Pubdate: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 Source: Saint Paul Pioneer Press (MN) Copyright: 1999 St. Paul Pioneer Press Contact: 345 Cedar St., St. Paul, MN 55101 Website: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/ Forum: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/watercooler/ Author: David Hawley and Amy Mayron, Staff Writers METHAMPHETAMINE MAKES MARK ON AREA Lab Busts Rise; Experts Differ On Scope Of Problem Law enforcement officers weren't checking fishing licenses last winter when they yanked open the door of an ice-fishing house on Waverly Lake, about 30 miles west of Minneapolis. What two state conservation officers discovered was a methamphetamine laboratory. And the toxic fumes from a compound cooking on the shack's portable stove almost overwhelmed them. The Waverly ice-house raid was one of 79 clandestine meth labs discovered by law-enforcement agencies in Minnesota between October 1998 and the end of September 1999. But other labs have been found since then -- including a huge lab in Minneapolis and a smaller lab in St. Paul that were busted on the same night last week. The Minneapolis lab had been cooking so many batches of meth that the caustic fumes were literally melting the walls in a rented office in the trendy Lyn-Lake area of South Minneapolis. Investigators seized two pounds of ``crystal meth,'' the most potent form of the illegal drug, plus what they suspect may be the ``boutique'' drugs Ecstacy and PCP. ``It's probably going to be the largest finished-product seizure this year,'' said Tim McCormick, head of the Minneapolis office of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. John Michael Pierson, who was arrested during the raid Tuesday night, faces drug charges in federal court, where the penalties are stiff -- starting with a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison without the possibility of parole. The St. Paul bust was the first meth lab discovery for St. Paul police. The lab, in the attic of a duplex on Matilda Street near Rice Street, was small and not fully operational. Two people were arrested. Methamphetamine use in the Twin Cities and throughout Minnesota and Wisconsin has been a growing problem for a number of years, but the discovery of meth labs is a fairly recent phenomenon. In 1994, for example, only three labs were discovered. This year's total is 81. There are different views of what this means, however. ``The lab increase is a little deceiving,'' said Tim O'Malley, a special agent with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. ``The highest percent of meth on the street -- about 90 percent -- is from Mexico. So the number of labs isn't indicative of an increase in meth, especially since most of them are very small.'' In fact, the increase in meth-lab busts may reflect the success of recent programs to train law-enforcement officers how to detect labs and deal with them safely. Part of a $750,000 grant from President Clinton's law-enforcement initiative has been used to train police, fire and emergency personnel on the signs and dangers of meth labs. ``We've probably trained over a thousand officers in the state since April,'' O'Malley said. In Minneapolis, for example, police carry laminated plastic cards in the glove boxes of their squad cars that they consult when encountering a suspected lab. That they've been extensively trained was demonstrated last week when officers broke into the huge lab on Lake Street, discovered its contents and immediately vacated the building to await a hazardous materials team and DEA officials. St. Paul officers took similar action when they discovered the small meth operation. On the other hand, the increasing number of meth labs could reflect an entrepreneurial reaction to increased demand for the drug. But there are differing opinions about the extent of the drug's penetration into Minnesota. The DEA's McCormick doesn't hesitate to call Minnesota's meth problem an ``epidemic.'' ``There's a growing user base here,'' he said. ``The addiction rate is very high. There's a lot of money to be made (in Minnesota), and the producers are acting accordingly.'' But another drug expert has a different view of the problem. ``There's no question that meth use is on the increase, but this is not an epidemic of the crack cocaine proportions that we saw in the 1980s,'' said Carol Falkowski, a research analyst for Hazelden Foundation, the state's best-known treatment center. ``When coke first caught on, every indicator of use was going off,'' Falkowski said. ``With meth, you can look at drug use among people arrested in Minneapolis in 1998 and it's less than 2 percent, compared to 20 percent for coke and 40 percent for pot (marijuana).'' Some law officers see things differently. Meth sales outpace cocaine in St. Paul by a ratio of to 2-to-1, according to Lt. Ken Reed of the St. Paul Police Department. ``We try to deal with all drugs, but meth is taking up a majority of our investigative time,'' Reed said. Whatever the numbers, meth poses a serious safety problem on several fronts, O'Malley said. ``Meth users are dangerous,'' he said. ``They can be violent, psychotic. They often have a surge of belligerence when they're high, and when they come down they can be depressed and experience something we call `tweaking' -- becoming aggressive because they need it (another dose).'' All agree that meth labs pose a significant safety threat to the public. Last July, for example, an explosion took place in North Minneapolis when drug manufacturers were unloading tanks of anhydrous ammonia, sometimes used in making meth. Other dangerous substances used in meth manufacturing include lithium from batteries, alcohol, gasoline, sulfuric acid and various cleaning solvents. ``The meth made with gun cleaner even has its own name -- `green grimace,' '' Falkowski said. ``The ingredients are so caustic. You wouldn't want it spilled on your pants, let alone inhaled up your nose.'' In fact, O'Malley says, law officers see meth labs primarily as a safety hazard. ``The biggest public safety concern is how hazardous the labs are rather than the amount of meth produced per lab,'' he said. ``What makes it even worse is how portable they can be. The process can be done in a few hours, if you're organized. So they can use an icehouse, a motel room, a van -- anywhere they can plug in a hot plate or turn on a portable stove. ``These guys (who make meth) aren't the brightest or safest people,'' O'Malley added. ``They carry caustic or explosive chemicals in milk cartons. Labs can blow up. Hazardous materials left over (from making meth) are being dumped into fields, or in rivers, or down toilets. People can die.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake