Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jan 2008
Source: Star-Gazette (NY)
Copyright: 2008sStar-Gazette
Contact:  http://www.stargazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1005
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

CRUSADE TO FIGHT METHAMPHETAMINE NEVER ENDS

Weekend Arrest, This Week's Seminar Show That The Drug Remains A High 
Law Enforcement Priority.

Three years ago the National Association of Counties  surveyed its 
members nationwide, asking about the No. 1  drug problem in their 
region. Most outsiders probably  would have guessed that it was marijuana.

They would have been wrong. The answer came back as  methamphetamine. 
Meth, a highly addictive drug, can be  made in garages, barns, houses 
or car trunks -- just  about anywhere that drug dealers can scrape 
together  many of the common household ingredients and even cold 
medicines to make the drug.

For many years, residents living in the Northeast  United States, 
such as those in the Twin Tiers, knew  little about methamphetamine's 
spread, except what they  read about the problem on the West Coast 
and its  migration eastward to the Midwest. But that didn't 
last  long, and soon meth started showing up on law  enforcement logs 
in the Twin Tiers.

Law enforcement and even hazardous materials emergency  workers have 
had to deal with the dangers of this  horrible drug and its risks to 
anyone even near it --  including the potential for explosions and 
fires. In  the early part of this decade, federal, state and local 
authorities in Pennsylvania and New York battled to  keep meth from 
reaching the epidemic proportions it has  in parts of the Midwest and 
West. An update in Sunday's  Star-Gazette indicates that at least 
anecdotally,  authorities are not seeing the frequency of meth labs 
that they had five years ago.

There's a good reason for that. Media attention has put  the public 
on alert for telltale signs of meth  manufacturing -- indications 
such as the pungent smell  or the discarded materials used to make 
the drug. Another reason is the tougher laws approved in New 
York  and Pennsylvania -- many sponsored by legislators in  the Twin 
Tiers -- that make meth manufacturing and  dealing more serious 
offenses subject to more severe  punishments.

In addition, new state and federal laws require people  purchasing 
cold medicines with pseudoephedrine, a key  ingredient in making 
meth, to show identification and  sign a log that authorities can 
track to monitor and  bust meth making.

The combination of public awareness, tougher  punishment, new laws 
and a higher state of alert by law  enforcement agencies has given 
the Twin Tiers a  multifaceted weapon to beat back the meth problem 
before it overruns this region of the country as it has  other areas. 
But staying ahead of the meth criminals is  not something that occurs 
without constant vigilance,  strong prosecution of meth suspects and 
persistent  investigation into leads regarding meth dealers.

On Friday night, Chemung County Sheriff's Office  deputies raided a 
house on Watkins Road in Pine Valley  and lodged charges against a 
man in connection with  what Sheriff Christopher Moss described to a 
reporter  as a "good-sized" meth lab.

It was a reminder that meth arrests may have tailed  off, as 
indicated by New York State Police Lt. Pat  Garey to a Star-Gazette 
reporter, but meth  manufacturing and dealing have by no means 
been  eradicated.

In fact, recognizing the need to keep up the pressure  against meth 
dealing, the Chemung County Sheriff's  Office has used a state grant 
to offer a law  enforcement seminar on Wednesday for officials from 
New  York and Pennsylvania.

It's an indication that those on the front lines of the  war on meth 
know that even if the law is winning, that  battle is never over.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom