Pubdate: Sat, 08 Jul 2006 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2006 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Tony Rizzo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH MISSILE MEMORABLE Rocket apparently was ready to launch evidence away from scene. "It was absolutely the most unusual thing I've seen." Cpl. Tom Walley Drug dealers aren't typically rocket scientists. Then again, Missouri Highway Patrol Cpl. Tom Walley's encounter with a pair of Kentucky men he stopped for speeding last summer didn't turn out to be a typical drug bust. Not after Walley opened the trunk of their 1990 Ford Thunderbird and a 4-foot rocket raised into an upright position. Eight explosive charges at the base of the rocket were attached by wires to the cigarette lighter on the car's dash. A flick of a switch from inside the car would have sent the rocket and its payload skyward. "It was plugged in. It was ready to go," Walley said Friday. He and the officer with him "just looked at each other," he said. Then they spotted what looked like several pipe bombs in the trunk. "We decided not to mess with it and let the bomb squad do their thing," Walley said. After unplugging the device, troopers found bags containing two pounds of methamphetamine inside the rocket. The car's occupants, Joseph Calvin Seidl, 39, and Michael Ray Sullivan, 41, were charged in federal court with conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. This week, Seidl pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Jefferson City. Sullivan pleaded guilty last month. They are now awaiting sentencing and face 20 years to life in prison. Walley said he was sitting in the median on Interstate 70 when the Thunderbird came up fast. By the time he trained his radar gun on the car, it was rapidly slowing down. He pulled the men over and when they gave conflicting stories about what they were doing and where they were going, the trooper asked if he could search the car. When they refused, he called for a backup trooper and a drug-sniffing dog. While waiting, Sullivan started running and threw something on the ground, which turned out to be a small amount of meth. Sullivan was caught and arrested and troopers began to search the car. First they found $12,000 in cash in the passenger compartment. Seidl later claimed that it was money he saved from his job as a "chicken catcher" for Tyson Foods. When Walley opened the trunk, he saw the 3- to 4-inch diameter rocket that was pulled from a prone position by a series of pulleys and ropes. In 12 years of patrolling Missouri's highways and arresting numerous drug runners he had never come across such a device rigged, which apparently was to jettison evidence before police could seize it. "It was absolutely the most unusual thing I've seen," he said. He has already been asked to share the experience at a conference for other drug investigators. "It was not only unusual for me, it was something incredibly unusual for them," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman