Pubdate: Mon, 10 Apr 2006 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2006 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH HUNTING ON I-26 CAN BE A LONELY JOB MARSHALL -- J.R. Shelton isn't the talkative type. He can sit in his car on Interstate 26 for hours, silently watching the cars go by. About the only words he says are to Ben, the drug dog in the back of his Madison County Sheriff's Department car. But Shelton doesn't need a lot of words. He has a sixth sense for which car, among the hundreds he sees every week driving through Madison County on I-26, is carrying drugs. And Ben has a nose beyond belief for finding them, once Shelton has stopped a car and had a look inside. Sheriffs John Ledford and David Kent Harris of Unicoi County, Tenn., believe I-26 is a major corridor for methamphetamine, a cheap drug people whip up in kitchens, bathrooms and back seats from over-the- counter medicines. The high can last for days, and the drug often gives its abusers an almost supernatural strength and endurance. Perils Of Meth Addicts may crash for days between highs. They may lose their teeth from the corrosive chemicals. They lose jobs, family and fortunes. But try telling that to someone whose only thought is to get more of it. That's why they're dangerous and why two or three times a week, the Sheriff's Department's drug officers head up the interstate. Ledford said the drugs seem to be coming from Tennessee and headed to Asheville and beyond. There aren't many other ways to get it through Madison. The interstate is where the officers go to score. It was sunny and warm in Marshall when Shelton and the three other drug officers -- Capt. Buddy Harwood and Detectives Kip Aldridge and Jeff Neill -- left the Sheriff's Department, but it's hazy and cold at Sams Gap, near the Tennessee state line, where the officers set to work. Traffic on the interstate is sporadic -- a clot of cars, then nothing for minutes. Shelton, his mixture of chewing tobacco and snuff in his cheek, sits with his window down, fresh breezes blowing through his military haircut. Ben snoozes in back of the police car, a bed made where the back seat had been. They're working the eastbound lanes. "You develop a sense" for who's carrying drugs, Shelton says. "Some throw up their hand (when they see a cop), some grab the wheel and stare straight." Some look nervous, and some try not to look nervous. Seeking Probable Cause Law enforcement officers can't stop a motorist without what they call probable cause -- some infraction of the law. It can be as simple as not wearing a seat belt and as stupid as weaving between lanes. Not many people are dumb enough to hold drugs up where they're visible to an officer lying low. But you'd be surprised, Shelton said. "Usually, if we fall in behind them in a marked car, they'll eat it or throw it out or try to hide it in a better place," he says. When that happens, officers have their probable cause. Shelton's car at the crest of Sams Gap isn't visible to oncoming traffic until the cars are about a quarter-mile away and coming up fast. The deputy has the drop on motorists, and many going too fast smile sheepishly or in a worried way when they zoom by. But the sergeant isn't biting. He watches a car with two young people in the front seat and two bikes on the back. He merely glances at a family van as it passes. In recent years, North Carolina has seen growing usage of methamphetamine, sometimes known as "meth." The State Bureau of Investigation reported nine methamphetamine lab busts in 1999. In 2003, that number had grown to 177. Law enforcement officers in North Carolina swooped in on 243 labs last year. Most of the labs have been found in Western North Carolina, where rural areas help hide the pungent, ammonia smell that comes from making meth. The drug is responsible for a whole raft of social problems. Parents amped up on the drug can't feed or take care of their children, who fall behind in school and behind in emotional development. Because users are often unable to work, they apply for food stamps and other social services. Addicts can be violent toward their families and law enforcement officials. Their behavior is unpredictable. At 10:21 a.m., Shelton hasn't done much -- which is a good thing, because his traffic citation book has only four tickets, should he pull someone for some infraction and actually have to write them up. "I want the big haul," he says to Harwood, who pulls his big SUV in front of the sergeant's car on Sams Gap, the better to hide it. "Supposed to get almost 70 degrees today," Shelton tells the captain. "It won't on top of this mountain," Harwood says through the rolled- down window of his car. Police Support System Shelton's got everything he needs. In green fatigues, he's got a huge service weapon strapped to his leg. He's wearing a radio and a cell phone. He's a radio click away from dispatchers finding out anything he needs to know, and what they can't tell him he can call up on the laptop bolted to the console next to him in the car. He's driving an eight-cylinder Crown Vic that tops out at 180 mph. He even has a cardboard car freshener wedged into the dome light overhead. And he's got Ben, his partner since January, in back. "You've got to be patient to do this," he said as the umpteenth car of the midmorning went by. A former manager of a concrete business, he's been in law enforcement for six years, a job no different from anyone else's, he said, except that it requires him to be a little more careful than the average Joe. He doesn't think about the danger. If you did, you couldn't do the work, he said. "You hear that?" Harwood says to Shelton, referring to trucker traffic over the CB radio. "Dog on the back of a motorcycle." "I don't think Ben would ride on the back of a motorcycle," Sgt. Shelton says. Sure enough, within seconds a motorcycle whizzes by with a little white dog sitting in a milk crate wired to the back of the bike. The officers laugh. "Just when you'd thought you'd seen it all," the captain says. A red Chevy pickup passes, and Shelton zeros in. He checks for traffic, pulls onto the highway and rapidly accelerates to make up ground. In less than 20 seconds he's behind the truck and calling in its tag, asking dispatchers to find out if it's stolen or not. The driver, a young man in a turned-around New York Yankees baseball cap, creeps along at less than 50 mph. He may be nervous, he may be slow, but he's just given Shelton probable cause. Shelton hits the switches to the siren and light bar on his car. It's surprisingly loud from where he sits. The sergeant is pure textbook as he approaches the vehicle. He stands behind the driver when he asks for license and registration, so he's not surprised by someone throwing open a door. He's careful not to stick his hands inside the truck. People can grab you. Aldridge arrives as backup, and Shelton asks the driver to get out of his car and for permission to search his vehicle. He gets it, then gets Ben. Ben, happy to get out of the car, is all ears and eagerness. Shelton squeezes a noisy toy, the kind kids take to the bathtub. It's Ben signal to go to work. He sniffs the outside of the truck, then jumps inside to have a nose around there. Nothing. "Son, you're going to have to do more than 48 (mph) when you're going down the interstate," the sergeant tells the young driver. "You're holding up traffic." If nothing else, this is good training for Ben, Shelton says after he gets back in his car. The more Ben practices, the better he'll get. The sergeant is proud of his partner. Ben, 2 years old, was born in Mansfield, England. His trainer picked him out of 35 dogs at the kennel. Shelton's telling a story about Ben when he throws the car in drive and takes off after a Honda, heading south toward Wolf Laurel. He comes up fast, and the driver, a woman, slows to 50 mph. License tags are valid, dispatchers tell him. No outstanding warrants on the registered owner. Shelton rides behind her, moves over the right lane. In the distance, the lower hills of Mars Hill sweep out before him. It's still hazy overhead. The woman's passenger, a man, flicks the ash of his cigarette out his window. "No PC," the sergeant said. He turns on the air conditioning, so that Ben doesn't get hot. It gets chilly real fast. He watches the car pull away. "Sometimes you do, sometimes you don't," he said of catching meth heads. "It's just a wait-and-see game." He slows, pulls over and sets up behind a guardrail near the Wolf Laurel exit, waiting for more traffic. He's not looking for a particular person or a particular car. He knows he won't get most of them. "It's just getting the right ones," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman