Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jun 2006 Source: Oroville Mercury-Register (CA) Copyright: 2006 Oroville Mercury Register Contact: http://www.orovillemr.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2277 Author: Greg Welter, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) METH LAB BUSTS WAY DOWN, BUT NOT METH ARRESTS The number of methamphetamine laboratories busted by county drug agents in 2005 was less than half that of 2004, but the number of people arrested for using and selling the drug stayed about the same. Those are among several findings from the Butte Interagency Narcotics Task Force, which released its 20th annual report this week on the fight against drugs. Just 17 labs were seized by BINTF in 2005, compared with 39 in 2004. However, the number of people arrested on charges of selling and possessing methamphetamine last year was 225 -- consistent with the previous four years. While the use of heroin and cocaine is on the rise locally, those drugs only figured in 14 narcotics arrests last year. BINTF said methamphetamine is still the drug of choice in Butte County. District Attorney Mike Ramsey said the focus of methamphetamine production has shifted to Mexico, and to a handful of "super labs" primarily operating in California's central valley. Ramsey said some of the essential ingredients in meth, including psuedoephedrine, are getting harder to purchase in the United States and are being smuggled in from Mexico. California restricted the sale of cold medicines containing psuedoephedrine to three packages per customer about four years ago, and in October will require retailers to keep the cold medications in a secure area behind a counter. BINTF operates a north and south division, each with its own commander. Officers on loan from local law-enforcement agencies, usually for a year, make up the drug-enforcement team. In 2005 the task force opened 358 cases and closed 367. Agents served 75 search warrants and arrested 434 people on both drug-related and nondrug-related charges. BINTF North Commander Vic Lacey said about 40 percent of those arrested in 2005 were either on probation or parole. More significant, according to authorities, is the number of children county drug agents have pulled from labs, drug-infested homes and other dangerous environments and placed in protective custody. That number totaled 145 last year. BINTF agents encountered 233 children in the course of drug investigations last year, down from the peak in 2004, when 331 children were found to be endangered by adult drug use or manufacturing. The county's Drug Endangered Children program, started in 1993, has become a national model for rescuing children from drug environments. Ramsey said drug arrests made by BINTF are scattered throughout the county, with no community or rural area immune from the problem. Chico accounted for 133 arrests in 2005, Paradise 51, Oroville 47, Gridley-Biggs 25 and the unincorporated county area 178. Agents seized assets from suspects totaling about $77,000, and took 152 weapons out of circulation. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman