Pubdate: Sat, 07 Feb 2009 Source: Burlington Times-News (NC) Copyright: 2009 Freedom Communications, Inc. Contact: http://www.thetimesnews.com/sections/contactus/letter.php Website: http://www.thetimesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1822 Author: Roselee Papandrea Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) RESIDENTS ANGRY ABOUT DAMAGE AFTER SEARCH THAT DIDN'T YIELD A METH LAB Jessica Garrison was driving on Interstate 40 Wednesday morning heading to Greensboro to pick up her fiance when she was pulled over by a Burlington police officer in an unmarked car. Garrison, 23, of 918 E. Davis St., knew she wasn't speeding and didn't know why she was pulled over. She said the officer wasn't quick to tell her. Instead, her cell phone was taken from her, and she was questioned. Eventually, Garrison, who was waiting on the shoulder of the interstate with her 2-year-old daughter and pet Chow-Chow, was told that the SBI was searching the home she rents on East Davis Street, but she wasn't told why. Meanwhile, Burlington police officers, who had obtained a search warrant, were breaking into her house along with the SBI's clandestine laboratory response team. The officers were looking for a possible methamphetamine lab or remnants of one. Burlington police blocked traffic on a portion of East Davis Street, between Flanner and Anthony streets, and about 60 officers and agents worked the scene. A small amount of marijuana and a homemade smoking device were found but there were no signs of a meth lab in the house. After searching for a couple of hours and securing the area, Burlington police eventually let Garrison back into her house. By that time, she had already seen the nine-page search warrant detailing law enforcement's suspicions that there was a meth lab operation at the house. It was then that she saw the gaping hole in her front door that officers made to get into her home and clothing from her closets and dresser drawers pulled out of place. Garrison's photo, as well as information about her including the fact she doesn't have a criminal record, were in the search warrant along with information about her fiance's friend, who was staying with them because he was "down on his luck." The fiance, a truck driver, had met the 44-year-old friend through work. The fiance didn't know the friend had two drug convictions in South Dakota in the 1980s, said Garrison, who indicated the marijuana police found belonged to the friend. Garrison was baffled about why police were in her home. Both she and her daughter were frightened by the experience. "I saw all this, and I'm just freaking out," she said. Burlington police Cpl. R.A. Henderson obtained a search warrant at 10:20 a.m. Wednesday. Superior Court Judge Robert H. Hobgood, a visiting judge from Franklin County, signed the warrant. According to the warrant, Burlington police received information earlier this week from an anonymous informant that methamphetamines were allegedly being manufactured and sold from the house. "The informant stated that he had observed a white male and a white female carrying boxes of funnels, large bags, hoses, lab-type scales and glassware from a vehicle into a trailer parked behind 918 E. Davis St.," the warrant states. "The informant stated that he had smelled strong odors coming from the residence and the trailer behind it over the last month, which the informant believed to be methamphetamine." Burlington police Capt. Jeff Saunders said that methamphetamine labs have a distinctive smell that's difficult to describe. "It's so unique to someone who has a very good nose," Saunders said. "You know it's different than a smell that's supposed to be in your community." The informant told police there was heavy traffic coming and going from the residence late at night and during all hours of the day. He also observed what he thought was hand-to-hand drug transactions, according to the warrant. Once police received the tip, officers started doing surveillance on the house to determine whether the information was credible. Meth labs are dangerous because of the chemicals used to make the synthetic drug. They are extremely flammable and the fumes also pose a great risk. The investigation became a priority, and police moved fast once the informant's information was verified. In order to get a search warrant, officers needed to prove that there was "probable cause" to believe a meth lab was at that location. While a magistrate can sign a search warrant, police went to a superior court judge for a signature. Officers also involved the Alamance County District Attorney's office. Garrison said she also smelled an odor in her neighborhood but that it wasn't coming from her house. Her fiance and his friend did carry the friend's belongings in boxes to a trailer parked in the back yard behind a locked privacy fence. The funnel was used to change oil. The fence was locked to prevent theft. She said she frequently leaves the house at odd hours because her fiance is a truck driver, and she takes him to work. She's lived in the house since Jan. 1 and named the few people that have visited in the past month. If police suspected there was a meth lab at her house, Garrison doesn't know why they didn't just come to her door and ask to come in. She said she would have let them in. They didn't have to damage her door and fence. WHILE BURLINGTON has never had a confirmed meth lab, police say they couldn't take any chances. They waited for Garrison to leave the house with her daughter to reduce the impact on the child. "Folks who do the clandestine labs are not properly trained to mix chemicals and when you apply heat, they react," Saunders said. Sometimes the labs are booby trapped so that if police find them, they will blow up to destroy all evidence. As a result, Burlington police had contingency plans to evacuate an area around East Davis Street that would have included up to 80 homes. "You don't know what you are going to encounter when you get there," Saunders said. "We put a plan in place to protect us as well as people in the community. ... Had we been met with resistance, then all of a sudden we would have to deal with a catastrophic event." Police didn't find a meth lab, and no one has been charged with any crime. Garrison said she feels violated. She wants to know if the police department is going to fix her door and her fence. "If they didn't find anything, I think we deserve an apology," she said. The police department has reviewed the case - the information officers received, the action taken as a result, what was found and what was learned from the experience. Despite the fact that a meth lab wasn't found, Burlington police officials are confident the department made the right decision. The department doesn't plan to apologize to Garrison and since officers didn't go to the wrong house or make any "glaring mistakes" in this case, the department isn't liable for any damages caused by breaking into the house to do the search, said Burlington police Assistant Chief Greg Seel. "Based on the case facts and based on the scenarios we were presented, we reacted to the situation we had properly," Seel said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin