Pubdate: Tue, 09 Nov 1999
Source: Evansville Courier & Press (IN)
Copyright: 1999 The Evansville Courier
Contact:  P. O. Box 268 Evansville, IN 47702-0268
Website: http://courier.evansville.net/
Author: James Prichard, Associated Press writer

DRAWING A BEAD ON A NASTY DRUG 

Federal Agents Join State And Local Effort To Fight Methamphetamine

It has spread like a wind-driven wildfire through Western Kentucky during
the past few years. 

Open a newspaper, change the television channel or click on the radio and
there it is: another methamphetamine lab bust. 

Now more federal help is headed to the region's law-enforcement agencies to
battle the illegal manufacture, sale and use of the stimulant, which can be
either smoked or injected. 

"It is the most insidious drug that I've seen, and I'm including heroin,"
said Ralph D. Vick, commonwealth's attorney for Muhlenberg and McLean
counties. "It is an extremely addictive drug. I've not seen anything that's
worse." 

Methamphetamine, also known as "meth," "crystal" and "crank," is popular
because it is incredibly profitable and relatively easy to make. Internet
sites explain how to do it and most of the necessary equipment and
ingredients can be found around the house or purchased in stores. 

In Kentucky, the problem has been concentrated in the western third of the
state. It is the main reason the federal Drug Enforcement Administration
plans to open a two-agent bureau in Madisonville. The first agent is
scheduled to arrive in late November, the second in early January. 

In addition, Rep. Ed Whitfield, R-Ky., has asked Congress for $1 million in
grants that local law-enforcement agencies can use in their war against the
drug. 

"They can basically do anything they want to with it as long as they think
it will help discourage the growth of methamphetamine," he said. 

The money is part of an appropriations bill that President Clinton vetoed
on Wednesday, though Whitfield was confident that the funding soon will be
secured. 

The area served by the DEA office in Louisville is virtually the entire
state west of Interstate 65. Because of Western Kentucky's methamphetamine
problem, more agents were needed in the field there, said Rick Sanders,
resident DEA agent in charge in Louisville. The agency also has offices in
Lexington and London. 

Muhlenberg County Sheriff Jerry D. Mayhugh has firsthand knowledge of the
situation. Along with Daviess County, Muhlenberg probably has been
Kentucky's hardest-hit county when it comes to methamphetamine. 

Vick said many people who get caught using methamphetamine and are released
on bond are addicts and end up being arrested again, before they can be
tried for the first offense. 

Of the roughly 275 cases he has tried since being appointed in September
1997, at least 200 have been related to methamphetamine, the prosecutor said. 

Mayhugh and Sanders said they believe the problem actually may have peaked
in Western Kentucky, though other law officers disagreed. Mayhugh placed
much of the credit on the special methamphetamine training his officers
have received during the past two years. 

Daviess County Sheriff Keith Cane said the problem is as great as ever in
his county, where more than 100 labs have been closed down since July 1,
1998. 

"I think we've done three this week," Cane said late last month. 

Most of the people making it there are using it themselves, with some being
sold to support their habit, he said. 

"For a very, very limited amount of investment, $100 or $150, these
individuals can turn out $2,000 or $3,000 worth of the drug very easily,"
Cane said. 

Theft and injury often accompany methamphetamine manufacture and use.
Anhydrous ammonia, a crop fertilizer, is the most difficult component of
the drug to obtain, so it often is stolen from farms or farm supply
companies. 

Improperly handled, the caustic, combustible compound can explode, causing
serious injury or even death. 

Merchants are helping law-enforcement officers by reporting large purchases
of Sudafed, Drano, engine cleaner or other items used to make
methamphetamine. 

While talking with a reporter, Mayhugh received a call from a Muhlenberg
County auto parts store where someone had just bought a case of engine
cleaner and had ordered another. The cleaner contains ether, a main
component in the manufacture of the drug. 

While purchasing large amounts of engine cleaner isn't unlawful, it is now
raising red flags in some areas of the state. Mayhugh planned to greet the
buyer at the store if he shows up for the rest of his order and offer him a
friendly word of warning against doing anything illegal.

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