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US TN: Portable Meth Labs Busted

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URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n1715/a07.html
Newshawk: chip
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Thu, 12 Sep 2002
Source: Manchester Times (TN)
Copyright: Manchester Times 2002
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Website: http://www.manchestertimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1863

PORTABLE METH LABS BUSTED

Fifty or so working fixed and portable laboratories for making crystal methamphetamine have been put out of operation in Coffee County so far this year and components from another 35 to 40 have been found discarded, usually along roadside or in wooded areas.

Now byproducts of a meth cook-off have been found in a stream feeding Coffee County's primary water supply.

Something in Wolf Creek at the Shedd Road bridge caught Coffee County Sheriff's Department chief investigator Doug Richardson's eye Friday morning and he stopped to take a closer look.

He found what turned out to be byproducts, chemicals and equipment from six meth labs, two of them large cooks and four about average size, filling seven large plastic bags.

The usual materials found in the residue included acetone, brake cleaner, Coleman fuel, liquid iodine and muratic acid and byproducts of cook-offs that are caustic, flammable and toxic, 14th Judicial District Drug Task Force agent Chad Partin noted.

Hazardous materials handlers under contract to the U.S.  Drug Enforcement Administration ( DEA ) at Chattanooga were called to the scene.

Water from the creek east of Manchester runs into the Little Duck River and eventually winds up in Normandy Reservoir where the Duck River Utility Commission ( DRUC ) has a water treatment plant that supplies Manchester and Tullahoma and their customers.

"It would break down into individual components and be so diluted that it would pose no problem," DRUC general manager Randall Braker said.

"Our carbon activated filters would catch any contaminants anyway but who wants pollutants like that fouling our raw water supply in the first place."

People swimming or fishing or animals drinking in the immediate vicinity of the meth trash risked contamination, he said.

"If contamination of the water supply concerns people, how much more concerned should they be about where the end product going into their bodies came from?" Partin said.

"We can expect to see about a 50 percent increase in meth lab activity in 2002 and there was more than enough to begin with."

A cluster of counties in southern Middle Tennessee already has one of the highest per capita concentrations of meth labs in the nation, one reason Congressman Zach Wamp has requested $1 million in additional funding funding for the war on drugs in the Cumberland Plauteau counties.

"Anyone who sees anything resembling meth trash should avoid handling it and notify the Coffee County Sheriff's Department or the local police departments right away," Partin said.

All four agencies, the drug task force and sheriff's and police departments, now have officers trained in inventorying and handling hazardous materials.

Anyone linked to illegal disposal of meth lab materials will be prosecuted. 


MAP posted-by: Beth

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