Pubdate: Fri, 10 Feb 2006 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Patrick Maloney Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) COPS GET INSIDE DOPE ON DRUG SITES AYLMER -- Making crystal meth is as easy as baking cookies, say officials at the Ontario Police College. Identifying the homes where this dangerous practice is happening, however, isn't nearly as simple. But a 1,200-square-foot house unveiled yesterday at the police training facility is the province's newest tool to help officers track down "clandestine" meth labs. Though the house, built at the college for $130,000, looks normal from the outside, its kitchen is teeming with the cold pills, contraptions and chemicals needed to make the deadly -- and highly addictive -- street drug. "We have obvious signs with a (marijuana) grow-op," John O'Reilly, the college's drug programs co-ordinator, said. "Meth labs are harder to find." This kitchen, he says, is what they look like from the inside: Ground-up Sudafed pills in a blender, a scale, bottles of Drano and beakers filled with other chemicals needed for the three-hour cooking process. "This truly sets the scenario," said college director Rudy Gheysen. "In the end, we will have better-trained police officers." Anyone hired by an Ontario police force must train at the Aylmer facility before starting the job. About 400 of the 1,000 new officers promised by the provincial Liberals will have graduated by spring. The house's bedrooms include three other simulations: A huge marijuana grow-op, a smaller pot operation inside a closet and an ecstasy lab. About $100,000 was spent on equipment for the trainees, including full-body decontamination suits and about 50 oxygen tanks. The whole project was bankrolled by a grant from the Community Safety and Correctional Services Ministry. Eventually, the house will also include all the potential dangers of a typical meth or marijuana operation, said O'Reilly, including trip wires and other traps. And there also are the potentially deadly tools of the trade. "(If) you come across a propane tank in these situations . . . you treat those almost as a bomb," he said, adding the house "is a great overall training facility. "It's just to get (officers-in-training) to slow down, take a look at their environment. They'll revert back to their training (on the job)." Few provincial politicians have a better understanding of the dangers posed by crystal meth than Perth-Wellington MPP John Wilkinson, who attended yesterday's event. His riding includes Perth County -- considered Ontario's meth capital. To Wilkinson, the drug, so easy and inexpensive to make, will increase its hold in Ontario and the college's new facility marks a step forward in the battle against it. "(Perth County) is where crime is trying to get a toehold," he said. "The story is our community and the province is fighting back. You've got to stop this before organized crime gets in." Wilkinson works with, but isn't a member of, the Ontario government's crystal meth task force. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin