Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jun 2006 Source: Pantagraph, The (IL) Copyright: 2006 The Pantagraph Contact: http://www.pantagraph.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/643 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) NO PROOF YET OF SPECIAL METH UNIT'S SUCCESS We wish we could be as confident as Gov. Rod Blagojevich that the state is "making a difference" on the methamphetamine problem. Arrest statistics don't prove his contention. Last week, the governor said in a prepared statement that the special Illinois State Police unit formed to track down methamphetamine labs had arrested 653 people in its first full year of operation. The unit was created in May 2005. At this time, there are no comparable statistics by which to measure this unit's success. And total meth arrests in Illinois over the past two calendar years show a decline in 2005. There were 1,264 arrests in 2004, according to state police. There were 737 last year. Some of the 653 special-unit's "first-year" arrests are included in the 2005 figures. One never knows the exact meaning of such statistics. Do they mean more "bad" guys got away? Or is stepped-up enforcement producing desired results? Year-to-year arrest trends suggest 2005 wasn't a good year for arrests. In 2004, the 21 Metropolitan Enforcement Groups (MEG) and task forces formed among law enforcement agencies throughout the state recorded the 1,264 arrests. Because meth arrests had increased from 605 arrests in 2000, six Methamphetamine Response Teams were formed by state police to concentrate on meth-related drug crimes. MEG units and the task forces then began concentrating on other illegal drugs. The true effectiveness of the special meth units can't be measured until this time next year. A state police spokesman pointed out that troopers assigned to the new meth units spent their first few weeks in learning more about the production of math and in training on how to detect and break up meth labs, so they weren't at full production for their entire year. The units also don't spend all of their time on arrests. During the first year, the units made 177 presentations to retail and business places and another 169 presentations to schools and community groups. The units also conducted 19 Drug Endangered Children training sessions for social service and public safety personnel and educators. User comments on this story) Note: All views and opinions expressed in user comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of The Pantagraph or its staff. Mac wrote on June 16, 2006 3:48 PM:"Questions, you obviously don't work in child welfare, law enforcement or the court system. This is a terrible drug that is a particular problem in central and southern Illinois. It is many times more addictive than cocaine. Addicts have an extremely poor recovery rate. The poisons used to make it can have long term effects almost as deadly as the drug itself. Talk to someone in law enforcement or child welfare about meth and then see if you think it's hyped to sell newspapers. " Dave Stump wrote on June 16, 2006 2:22 PM:"Take a walk through any small town in Southern Illinois and then tell me Meth is not a serious problem. Don't kid yourself. Meth is chewing up our kids. We can not let down our guard on this terrible problem. Look at the stats now on how much Meth is coming over the US border. Look at the money the gangs are taking in on Meth sales. We have to fight drug problems where ever they show their ugly heads. Support the efforts of those who are fighting this terrible problem." Questions wrote on June 16, 2006 9:59 AM:"Did it ever occur to you that Meth is not a significant problem in our society? According to a study released this past Wed. and reported on the AP wire (evidently the Pantagraph editorial board doesn't read these stories) "The portrayal of methamphetamine in the United States as an epidemic spreading across the country has been grossly overstated." Also, four times as many people use cocaine regularly and 30 times as many use marijuana. Lets stop pushing expensive solutions to nonexistent problems which have been hyped to sell newspapers." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman