Pubdate: Sat, 11 Mar 2006 Source: Montrose Daily Press (CO) Contact: http://www.montrosepress.com/shared-content/perform/?domain_name=montrosepress.com&form_template=letters Copyright: 2006 Montrose Daily Press Website: http://www.montrosepress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4108 Author: Katharhynn Heidelberg, Daily Press News Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?247 (Crime Policy - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) DRUG TASK FORCE NEEDS COOPERATION IN BATTLING METH'S STRANGLEHOLD MONTROSE - From the home labs of past years, to the Mexican imports currently being seen, methamphetamine has taken hold of the Western Slope and Montrose law enforcement officials said there's no simple way to stem the tide of social ills it unleashes. "The meth problem is very significant," Delta/Montrose Task Force Agent Jack Haynes said. "It's becoming the dominant drug of choice." The task force reported incidences involving three primary drugs, with marijuana and cocaine cited as well as meth in the majority of its cases. "Meth in our opinion is the worst and is the one we see - we actually see it more than marijuana and we know marijuana is widely used," Haynes said. Last October alone, meth accounted for the bulk of the agency's work: 54 percent of its active cases, 61 percent of its intelligence and 54 percent of requests made from other agencies for assistance. "We consider (meth) a pretty big problem because weekly, we're in contact with, or dealing with people who admit to the deputies that they have a substance-abuse problem," Montrose County Undersheriff Dick Deines said. "That's nothing new, but in the last two or three years, we've definitely seen an increase in meth use and people that are hooked on it." As have other officials, Deines pointed to widespread social problems due in part to meth use, problems that indicate it's not just the addict's worry. "They want it that bad, that they will break into houses. They will steal and not only from unknown individuals," he said. "Initially, they start stealing from their own family members" and have been known to go on to commit other crimes to fund meth or other drug habits. Off the Radar Meth is by no means the only drug causing problems in Montrose - marijuana is prevalent and cocaine is making a comeback, the task force and other agencies said. But it is seen as the most devastating. "I think it's more addictive than any other drug I've ever dealt with or been around," Deines said. That's because meth has become more available, Haynes added, explaining that in past decades, people had to be associated with certain gangs to obtain the substance. Now, with newer methods of producing meth and greater quantities being brought across the Mexican border, the drug proliferates. "The availability of meth has become so great," Haynes said. "Cocaine did fall off the screen for a while, but now, we can find and purchase coke as easily as we can meth." Addressing America's meth epidemic will not only "take a village," but a village that understands what law enforcement can and cannot do, as well as the possible consequence of such suggestions as legalizing drugs. "This drug issue is not a drug task force problem, not a law enforcement problem. It is a community problem," Haynes said. "It has to be all of us recognizing the problem and asking, 'Do we want to combat it or bury our heads in the sand?' It takes this community to say we don't want drugs." A zero-tolerance atmosphere will discourage drug dealers from coming to roost in Montrose, but that alone isn't enough, Haynes said. Residents need to understand the way the legal system works - it isn't always as simple as phoning in an anonymous tip because one suspects his or her neighbors of dealing or using meth. Haynes said he wasn't faulting anyone, but that politicians needed to do more to address meth and the drug problem in general. "When do you hear any politicians addressing the drug issue?" he said. "From that perspective, it seems to have fallen off the radar screen. Our drug task force is barely hanging on because of funding. Who's going to combat this area's No. 1 problem?" Recent legislation in Colorado restricted the sale of products containing pseudoephedrine, meth's active ingredient. Haynes said that has "significantly reduced" local and domestic meth labs, but it remains relatively easy to find a supply source, such as Mexican and Californian super labs. Controlling the supply from Mexico requires politicians to see the meth issue in terms of immigration concerns that now focus on economics. "I haven't heard one politician yet say a word about the drug problem being caused by the drug cartels and the network of illegal immigrants," Haynes said. "That's what I'd like to see stopped." Haynes said in a previous story concerning international meth supply sources that not all immigrants were necessarily drug runners. Since the Daily Press spoke to Haynes, both state and national politicians have offered measures aimed at combatting the meth problem (see Sunday's Daily Press), including Colorado Rep. Josh Penry's resolution urging a Congressional partnership with the Mexican government to stop flow the trans-border flow of meth. That resolution unanimously passed the state House Wednesday. Does Criminalizing Meth Work? Meth is classified as a schedule II controlled substance with limited legitimate medical use. Possessing, distributing or manufacturing it is a crime and those convicted of such offenses in the local Seventh Judicial District have been sentenced to prison - most recently, a man who sought Community Corrections and said he'd disassociated himself from the meth circle. He received five years. "Possibly, it (prison) isn't the best way, but I don't know what else is available to us," Deines said. "Prevention is the best answer, but once they are hooked on it and will not give it up, or give up committing crimes to obtain more, then the only answer is to be incarcerated." Deines said a stint in the county jail has kept criminal addicts away from meth - but not always for long. "If you talk to them, they will tell you that more than likely when they get out, they will find some more meth. We've had numerous inmates admit that, even though they look and feel better. They know in their hearts they will use it again. that's what's so scary about it." Whether incarceration is effective in deterring meth use is "the million dollar question," Assistant District Attorney Mark Adams said. "I think the system is helping people, particularly those that want to be helped, who will face up to their addiction and make a decision to take advantage of treatment programs the justice system is now offering," he said. Adams said, however, that prison-based treatment doesn't always work. "Clearly in a lot of cases, it's failing. It's a complicated issue, too complicated than to say we just need to warehouse everybody," he said. As for legalizing meth? "It's too dangerous a drug," Deines said. "It's too habit forming." While he could at least understand the arguments of those advocating for the legalization of other drugs, Deines said no to meth. "Meth is the one drug I'd say 'absolutely not,' because I don't know how you'd control the addiction," he said. "It alters too many things. I wish I had the answers." Chief Probation Officer Carol Warner said much the same. "I'm not for criminalizing behavior that just hurts yourself, but when you learn about the fall out, the injury to children, to elderly, to families, you realize this (meth use) is not a victimless crime," she said. "They (users) don't have the intention of hurting anybody, but they do." Harvey Palefsky, a local public defender, said he's seen enough of meth to make him re-evaluate his opinion concerning legalization. "There was a time I thought if we legalized drugs, with controls, a lot of the money we spent on 'the Drug War' could be spent on treatment; that was the answer. That was before meth." Palefsky said he was no longer certain, but he also wasn't certain current approaches were working. "I think we need to rechannel our energies. Just locking people up and letting them out on the street again is not the answer either." Nor, said Montrose County Judge John Mitchel, would legalizing meth make its attendant social woes disappear. "The devastation we see is in families," he said, pointing to financial hardships, evictions and foreclosures that come about when meth addicts don't pay the bills. The drug also takes a toll on familial relationships and has been linked to domestic abuse, including child neglect. "It just snowballs," Mitchel said. "Kids in this situation are in danger. It affects every single aspect in this community. I think it (legalization) is a terrible idea." District Judge Dennis Friedrich added that legalization was out of the hands of judges. "It's not my decision. It's a societal decision," he said. Haynes said he is opposed to legalizing drugs, even marijuana. "We have, apparently, a large segment of our society that thinks marijuana ought to be OK," he said. "Marijuana is a stepping stone to all drug problems. In almost every case where there's meth or coke, there's also marijuana." 'We're Going to Deal With It' Though meth has become a popular media subject in the past few years, it has been eroding society for quite some time. "The problem with meth is that is has been killing and ruining children for years," Probation Officer Bill Jackson said. Originally manufactured in rural areas so as not to attract the notice of authorities, meth began spreading to metro areas and then made its way to large population centers in the northeast. That, Jackson said, is when the national media began paying attention. "Nobody gave a damn whether somebody's trailer would blow up, but when it was an apartment in Cleveland," that got attention. "...Now that Newsweek says meth's a problem, it is." Other drugs once captured the public's attention the way meth is doing now, he added, pointing to the crack cocaine epidemic in the 1990s. "What are we going to do with meth? The same thing we did with crack cocaine. We're going to deal with it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake