Pubdate: Fri, 28 Aug 2009 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Andrew Hanon, Columnist NEW METH MENACE Pop Bottles Used To Make Cheap, Volatile Shake-And-Bake Concoction If you find a two-litre pop bottle full of brownish or white sludge lying by the side of the road, don't touch it. Call the police. There's a chance that you've discovered the highly toxic -- and potentially explosive -- byproduct of so-called "shake-and-bake" crystal meth production. Turns out, meth doesn't have to be made in an elaborate, clandestine lab, like the one depicted in the TV show Breaking Bad. In recent years, meth heads have developed their own ways to cook up small batches of the drug. It's fast, cheap and flies under the radar of the authorities because only tiny amounts of the precursor chemicals are needed. The best known method is shake and bake, where a few pseudoephedrine pills (the active drug) are crushed and mixed in a pop bottle with some other readily available household chemicals. The volatile chemical reaction produces a small amount of crystal meth, enough for a few meth heads to party for a couple hours or keep one addict going for a day or so. Techniques like this are spreading like wildfire in the U.S. Midwest, where meth use is an epidemic. Edmonton isn't immune. "We've busted a few of these user-based labs, but we haven't seen a lot of them," said Edmonton police Staff Sgt. Darren Derko, noting that they have yet to see the shake-and-bake type. Nonetheless, members of the city police drug squad have travelled to Detroit to learn from cops there how these small labs work, and what to do with the chemicals when they find them. Derko acknowledged they're extremely difficult to track down because it's all done on the fly. All the chemicals and equipment can fit into a backpack. "It only takes two or three hours for the whole process, and then they're gone," Derko said. "It's not like a (marijuana) grow-op. It doesn't move." In the U.S., it's been reported that meth heads routinely mix a batch while driving around in a car. They keep the windows down to vent the poisonous vapours. Once the batch is cooked, they toss the bottle and its extremely toxic leftovers to the side of the road. Police in the U.S. warn that during the chemical process, the highly volatile chemicals are under extreme pressure. "Every meth recipe is dangerous, but in this one, if you don't shake it just right, it can build up too much pressure and the container can pop," Mark Woodward of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control told the Associated Press. "You see more extreme burns because they're holding it." Derko added that because the "chemists" are usually addicts themselves, they can get impatient and try to speed up the process by adding heat, dramatically increasing the risk of an explosion. While U.S. cops say they've seen a big increase in meth use the past couple of years, largely due to user-based labs, Derko said cocaine has always been far more popular than crystal meth in Edmonton. He attributes that to the intense public awareness campaign about meth earlier in the decade, along with tight restrictions on sales of the chemicals used to make it. Since 2005, cold remedies containing significant amounts of pseudoephedrine must be kept behind pharmacy counters, while the federal government has tightened restrictions on the sale of the other chemicals. "There was never the epidemic here that people feared there'd be," he said. Time will tell if these microlabs change that. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr