the western district of North Carolina to know the nature of the ongoing work of law enforcement and prosecutors and to know how truly wicked methamphetamine is to users and to the communities in which they live." Since 2001, local, state and federal authorities have sent dozens of people from McDowell and surrounding counties to federal prison in connection with meth conspiracies. With the recent stabilization of lab seizures, law enforcement and federal prosecutors have shifted their focus currently to the threat posed by Mexican traffickers who currently dominate the meth market in North Carolina, said the U.S. attorney. Shappert thanked local and regional law enforcement officers for their ongoing commitment to battle the meth problem in western North Carolina. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine