Pubdate: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 Source: Morganton News Herald, The (NC) Copyright: 2006, Media General Inc. Contact: http://www.morganton.com/aboutus/letters.shtml Website: http://www.morganton.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1623 Author: Todd Huffman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COMMITTEE COMBATS METH USE LENOIR - A congressional committee brought together area leaders on Tuesday in an effort to combat methamphetamine use. The committee field hearing was an opportunity for local leaders to make impassioned pleas to congressmen that they hope will be heard in Washington. District Attorney Jay Gaither says that money is the key to cutting off the supply of meth and ensuring that jail time awaits those who break the law. "The spike (of meth lab seizures) in 2003 and 2004 are just now hitting the courts," Gaither says. "Punishment for possessing meth is woefully weak ... We need new prisons and new laws." The committee was made up of U.S. Reps. Patrick McHenry, R-10th, Virginia Foxx, R-5th, and Mark Souder, R-Ind. Souder serves as chairman, McHenry, vice chairman. Stiffening the law, as Gaither requested, was part of the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005. Authored by McHenry and signed into effect in March, the law ensures that people who manufacture meth in the presence of children can get 20 years in prison, up from the previous 10-year maximum sentence. Caldwell County Sheriff Gary Clark says the drug is a serious threat to children in the area. Three out of four meth lab seizures in Caldwell County take place where children live or play, Clark says. Tightening the laws and reducing access to meth might have helped Lynne Starr-Vasquez's son. She told his story to the committee with a trembling voice and tears streaming down her face. She spoke about her son's addiction to the drug; she spoke about her decision to turn him in; she spoke about the struggle to protect her grandchildren from their parents. After a pause to compose herself, she spoke about the time her son ran 10 needles full of meth into his body in an attempt to kill himself. "He said he was trying to bust his heart or blow a vein in his brain," she says. He didn't succeed. Instead, her son entered federal prison three days later to begin a seven-year sentence for conspiracy to manufacture meth, Starr-Vasquez says. It's getting better, but more work needs to be done. Limiting the availability of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine has helped keep local meth labs out of business, says Sheriff C. Philip Beyers of Rutherford County. "The first three months of 2006 have resulted in a 30 percent decrease in meth lab seizures statewide," he says. Forty labs were discovered statewide in March 2005 versus 14 labs in March 2006. McHenry says the hearing produced some good information for the subcommittee. The biggest item, he says, is that the time from arrest to prosecution needs to be reduced. The nature of the meth epidemic is changing as well, McHenry says. The law restricting ephedrine sales will also lead to more meth being imported from Mexico, he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin