Pubdate: Fri, 05 Mar 1999 Source: Log Cabin Democrat (AR) Contact: http://www.thecabin.net/contact/letters.shtml Website: http://www.thecabin.net/ Author: David Lieb - Associated Press Writer HOUSE PASSES TOUGHER PENALTIES FOR METH LABS LITTLE ROCK -- Makers of methamphetamine would be singled out for stiffer punishments under House-passed legislation that is intended to discourage Arkansas' fastest growing illegal drug industry. "Arkansas is number two in the nation for crystal meth," said sponsoring Rep. Bobby Lee Trammell, D-Jonesboro. "It's bad enough to say we're on the bottom in education, on the bottom in bad roads. But it hurts me down deep inside to say we're practically on the top in the number of crystal methamphetamine labs," Trammell said. Representatives, who gave Trammel a standing ovation, passed the legislation on a 92-1 vote after a string of speeches decrying the drug problem. The legislation now goes to the Senate. Rep. Sandra Rodgers, D-Hope, the lone dissenter, said crack cocaine was a bigger problem in her area. She added that overzealous police could wrongly conclude that someone was building a meth lab when in fact they were using the ingredients for legal reasons. Many of the ingredients to make methamphetamine can be bought at Wal-Mart at farm supply stores. A $300 investment can make $3,500 worth of methamphetamine, Trammell said, and a home meth lab could produce up to $50,000 worth of the drug in one week. Trammell said methamphetamine dealers are hooking children on the drug, causing "young boys to start stealing" and girls "to go out selling their bodies just to get another hit." Manufacturing, delivering or possessing methamphetamine with intent to distribute it now is a felony, with punishment based on how much of the drug was in the person's possession. Sentences can range from 10-40 years in prison and up to a $25,000 fine to 15-40 years in prison and up to a $50,000 fine. Trammell's bill would impose a mandatory sentence of 10 years in prison and a fine of $50,000 for first-time offenders who use or possess paraphernalia to make methamphetamine. A second offense would warrant 25 years without parole and a fine of $100,000. A third offense would be punished by a mandatory life sentence without parole. Legislators acknowledged that it was unusual to deny parole on drug charges, but said the spread of meth labs was a good reason to break from the norm. "Drastic and despicable actions require drastic responses," said Rep. Mark Smith, R-El Dorado. According to estimates from the state Sentencing Commission, the longer prison sentences would require construction of up to 1,490 prison beds within an 18-year period. Over that time, the cost of housing the methamphetamine convicts would increase by about $20 million. Last year, the federal government spent nearly $1.2 million in Arkansas for hazardous-waste cleanup of meth labs, according to figures from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea