Pubdate: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 Source: Alamogordo Daily News (NM) Copyright: 2007 Alamogordo Daily News Contact: http://www.alamogordonews.com/feedback Website: http://www.alamogordonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2997 Author: Laura London, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COALITION TAKES METH SERIOUSLY The Otero County Meth Coalition got people talking about meth Thursday night at its Methamphetamine Awareness Community Forum at First Assembly Worship Center on the corner of 10th Street and Florida Avenue. Sylvia King, substance abuse counselor and president of the Otero County Health Council, opened the forum by thanking the church and its staff for the use of their facility. She also informed everyone the Meth Coalition meets the second Tuesday of every month and the meeting is open to anyone interested in attending. King said this was the third forum the coalition has hosted, the last having occurred in April, and that each forum garners higher attendance. Thursday night found 45 to 50 people at the forum. She then introduced a 26-minute documentary titled "Meth in Las Cruces," featuring interviews with police officers battling the problem on the streets as well as ex-addicts battling it in their heads. The DVD began to skip as the documentary moved into several close-ups of meth addicts' rotten and missing teeth, also known as "meth mouth." "That was kind of gross anyway," King said as the movie was stopped. Several audience members commented on the meth mouth phenomenon once the question and answer session later ensued. She then introduced the Meth Coalition panel. Dr. Gil Heredia of White Sands Family Practice was the first of the panel to speak. He began by explaining that as a physician, he likes to get patients to think out of the box. "We prefer to practice evidence-based medicine," Heredia said, then explained the difference between that and anecdotal medical information or, the difference between something that can be proven in a laboratory as opposed to something that is never proven anywhere, merely passed by word of mouth. Heredia said getting patients to think more like doctors, in terms of evidence rather than stories, is more productive to the healing process and that the rational approach may lead to the discovery of less obvious information. He then read some statistics as listed in a federal survey on drug usage and remarked that meth usage increased steadily between 1992 and 1998, but since then there has been no significant change. He said according to officials, legal restrictions that have been imposed on the sale of cold remedies one source of meth-making ingredients has helped production go down; however, the use rate remains the same. According to Heredia, the cold remedy restrictions have simply changed the way meth dealers do business rather than making the drug locally, they import from Mexico, where the meth happens to be made in more pure form. Heredia feels that the meth problem cannot be treated through law enforcement alone, and that the War on Drugs may itself be a culprit as far as aggravating it. He said meth addicts are very difficult to rehabilitate but they can be treated if significant resources are committed. "Meth is not a police issue, it's more of a community issue," Heredia said. "... As a physician, I am frustrated at the lack of treatment options available." Heredia thinks the War on Drugs makes it more difficult for addicts to seek help as the fear of prosecution deters them from asking. Also, he said roughly 7,000 deaths per year in the country are drug related, and often happen because of impurities in the drug supplies. "I think if drugs are legalized, or at least decriminalized, it would do a lot to help that problem," the doctor said. Heredia also noted public monies are generally spent on police efforts, not drug rehabilitation. He said "no offense to law enforcement," but money should be spent on rehabilitation and prevention as well. Otero County Narcotics Enforcement Unit Agent Rick Ramsdale next took the podium and explained some of what his unit does. OCNEU is a federally funded task force that coordinates different law enforcement agencies, as well as engages in typical law enforcement activities, in the name of policing narcotics. He mentioned OCNEU also does meth awareness training incidentally his purpose at the forum. Ramsdale agreed with Dr. Heredia that meth in Otero County comes from Mexico, and there is a lot of it. He said dealers in Mexico practice business "just like Wal-Mart does, high volume and cheap." Ramsdale mentioned he has filled various roles in law enforcement over the past 14 years, with over half that time spent fighting drugs. He noted other countries focus more on prevention in their anti-drug efforts, and this seems to Ramsdale a more effective course. "I agree with the doctor (Heredia)," Ramsdale said. "Law enforcement alone won't fix it." Ramsdale advocated the one-two punch: maintain police efforts, but also work more on proactive measures, such as educating the public through things like the Methamphetamine Awareness Community Forum. Ramsdale said OCNEU has located three meth labs this year, and another three dump sites where the toxic byproducts have been discarded. "That's not many labs, but we're right on the smuggling artery so there's plenty of meth here," he said. Even so, methamphetamine is not the number one drug here; marijuana is, according to Ramsdale. "But meth causes a lot more problems," he said. The forum took a break after Agent Ramsdale's words, at which time Michael Mirabal, supervisor of the Alamogordo Department of Public Safety Narcotics Enforcement Unit, mentioned he agreed with most of what was said by Dr. Heredia and Agent Ramsdale. However, he maintained that the most important component to meth control is law enforcement. He also disagreed somewhat with Dr. Heredia as to those seeking help "If you want help, we won't prosecute." "Meth is the worst thing to hit New Mexico," Mirabal said. "It creates jobs in law enforcement." Although Mirabal is retired, he continues working on contract for DPS because he loves his work and wants to help the community. "I'm here with my wife's permission," he joked, but not really. Following the break were more speakers, including Mirabal; Steve Hicks from the Border Patrol; Santiago Rodriguez, executive director of the Otero County Council on Alcohol Abuse and Addiction; and two ex-addicts, complete with horror stories. A woman introduced simply as Kim shared her addiction story. She said she began her drug experience with marijuana and alcohol in her early teens, and by age 17 was a regular meth user. "I was dead in every sense except I had a pulse," she said. Sometime in her late 30s, Kim said she was overwhelmed by the horrible condition of her life. "I said, 'God, help me!' And then I got in trouble," she said. Kim said getting in trouble was an answer to her prayer not the answer she expected, but it probably saved her life. "It's a relief to know there's help out there," she said. "I'm so blessed. I have everything (I lost) back and then some." Ken Larson, another recovering meth user, also shared his horrors. He was once a truck driver, and spent 18 years in the drug's power. He said he served time for writing hot checks, in order to buy meth. He also shared about the time he left a brand new semi truck in Phoenix, took his last two paychecks from the trucking job and moved into a shanty town meth community. "My addiction told me I needed to live on the streets with the tweakers," Larson said. Larson said he eventually left the shanty town not to be with his wife, who was in New Mexico at the time, and certainly not to go back to work. His departure was inspired by an incident with the police, who he said would visit the area regularly to check for needles and nefarious activities. During one such occasion, a strung-out shanty town resident beamed an officer in the head with a rock. Larson said the officer was nice about it, warning the man not to persist in such behavior. So the man threw another rock, again hitting the officer's head. Police then stopped the man via several 9mm rounds in the chest. Larson returned to Otero County after leaving Phoenix. What finally interrupted his meth habit, he said, was being "busted by Officer Prudencio for DWI, twice." He said he first appeared for treatment with no teeth and only 104 pounds of weight Larson is 6 feet 4 inches tall. He is now studying to be a counselor and has been clean and sober for two and a half years. During the question and answer session that followed, a man asked about the long-term health effects of the drug and whether ex-addicts can have a normal life. "Yes," Heredia said. "The key is getting them off meth." Heredia explained a risk of depression and suicide exists for those who give it up. "Well, I noticed in the video some of those people (ex-addicts) look pretty normal, and I noticed Ken (Larson) grew his teeth back," the man said. "It was $7,000 to make my teeth grow back," Larson said. "And, I had a heart attack at 43 years of age." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom