Pubdate: Thu, 08 Apr 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Dale Rodebaugh, Mercury News Staff Writer POLICE FIND DRUG LAB NEAR MORGAN HILL Ranch caretaker sought after fleeing scene Santa Clara County sheriff's deputies serving a restraining order on a Morgan Hill man late Tuesday discovered a methamphetamine laboratory in his cabin, located on a ranch in the shadow of the Uvas Reservoir dam. The ranch is southwest of Morgan Hill, about a mile from the junction of Uvas and Watsonville roads. Allen L. Pacheco, 47, who was leaving the Merriman Ranch as deputies Mike Rodriguez and Bob Cisneros approached, abandoned his vehicle and fled into the hills, said sheriff's spokesman Sgt. John Hirokawa. After losing Pacheco and two other unidentified men at the ranch in the heavily wooded area, the deputies returned to the cabin that Pacheco occupied as ranch caretaker. The smell of chemicals led them to substances and equipment commonly associated with the manufacturing of methamphetamine, Hirokawa said. The deputies called in agents from the state Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement and the United Narcotics Enforcement Team, who found chemicals in the final stages of methamphetamine production, said Bob Cooke, a BNE agent and supervisor of the local narcotics enforcement team. Among the chemicals found were hydrogen chloride gas, liquid Freon, red phosphorus and iodine crystals -- all ingredients of methamphetamine, a white crystalline derivative of amphetamine. The laboratory is capable of producing 20 pounds of methamphetamine in a 24- to 36-hour period, Cooke said. Methamphetamine producers typically sell at $6,500 a pound to good customers, who can then sell it about $600 an ounce on the streets, he said. Mark A. Merriman, 52, who arrived while agents were conducting their investigation, was arrested on felony warrants for transportation and sale of a controlled substance and abuse of an elderly person, Hirokawa said. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady