Pubdate: Sun, 17 Oct 2010 Source: Star Press, The (Muncie, IN) Copyright: 2010 The Star Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/m0DXtEYZ Website: http://www.thestarpress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1925 Author: Nick Werner THE RISE AND FALL AND RISE OF METH After The Pseudoephedrine Law Knocked The Drug Down, It Returned With A Vengeance. GASTON -- On a Thursday afternoon in September, police converged on an older house near downtown Gaston with whitewashed clapboard siding. Across the street, Kaylie Starrett watched from her own home, confused by all the commotion. In the 18 months or so that Starrett had lived in the neighborhood, everyone across the street seemed friendly. It wasn't until later that she learned from friends that police suspected her neighbors were manufacturing methamphetamine. "I couldn't believe it," Starrett said in a recent interview on her front porch. "Everyone says its supposed to smell really bad." Welcome to Meth 2.0. After drawing back a few years ago, the meth tide is gripping Indiana again. More people are cooking meth now than at any time in the state's history, and they are using methods that are more efficient and much more difficult for neighbors and law enforcement to detect. If Delaware County is any example, this second wave of meth is washing into areas of Indiana that had previously enjoyed relative immunity to the drug. In 2009, police discovered zero meth labs here. Since May, however, police have disrupted seven meth operations -- five of them in the Gaston area. "Yeah, I think meth is on the rise," Gaston Town Marshal Jim Oliver said. "It's becoming more and more popular. More and more available." A Perfect Storm Methamphetamine, also known as speed or crank, is a highly addictive stimulant produced in clandestine labs using common household products. It can leave users high for hours on end, cause paranoia and result in long-term health problems that include weight loss and horrific tooth decay. The drug not only devastates its users, it's a drag on the economy as well. The RAND Drug Policy Research Center estimated the economic burden of meth use -- including addiction-related costs, premature death, drug treatment and incarceration -- was $23.4 billion in 2005, the most recent year for which figures were available. Ingredients, known in the law enforcement world as "precursors," include pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, lithium batteries, lantern fuel, ether, rubbing alcohol, acids, brake cleaners and other potentially hazardous materials. Meth has been used illegally for decades, especially in the Southwest and West Coast. But it didn't gain a foothold in Indiana until around 2000 and 2001, when it exploded in popularity, especially in the more rural counties in southern and northern Indiana. In Vigo County to the southwest, for example, police seized 166 meth labs in 2004. But in 2005, state lawmakers responded, passing the Indiana Methamphetamine Protection Act, which required pseudoephedrine and ephedrine to be placed behind the counter at retail stores and pharmacies. The law also limited the amount of drugs customers can buy and requires buyers of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine to sign a logbook for their purchase and present a photo ID. The law was a success, at least initially. In 2005, meth labs in Vigo County, for example, were down 50 percent. But the honeymoon only lasted so long. By 2007, lab busts were on the rise again. By 2009, statewide meth lab figures exceeded those prior to the Indiana Methamphetamine Protection Act. Last year, police across the state dismantled 1,343 meth labs, a record for Indiana. The state is on pace for as many labs in 2010 and even more arrests, according to 1st Sgt. Niki Crawford, commander of the Indiana State Police Methamphetamine Suppression Section. How could this happen? "There's a variety of ways they (the cooks) are figuring out how to get around the law," Crawford said. Meth cooks have essentially outsourced the purchasing of their pseudoephedrine and ephedrine, often to drug addicts, making it more difficult for police to link buys to the actual drug dealers. The practice is known as smurfing. At the same time, they have developed a new method known as "shake and bake" or "one-pot." Cooks have slashed production time and no longer need anhydrous ammonia -- the odorous chemical that made meth labs easier for police and neighbors to detect. "Cooking meth is not as difficult as it once was," said Jeff Stanley, a drug investigator with the Delaware County Sheriff's Office. "You can do a one-pot in an hour-and-a-half and you can have a finished product of methamphetamine. A few years ago the same amount would have taken you four hours." Further adding fuel to the meth resurgence are changes to meth production in Mexico. Imported Mexican meth supplemented the American meth market when laws like Indiana's Methamphetamine Protection Act made the drug harder to come by. Then, to the surprise of many law enforcement officials north of the border, Mexico outlawed pseudoephedrine and ephedrine in late 2007. Mexican cooks are still producing meth, but without pseudoephedrine or ephedrine the drug is not nearly as strong. American meth users, Crawford said, want meth made in America. "It's almost like this perfect storm has been created," Crawford said. Ground Zero In the local battle against meth, ground zero has been the small town of Gaston, population 1,000, and the surrounding rural areas. The Gaston police department, with only three paid officers, has uncovered five of the county's seven meth labs this year and have arrested 13 people on meth-related charges. The drug came across the police radar there around last winter, Town Marshal Jim Oliver said. But the number of busts and arrests is as much a reflection of the police department's tenacity as it is the town's drug problem, Oliver said. "We've heard a lot of comments, 'My, my, Gaston must be overrun with drugs,'" Oliver said. "No. Gaston cracked down. But it's everywhere. Every town has it." About 18 months ago Gaston officer Carl Barber used a combination of his own money and donations to buy the town police department a drug sniffing dog at no cost to taxpayers. Having the dog, named Ammo, has allowed the GPD to make more drug arrests from traffic stops. And the men and women they arrest give police information that helps jump-start meth investigations, Oliver said. For as much attention as meth has received in the news lately, the drug still ranks behind marijuana, pills and cocaine in terms of the local drug of choice, authorities said. "It's still, I would say, one of the lower drugs we are seeing," Stanley said. "We still have a huge prescription drug problem." Nonetheless, meth remains a high priority among law enforcement because of the dangers involved in making the drug. In May, a 24-year-old Portland woman was found in her apartment suffering from chemical burns that police said was connected to meth manufacturing. Her 29-year-old husband, also in the apartment, had been dead for two days from an overdose. The woman died two days later at Ball Memorial Hospital. The Indiana State Police have created a new website devoted to educating the public about meth and making it easier for pharmacies to report ephedrine and pseudoephedrine sales to authorities. Since July, the website, www.meth.in.gov, has collected records for about half-a-million ephedrine or pseudoephedrine sales. About 45,000 are suspicious, Crawford said. "It's really a much broader law enforcement tool," Crawford said. In 2006, Oregon became the first state to make pseudoephedrine and ephedrine available only by prescription. Two Indiana lawmakers proposed similar bills this last year that either died in committee or never got a hearing. Crawford said lawmakers need to take a hard look at how much government spends on meth. In her interview, however, she declined to advocate for a prescription law. "The lawmakers have to make that decision," she said. "It's not mine to make." In the meantime, police like Jeff Stanley said they will do their best to curb meth with the tools they have. "However, it's going to continue to be here," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D