Pubdate: Sun, 02 Dec 2007 Source: Flint Journal (MI) Copyright: 2007 Flint Journal Contact: http://www.mlive.com/news/fljournal/index.ssf Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/836 Note: Prefers to print letters from people in the area of The Flint Journal Author: Bryn Mickle Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) IS METH RARE HERE OR JUST HIDDEN? GENESEE COUNTY - A few years ago, police sounded warnings that a scary drug was making inroads into Genesee County. A drug that would turn users into crazed maniacs. A drug that could be brewed up in the comfort of home, using common store-bought goods. Its name? Methamphetamine. "It's here, and it's only going to get bigger," a state police official told The Flint Journal in 2000. But, so far, meth remains a bit player on the local drug scene and hasn't been near the phenomenon that was predicted. A county health official estimates that just over 1 percent of people interviewed seeking treatment cite meth as their drug of choice. And the Flint Area Narcotics Group had seized less than a gram of the drug this year before finding a small amount during two busts in October. "We haven't seen any on the street," said FANG Officer Don Urban, the team's meth expert. Police also are finding fewer meth labs in Genesee County. FANG went nearly a year without a meth lab bust before finding two small "mom and pop" operations in Clio and Flint Township in October. The local numbers mirror a statewide trend that has seen meth lab takedowns drop from 261 two years ago to less than 100 this year. Why the dramatic drop in lab busts? Outsourcing, police say. Two years ago, the state began restricting the sale of cold medicines used to cook meth. The result is that meth is now cheaper to smuggle in from Mexico and Canada, said state police Lt. Tony Saucedo, commander of the statewide meth investigation unit in Lansing. Despite the drop in labs, Saucedo doesn't believe meth has gone away - it's just harder to find. Unlike cocaine and marijuana, which demand the lion's share of police attention, Saucedo said meth likely still goes unrecognized by some street officers because they don't encounter it as much. "Methamphetamine is a different animal," he said. And it's not an animal that police relish encountering. Not only is the cooking process for meth highly toxic and potentially explosive, the drug has a longer-lasting high than cocaine and can keep users awake for days. Heavy users, or "tweakers," have a reputation for strange and violent behavior. In one highly publicized 1995 incident, a meth user in San Diego stole an M60 Patton tank and led police on a slow-speed chase crushing everything in his path before he was shot to death by police. One possible reason for the lack of a local explosion in meth's popularity could be the state's proactive efforts to curb interest in the drug before it grabs a foothold, said Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton. The money spent on Michigan's anti-meth campaigns may have "significantly wounded" attempts to grow the market here, said Leyton. Leyton added that critics of those efforts might argue that money would have been better spent on campaigns against more established drugs such as heroin and cocaine. "I can see both sides of that issue," said Leyton. While the evidence room at FANG suggests the Genesee County drug trade isn't all that interested in meth, police have found evidence in recent years to suggest otherwise. In 2001, FANG busted one of the largest meth operations in the state and dismantled labs in Flint, Burton and Richfield Township. Investigators believe that bust crippled the fledgling meth industry here, but said tips continue to come into FANG about labs sprouting up around the area. Fast-moving "cooks," however, either dismantle labs before they are caught or move the process around to different sites. Urban is pleasantly surprised the meth business is not booming, but doesn't believe the lull will last forever. "It's not like we don't have a meth problem ... it's that we're not finding it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath