Pubdate: Wed, 19 Dec 2007 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2007 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Author: Monte Mitchell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Note: The Journal does not publish LTEs from writers outside its circulation area 'CANDY-FLAVORED' METH IS ASHE SENATOR'S TARGET Fear That Dealers Are Targeting Kids Sparks Effort, But Skeptics Say That Threat Is Only A Myth JEFFERSON Drug dealers could be distributing candy-flavored methamphetamine to children. Or reports that they are could be an urban legend spreading on the Internet and in the news media, depending on who you believe. But in Ashe County, Sheriff James Williams' nose told him that a batch of pink meth seized by his investigators during a three-month investigation earlier this year sure smelled different. "You could smell the flavor on it," Williams said. "It was like a crystal meth, only it was red-looking. It had kind of a strawberry smell to it." Reports of candy-flavored meth have made news headlines since January, when authorities in Carson City, Nev., seized a pink-colored meth that became known as "strawberry quick." Skeptics note that no one in law enforcement probably knows what the substance tastes like. David Duncan, the chairman of the illicit-drugs council of the National Association of Public Health Policy in Reston, Va., said that the candy-flavored-meth stories are myths, fueled by misunderstandings and a gullible media. Steve Robertson, a Drug Enforcement Agency special agent and spokesman, said that the DEA has not analyzed any flavored methamphetamine, but it has heard from informants and intelligence sources that "people are trying to flavor meth to make it more attractive." A spokeswoman for the State Bureau of Investigation said that the agency is investigating two or three cases of colored meth, but it doesn't know yet if the meth was flavored. The reports were enough for state Sen. Steve Goss, D-45th, whose district includes Ashe County, to announce this week that he's working on legislation to fight what he called a scourge and real danger to children. He's still developing the details, but he said that the approach could include stronger penalties and the appointment of a task force. "There's much to be learned about this new threat," Goss said. "We believe it's being targeted to younger children." Goss isn't the only politician calling for tougher laws. Responding to police and media reports, U.S. Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced legislation in April to increase federal penalties for drug dealers who use flavored drugs to entice young people. The bill is still in committee. Meth is typically a white or brown crystal that is most often smoked, inhaled or injected, although some people swallow it. Traffickers may add chocolate powder, gelatin or other flavorings to downplay the dangers of the drug and make it more attractive, Robertson said. Colored meth has been around for years. Some makers add dye to distinguish their "brand" for marketing. Information on the Web site www.snopes.com, which debunks many stories circulating on the Internet, says that candy-flavored meth is an urban legend. One widely distributed e-mail in October said that strawberry-flavored meth was being handed out to school children. The e-mail was purportedly from Special Agent Todd Coleman of the federal Department of Homeland Security. Reached by telephone this week, Coleman said that the e-mail did not come from him or his office. Bob Curley, the news editor for Join Together, a program of Boston University's School of Public Health, said this week that he didn't know of any confirmed instances of flavored meth in the United States Curley said that the DEA issued warnings after the report came out of Carson City, Nev., and major news outlets picked up the story. "Flavored meth is somewhat akin to the Loch Ness Monster: everyone has heard of it, but firsthand sightings are hard to track down and verify," Curley wrote. He said that when he spoke to officials at the Carson City Sheriff's Office they couldn't confirm if the meth they seized was flavored or just colored. He said that both the DEA and the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy told him that they haven't been able to identify a single confirmed seizure of flavored meth. In Ashe County, sheriff's Capt. Chris Miller said that after a local newspaper reported the local case - including its Web site - he was contacted by a doctor in Alaska, as well as others, either telling him that candy-flavored meth is an urban legend or asking questions about it. "I can only tell you what we got, it's not rumor," he said. The sheriff's office conducted an undercover drug investigation from July to September in Ashe and in Grayson County, Va., and seized about 10 to 11 ounces of the meth, he said. Meth is often odorless or can sometimes have a pungent chemical smell if it's wet, he said. This was different. "It smelled like candy, a sweet candy odor," he said. "It looks like a pink crystallized candy." He said he's heard the drug called "strawberry delight" in Ashe and Alleghany counties. He said that the DEA information says that candy-flavored meth is being made to entice children, but that authorities don't believe that's what happened in Ashe. He said the drugs that were found appear to be simply what the dealer had been provided with by his supplier. "We have no information children are being targeted in this area," Miller said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek