Pubdate: Sat, 08 Jul 2006 Source: Daily Reporter-Herald (CO) Copyright: 2006 The Daily Reporter-Herald Contact: http://www.lovelandfyi.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1710 Author: Pamela Dickman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/Mark+Souder (Mark Souder) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) LOCAL OFFICIALS ASK FOR FEDERAL HELP IN FIGHT AGAINST METH Every day, area prosecutors and law enforcement officers battle a "perfect storm" ravaging the community environmentally, socially, emotionally and criminally. On Friday, a panel of local officials asked the federal government for help combating methamphetamine. One suggestion: Close the borders, cut off the source. The highly addictive drug is taking over communities, tearing apart families, monopolizing law enforcement efforts, contributing to violent and property crimes and affecting employers, the said. People involved in the battle -- three district attorneys from Northern Colorado, a sheriff, a local drug task force commander, a county commissioner and the wife of a user who started support groups - -- acknowledged at a U.S. congressional hearing in Loveland on Friday that the problem and solution are complex. Communities need treatment, prevention, intervention and more money to battle the drug, they said. But communities also need help cutting off the source. In Colorado, the largest source is Mexico, said Lt. Craig Dodd, commander of the Larimer County Drug Task Force, Denver Drug Enforcement Administration Agent Jeffrey Sweetin and 13th Judicial District Attorney Bob Watson. About 80 percent of the drug consumed in the state comes from Mexico, traveling up Interstate 25 then east and west on interstates 70 and 76. The statistic is based on a drop in small clandestine labs as well as information gleaned in specific investigations, the officials said. Five witnesses -- officers and prosecutors -- all suggested that tighter border security is a necessary weapon in the battle. However, Indiana Congressman Mark Souder -- a Republican who attended the hearing with Colorado Congresswoman Marilyn Musgrave and who described the drug and its ripple effect as "a perfect storm" -- questioned that assertion. After visiting a southern Border Patrol post and seeing confiscated heroin and marijuana, he said he isn't sure. "They're not getting any meth at the border," Souder said. "Why not?" Is it, instead, coming from Canada? he asked. Are illegal immigrants carrying it to the United States as passage fare? All local investigation, said Dodd, Sweetin and Weld County Sheriff John Cooke, points to it coming north from Mexico into Larimer and Weld counties. They could not say how it is getting past patrols, just that it is, and federal help is needed. "We have to have border enforcement with all the drugs coming into our country," Musgrave agreed. "I daresay we have to focus on our northern borders as well." By the Numbers Larimer County 85 percent of adult drug court offenders listed methamphetamine as their drug of choice in 2004. 28 percent of juvenile drug court offenders listed meth as their drug of choice in 2005. 0 -- the number of juveniles who listed meth five years earlier. 52 children were placed out of their homes because of their parents' meth use in the first nine months of 2005. 256 meth-related child protection investigations occurred in the same period. 12.9 pounds of methamphetamine were seized by drug officers in 2005-- almost double the amount in the two prior years. Weld County 4 of the past five murders were meth-related. 50 percent of property crimes are linked to meth. 90 percent of forgeries are linked to meth. 183 children have mothers who, as inmates, participated in a Weld County Jail survey about meth. Mesa County $3 million was saved by the building of a drug treatment facility instead of a new jail. $500,000 -- the amount that will be saved each year in operations costs for the treatment facility as opposed to a jail. Source: Witnesses at a congressional committee hearing held in Loveland - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman