Pubdate: Wed, 08 Feb 2006 Source: Arizona Range News (AZ) Copyright: 2006 Arizona Range News Contact: (520) 384-3572 Website: http://www.willcoxrangenews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3684 Note: Weekly, published Weds. Author: Ainslee S. Wittig Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. THREE METH LABS FOUND IN WILLCOX Three suspected methamphetamine labs were found Friday during a search at a residence on the corner of Grant Street and First Avenue in Willcox. The property, enclosed by a fiberglass panel fence which obstructs the view of the yard and residence from the outside, is owned by [Name redacted], 46. Flasks, chemicals and tubing were found when a search warrant for [Name redacted]' property was executed by the Willcox Police Department and the Phoenix -based HIDTA (High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area) task force at 8 a.m., said Police Chief Jake Weaver. "We got information about the residence from a suspect in an unrelated arrest last week." Weaver said. "We notified the meth task force and set up surveillance. We saw a State Land sign inside a bus on the property. We called State Land and they said they shouldn't have that, so we obtained a search warrant for stolen property." "In the process, we saw items likely used in a meth lab inside the bus, and we backed out and went to court for another search warrant," he said. "We left security at the site all night and went in with the warrant this morning," Weaver said Friday. [Name redacted], 46, was not home. Weaver said [Name redacted] served time in prison in Oklahoma for manufacturing methamphetamine, and was then reportedly transferred to Arizona to serve time for another conviction, but Weaver was not sure what that was. The meth labs "appeared to be inactive," however there were items that could still be dangerous, he said. "We found an item that had numerous wires coming from it, which could be an explosive device. It resembled a heating element, but it will be buried and detonated in case," Weaver said. IEDs (improvised explosive devices) are often found at meth labs to hurt or kill officers, he said. The HIDTA officers and Willcox police collected evidence and checked for fingerprints that might indicate [Name redacted] was involved with the suspected labs, Weaver said. Evidence will be forwarded to Arizona Attorney General's Office to seek a Grand Jury indictment, he said. Weaver noted the dangers of manufacturing meth, including the mixture of chemicals that can be explosive and the toxic residue left behind. "He could've blown that neighborhood up with just one lab. And we've found three, so far," he said. Weaver said the Willcox Police Department has done everything in its power to stop methamphetamine use and production in Willcox, including writing an ordinance that has been approved to limit and restrict the sale of psuedoephedrine, an ingredient in meth, and put on public service advertisements warning of the dangers of meth at the local Rex Allen Theater where kids will see them. Also, Weaver connected local physician, Dr. Dawn Walker, with the Partnership for a Drug Free America, and then spearheaded the start of the Anti-Meth Task Force in Willcox, with the combined efforts of Northern Cochise Community Hospital, Willcox Against Substance Abuse and the police department. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman