Pubdate: Tue, 15 Oct 2002
Source: Denver Post (CO)
http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36%257E53%257E925215,00.html?search=filter
Copyright: 2002 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: Brent Boyer, Special to The Denver Post
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

BOY MISSING DURING METH RAID FOUND

Child discovered at Weld Sheriff's Office

Tuesday, October 15, 2002 - A 6-year-old Adams County boy who lived at a 
home police said contained a methamphetamine lab was dropped off at the 
Weld County Sheriff's Office in Fort Lupton early Monday, one day after 
police arrested his mother. The child, who had been missing, was taken to 
the office by unidentified Fort Lupton residents, said North Metro Drug 
Task Force Sgt. Jim Gerhardt.

The boy's mother, 23-year-old Jamie Sanders, was arrested Sunday at a hotel 
near Interstate 70 and West Colfax Avenue, police said. She was being held 
on a $50,000 dangerous-drugs warrant in connection with a separate meth 
lab, according to police.

Police had been searching for Sanders since Friday, when she eluded the 
task force raid at a home at 1480 Marigold Drive in unincorporated Adams 
County.

"Last night at midnight, the 6-year-old was dropped off at a house in Fort 
Lupton," Gerhardt said. Police said the residents of the home know the 
boy's family, although the relationship was not clear.

"Instead of calling right then and there, they waited until this morning to 
take him in," Gerhardt said.

The child was taken to Children's Hospital in Denver, where he was 
evaluated for exposure to the dangerous chemicals used in meth production, 
Gerhardt said. The boy was released Monday afternoon, according to a 
hospital spokesperson.

During the Friday raid, the task force found gallons of muriatic acid and 
other unknown chemicals, in addition to methamphetamine, which was found on 
the headboard of the bed where the 6-year-old and his younger sister slept, 
police said.

Janice Copp, Sanders' 47-year-old mother, and Danielle Copp, Sanders' 
18-year-old sister, were arrested at the home and could be charged with 
possession of a controlled substance, possession with intent to manufacture 
a controlled substance and child abuse. They also may be charged as 
"special offenders" because the lab was within 1,000 feet of a school, 
police said.

Task force members were met by Sanders' 4-year-old daughter as they entered 
the front door of the home during the bust. The girl was checked at the 
scene and eventually transported to Children's Hospital, where she also was 
checked for exposure to drugs and dangerous chemicals. She was released 
Friday, a hospital spokesperson said.

Both children have been placed in protective custody with Adams County 
social services, police said.

Gerhardt said that about 80 percent of meth labs show evidence of children 
living in the home. "I can't tell you how many times we're searching for 
meth lab components and we're in a child's bedroom," he said.

Dr. Kathryn Wells, a pediatrician with Kempe Child Protection Team, which 
evaluates children suspected of abuse or neglect, said she examined both 
children.

"We look for signs of exposure to any of the chemicals used to produce 
methamphetamine," Wells said. Those signs are often difficult to determine 
without blood and urine tests, she said.

"They may come in looking fine externally, but have internal damage," Wells 
said. The volatile chemicals used in meth production can cause internal 
burns and damage to all major organ systems, including the brain, she said.

Even so, the psychological damage can be far greater than any physical harm 
associated with meth production because of the violence, drug use, weapons 
and pornography the children often are subjected to, Wells said.

Wells refused to comment on the condition of the two children.