Pubdate: Fri, 08 Jun 2007 Source: Siskiyou Daily News (CA) Copyright: 2007 Siskiyou Daily News Contact: http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/668 Author: Brad Smith, Daily News Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) PROGRAM COMBATS METH PROBLEM SISKIYOU COUNTY - To combat California's methamphetamine problem, the state established a new program called California Multi-Jurisdictional Methamphetamine Enforcement Team. Cal-MMET's mission is to: o Reduce methamphetamine production, distribution and availability of methamphetamine on the street; o Reduce methamphetamine related criminal offenses; and o Reduce hazardous waste sites associated with the chemical manufacture of methamphetamine. According to Siskiyou County Sheriff Rick Riggins, Cal-MMET is a regional effort, with sheriff's departments receiving grant money through the Office of Emergency Management. "We use these grants to pay for wages including overtime, equipment, and 'buy' money for undercover operations," Riggins said. The grant also helps to pay for administration and logistics costs as well. In a few weeks, Riggins will appear before the county board of supervisors to apply for another grant. On the average, counties taking part of the Cal-MMET program received more than $200,000, he reported. Originally, Siskiyou County was part of a different multi-county Cal- MMET effort based out of Shasta County, Riggins said. Siskiyou County's grant money went towards the regional command headquarters in Redding and was distributed from there. "I liked the idea of working with Shasta County but we weren't seeing a lot of results in our area," he said. His people working with the Shasta Cal-MMET operation were busy in other counties, but "they weren't doing a lot here in our county." A number of counties decided to pull out of the Shasta regional operation and pool their own resources. Riggins saw the benefits of doing something similar. He contacted sheriffs in Trinity, Modoc, Lassen and Plumas counties. The sheriffs talked about their mutual situations and problems. "Over a period of time, we came to an agreement," he explained. "By pooling our money and resources, we (the sheriffs) feel that could tackle the meth problem more effectively." For example, Siskiyou County has K-9 units and other resources that some of the other sheriff's departments lack, Riggins commented. Right now, Riggins said that a pound of processed meth has the street value of $18,000. "When you have these cartel-operated 'super-labs' turning out 40 or more pounds of meth a day, that gives the drug producers and traffickers a lot of capitol to work with," he observed. According to the Department of Justice, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, 80 percent of the meth flooding the United States came from California. In 2003, more than 125 Californian super-labs were busted. In 2006, just 12 super-labs were busted. The DOJ reports that 80 percent of meth currently comes from Mexican cartel-operated super-labs south of the border. But Riggins thinks that domestic labs will make a comeback. "Meth is easy to make. When you can get more than $18,000 a pound, that's more than enough to get people started making their own meth," he said. When cartels making meth can generate hundreds of millions of dollars, combatting the production and distribution of it, with five counties' combined $1 million, is a daunting task. Riggins feels that something can be done. "Last year, our partnership with the Jackson County Sheriff's Office (Ore.) hit the cartels hard, taking more than $300 million of their product," he said. "We can do the same with the meth producers and traffickers." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake