Pubdate: Tues, 28 September 1999 Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT) Copyright: 1999, The Salt Lake Tribune Contact: http://utahonline.sltrib.com/ Forum: http://utahonline.sltrib.com/tribtalk/ Author: John Heilprin CANNON VOWS METH LEGISLATION Rep. Chris Cannon drew attention to illegal methamphetamine use and production Monday, promising to introduce a House companion bill this week to accompany Sen. Orrin Hatch's plan. The Republicans' identical legislation would spend more money to hire more law enforcement agents, increase penalties and ban sharing information about meth production on the Internet. Hatch and other senators introduced their plan in late July. "Methamphetamine is a powerful and dangerous drug," Cannon said at a press conference in downtown Salt Lake City. "This meth drug is a threat to our liberty and prosperity . . . We need to take some responsibility for the war on drugs." He stood beside two specially equipped trucks, a Humvee and a Ford F-350, and a mannequin sporting a breathing mask and fire protective clothing that the police use when busting up meth labs. There also were tables laden with equipment -- glass beakers, an electric range, plastic bottles and drug store ingredients -- to demonstrate how easy it is to make meth. Frank Drew, head of the DEA's Clandestine Laboratory Training Unit, and one of the unit's training instructors, Douglas Coleman, traveled from Quantico, Va., to join Cannon at the press conference. Coleman demonstrated how to make meth. "I didn't tell everything. I left out a few key steps," he said. The bill would authorize spending another $27 million over five years to hire about 100 more Drug Enforcement Agency personnel, including perhaps two in Utah. The state has several dozen agents who either work solely in Utah or in multi-state task forces, according to DEA officials. "Due to the fact that Sen. Hatch and Chris Cannon are sponsoring this, we'll probably reap some benefits," said Don Mendrala, the DEA's resident agent-in-charge of the Salt Lake City office. He said 285 meth labs have been busted this year, costing $600,000 to environmentally clean up and properly dispose of the ingredients. For 30 years, the nation has waged a "war" on drugs by spending more money for enforcement and creating harsher penalties that require more prisons. Methamphetamines, which are synthetic amphetamines or stimulants that are cheap to produce and intensely addictive, are the latest crisis. Mendrala defended the proposed spending as a solution to the problem. "This one costs," he said. "We have to pay to solve the meth problem." Provo Mayor Lewis Billings, after checking out the drug-making paraphernalia, turned to Mendrala for special help in spreading the anti-drug message. To the DEA boss, he said: "This is something that would be great to put in a parade." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D