Pubdate: Mon, 16 Mar 2009 Source: Laurel Leader-Call (MS) Copyright: 2009 Laurel Leader-Call Contact: http://www.leadercall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1662 Author: Charlotte A. Graham Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH MADNESS Authorities Seeing Disturbing Trend Jones County might not be a large metropolis, but it has the same big problem shared by many of the larger cities and communities across the country -- methamphetamine. Better known as "meth," according to Jones County Sherrif Alex Hodge, it is currently one of the most popular drugs in the county. This white, odorless, bitter-tasting powder, can be easily dissolved in alcohol or water and can be smoked, injected, or snorted. "It's a dangerous drug," said Hodge. "And all of those old stereotypes you may have of drug users can be trashed. "Meth is used by everyone, from those driving the Volkswagen to the Mercedes," he continued. "It affects all businesses, employees and employers. It's just a major problem." According to Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics Director Marshall Fisher, the demographics of the county is perhaps the main reason meth is so popular. "Jones County is mostly a rural area," he said. "It's the perfect environment for people who want to cook the stuff in houses, trailers, barns, or what have you. "They are in an area where house aren't too close together and that makes it very convenient," he said. "The fumes are perhaps not as noticeable as they would be if they were in a city." Many of the arrests made by the Sheriff's Department came as a result of people smelling a strange odor coming from a house in their community. The March 6 arrest of four people on Sharon Moss Road is an example. However, Hodge said all strange odors coming from a house does not necessarily mean a meth lab is present. He want's people to be watchful and look signs other than a strange odor. Eddie Hawkins, Methamphetamine Field Coordinator for the Bureau of Narcotics, said other indicators of a meth lab are : fortifications, people barricading themselves inside a residence, suspicious visitors coming to a residence and staying a short time, chemical drums outside a residence, people going outside a residence to smoke, chemical containers in the trash can, jars containing clear liquid with a white colored, jars containing clear liquid with a white colored solid on the bottom coffee filters containing a white pasty substance or a dark red sludge or small amounts of white crystals, cookware containing a powdery residue, large amounts of lithium batteries, especially ones that have been stripped out of the casing propane tanks with fittings that have turned blue, an unusually large number of cans of Coleman fuel, paint thinner, acetone, starter fluid, Red Devil Lye and drain cleaners containing sulfuric acid or bottles containing muriatic acid, and large amounts of cold tablets containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine. Hodge said any time people are manufacturing meth, they are endangering not only themselves, but any one around them. The chemicals used are so potent they can burn the skin once it touches them. "Now just imagine people digesting it," he said. "It's not a pretty picture. It ages them drastically." What saddens Hodge most about it all is the children that are affected by the drug. One arrest scene lingers vividly in his mind because of the victims. "We entered the home and there was the mother as high as a kite, sitting there," he said. "There in the bed was a five-month-old child. "As we removed the child from the house, (the mother) was crying 'my baby, my baby'," he continued. "The baby was filthy: it's diaper was soiled. "We called the Department of Human Services and they cleaned the child up. When they changed the baby's diaper, they found ammonia pellets in it. The baby had ingested so much of the chemicals from the meth lab, they were in its system. "People just don't think." Also, people just can't say it'll never happen to them. Hodge has had a number of people to say they never thought their daughter, son, mother or father would ever use the drug. Many of them turn to the drug because of some crisis, he added. "Some may lose their jobs, may be facing divorce or are having other family problems tugging at them. You can manufacture three or five grams of meth at a time and it goes for $100 a gram. "At anywhere from $25 to $30, it's inexpensive to manufacture. With the economy the way it is, $100 a gram seems like a gold mine." But remember this. Hodge and his law enforcement agents will continue to destroy these meth labs and arrest manufacturers, as well as buyers. "There's an old saying, 'sin will keep you longer than you want to stay and cost you more than you want to pay,'" said Hodge. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom