Pubdate: Sat, 10 Dec 2011 Source: Huntsville Item (TX) Copyright: 2011 Huntsville Item and Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. Contact: http://www.itemonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1126 Author: Cody Stark METH, A GROWING PROBLEM HUNTSVILLE -- The use, manufacturing and selling of methamphetamines is the latest drug epidemic to plague this country and like it is in a lot of areas, there is a growing problem in Walker County. Meth, as it is known on the streets, is a psychoactive drug that increases alertness, concentration, energy and could enhance euphoria. It is highly addictive and easy to make, which are two of the reasons as to why it is becoming increasingly popular for both users and dealers. "Meth has always been around, but right now the problem is more frequent," said a narcotics investigator with the Walker County Sheriff's Office whose identify was asked to be protected. "When talking with informants on the streets, it comes in waves and you hear more and more people talking about it and getting arrested for meth. It comes in cycles and right now we are in a part of the cycle where there is a lot of meth." The Walker County Sheriff's Office has busted two meth labs in the past year. One of those incidents came in January when investigators performed a "knock-and-talk" at a residence on Bybee Circle in the northwest part of the county. The officers smelled a strong odor coming from the home and when one of the residence came to the door, it was discovered that the home was being used to manufacture meth. Law enforcement seized close to 2,500 grams of finished product and materials used to make methamphetamines. Four people were arrested and charged with first-degree felony counts of manufacturing and delivering a controlled substance. Two busted meth labs might not sound like a lot, but because the drug is getting easier to make, labs are becoming more mobile. Inside the city limits of Huntsville, police have found labs in a car and in a hotel room. "Meth has been in this country for many, many years and back in the 1960s and 70s there was a whole different cooking process," Walker County Sheriff Clint McRae said. "It just about required a chemist to cook a finished product. As time has progressed, cookers have come up with ways to shorten the process." Chemistry labs with beakers, burners and other apparatuses have been replaced now days with a plastic bottle and cold medicine tablets. A popular and simple method used by today's cookers is called "shake and bake" or one pot meth making. Basically what that means is that the cooks make the drug in a sealed container, a two-liter bottle for instance, which is flipped upside down to cause a reaction between a number of toxic ingredients to make a finished product. Instead of a long process, meth can now be made in less than an hour. Just this week, a woman was arrested for allegedly mixing chemicals to make meth inside a Walmart in Oklahoma. "It requires just chemicals now, not heat," McRae said. "They put it in a bottle, shake it up and let it sit. The chemicals separate and dry and just like that there is a finished product." Meth is made by mixing pseudoephedrine, which is an ingredient in over-the-counter cold medicine, with other harmful chemicals such as rubbing alcohol, ether, paint thinner and lithium among other things. State laws have been passed to limit the purchase of over-the-counter cold medicine that contains pseudoephedrine in an effort to try and prevent the manufacturing of meth. Those medicines are now behind the counter and pharmacies electronically track these transactions and individuals are only allowed to purchase a certain amount each month. But meth cookers have found away to get around this obstacle. "Smurfers" are people who gather raw materials for the dealers and exchange them for the finished product. "Smurfers go around to pharmacies and purchase as much medicine as they can," said Det. Justin Lehman, a narcotics officer with the Huntsville Police Department. "They might start off in Huntsville and go to College Station and so on in a big circle so that by the time they come back to Huntsville they can buy more. They give the medicine to the dealers and get drugs in return." Meth is highly addictive. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, it leads to devastating medical, psychological and social consequences and health risks including psychotic behavior, heart problems, malnutrition and severe dental problems. Meth has also led to a rise in other crimes around the area. Users need to get a fix so bad that they break into homes and commit robbery just to get money. "Drugs, be it marijuana, cocaine or meth, are the root of many evil," McRae said. "In turn we see a lot of property crimes, shoplifting, burglaries and stuff like that as a spin-off of meth use. Heavy users can't maintain a job and they need money for their ephedrine, other chemicals and food. That leads to stealing." Walker County law enforcement agencies are doing their best to crack down on the meth problem with narcotic task forces. It is an uphill battle as the dealers continue to evolve their drug making methods and trap more people with addiction. But there is headway being made. "I was talking to a sheriff from a adjoining county not long ago and he said 'Clint, you guys are really hammering the drug users hard over there,'" McRae said. "He said that he knew this because we were chasing them into his county. We have made more narcotic related arrests on an annual basis than ever before in the history of the Sheriff's Office. "We are hammering them and we are going to keep on hammering them." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D