Pubdate: Sun, 20 Nov 2005 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Jason van Rassel, Calgary Herald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Spokane Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) A CITY WAGES WAR AGAINST ITS CANCER Horror of Drug Epidemic Spawned New Solutions You wouldn't know by looking, but this is a city with a crystal meth problem. The Spokane River flows through the middle of this city, surrounded on both sides by leafy parks. Two university campuses sit near the city's core, and students tap away on laptops or chat with friends in nearby pubs and coffee shops. Even as dusk approaches, female joggers run solo through secluded stretches of Spokane's picturesque riverside pathways. The outward tranquility offers no hints of meth-related trouble among Spokane's 200,000 citizens, but it exists in an overwhelming number of arrests, property crimes and child neglect cases fuelled by the drug. Last year, more than half of the 1,099 felony drug arrests recorded by the Spokane Police Department were for methamphetamine. Even when police don't find the drug, they turn up evidence of its role behind other crimes. "Methamphetamine use is probably responsible for 70 per cent of our burglaries, 80 to 90 per cent of our vehicle thefts and 95 per cent of our credit card and bank cheque fraud," says Lieut. Darrell Toombs of the SPD's special investigative unit, which handles drug cases. Spokane's experience with meth offers valuable lessons for a city like Calgary, where the drug has so far turned up only in small amounts. Emulating Spokane's successes and learning from its mistakes could spare Calgary the same fate. Stricter laws, along with police efforts and increased public awareness, have helped lower the number of meth labs in Spokane County from a high of 190 in 2002 to only 10 by mid-October of this year. But meth use persists. Now, most of it comes from Mexico. It's plentiful and cheap -- about $40 Cdn a gram. "The use and abuse of methamphetamine is higher than it's ever been," says Lieut. Rick VanLeuven of the Spokane County Sheriff's investigative support unit. People from all walks of life get hooked on crystal meth. Others feel the effects when addicts steal, neglect their children or contaminate their homes with dangerous chemicals. "It's not just low-income, dirty, grungy people," VanLeuven says. It's often said that cancer touches everyone in one way or another -- either they get it themselves or have a loved one who is affected. In that sense, meth is a cancer in Spokane County. And, like the fight against cancer, victories against meth are hard-earned, the result of considerable effort, research and innovation. It may surprise Canadians weaned on rhetoric about America's "War on Drugs" that the battle is being fought with a measure of mercy in places like Spokane County. Like a growing number of jurisdictions, Spokane County has a drug court, which offers court-monitored treatment instead of jail time for addicts. "Graduates" who complete the program, which takes at least a year, get their criminal charges dropped. About 75 per cent of drug court defendants are meth addicts. "Meth permeates everything we do," says Judge Tari Eitzen. The court aims to eliminate what's driving addicts to commit crime: their addiction. People who make or sell drugs, and violent offenders, aren't eligible. Resistance from skeptics was fierce when planning for Spokane County's drug court began in 1994, with detractors saying "hugs for thugs" wouldn't do any good. Eitzen says the proof is evident after more than a decade: only an estimated 10 per cent of drug court graduates reoffend. Although a third of defendants are kicked out of the program for not complying, Eitzen counters that drug court still performs better than regular courts, where the recidivism rate among drug offenders is approximately 75 per cent. David Morse's time in drug court is just beginning when he leaves Eitzen's courtroom with marching orders from the judge on a recent autumn afternoon. Morse, 23, says he stopped using meth a year ago, while in custody for charges that got him referred to drug court. He reached out to his estranged mother in California. She replied with a letter and pictures of a son from another relationship whom he hadn't seen in six years. Morse also thought of his wife and their young son here in Spokane. "I realized I didn't want to live this life anymore," he says in an interview. Morse now lives with his wife and five-year-old son in Airway Heights, a bedroom community west of Spokane. "I've had to cut off everybody -- people who say they're your friend. But it's not about the friendship, it's about the drugs," he says. For almost 10 years, though, Morse's life was "about the drugs." Rolling up his left sleeve, Morse reveals an atrophied forearm and skin scarred by a shotgun blast when he was 13. Morse says his assailant was another boy avenging an earlier beating at his hands. The shooting began a painful recuperation that opened the door for his first experience with meth. "When I was a kid, I despised it," he says of the drug use he witnessed. "I got shot, and everything inside me said, 'F--k it.' " He started smoking meth, sometimes staying up for five or six days at a time, reaching an agitated, paranoid state known as tweaking. Three years later, Morse began injecting meth. "Slamming" meth into the bloodstream via injection produces an immediate high. "It was the worst mistake of my life. I needed it every day," Morse says. He also resorted to selling meth at one point. "I made money off of other people's problems." Now, he wants to make money the honest way and plans to start his own landscaping business. Even though he has multiple criminal convictions, Morse is most worried about the stigma attached to being a former meth addict. "You can go to jail for smoking pot and people will hire you. Not meth," he says. "I don't blame people -- a year and a half ago, I would have robbed a business blind." While drug court tries to undo the criminal toll addiction takes on the community, a specialized civil court is trying to heal the damage drugs wreak on families. Washington Child Protective Services launched 3,274 abuse and neglect investigations in Spokane County last year. CPS officials say they don't officially track how often drug use is a factor, but the numbers show a steady rise since 2,933 referrals were recorded in 2002. Perhaps more tellingly, emergency referrals -- where imminent risk to a child dictates response within 24 hours -- are making up a larger percentage of the total. Between 2002 and 2004, emergency referrals more than doubled, to 439 from 200. When meth is involved, workers find children whose basic needs have gone unattended while their parents feed their addictions. "(The children) are hungry. When they're first put in placement, they have hoarding issues with food," says Marilyn Walli, who manages a program that works with expectant mothers and parenting mothers abusing drugs or alcohol. Although there can be environmental hazards for children living in a home where meth is being made, an official who deals with the contamination says the abuse children face at the hands of erratic, violent parents is far harder to remedy. "I'm more worried about a kid growing up in an environment where a parent is a drug user and not feeding them properly," says Paul Savage, an environmental health specialist with the Spokane Regional Health District. "Basically, they need a bath, food and a hug." Reuniting children with their parents is the ultimate aim of family treatment court, but it takes at least a year of treatment and responsible living before that happens. "The bottom line is not just whether they're going to get their kids back, it's whether they're drug-free and going to be productive members of society," says Marilyn Bordner, program director of New Horizons, the agency that runs Spokane County's initiative with a $2-million federal grant. Data on 27 graduates who have finished the program since it started in 2002 show only two who have lost their children again. Another is currently "struggling," Bordner says. A total of 69 clients entered the court between January 2003 and January 2005. Between them, they had 135 children apprehended by Child Protective Services. "Economically, that's a huge impact," Bordner says. Beyond the savings to taxpayers, Bordner adds putting families back together increases the chances the children will grow up well-adjusted and the cycle of addiction will be broken. Chantel Martinson is one of the people who has managed to put her life -- and her family -- back together. Martinson, 33, graduated from family treatment court Monday, allowing her to regain formal custody of her daughter, Kayla, 16, and son Christopher, 10. She opted for the court in August 2004, after her children were apprehended while in the care of her ex-husband. The kids were living with their father after Martinson sent them there as her meth addiction worsened. When her ex lost custody, authorities deemed her unfit to take them back. How things got to that point, Martinson is eager to point out, is far from the stereotype people have about drug addiction. She was a good kid who grew up in a stable, loving environment. "I didn't have a family where (drug use) was acceptable," she says. Martinson first smoked meth when she was 22 and used it occasionally for about 10 years. For a time, she owned her own business. In 2003, things started going wrong. She lost her job, while at the same time struggling to cope with a panic disorder brought on by a serious car crash. "I wasn't using, but the drugs were around me. I had allowed myself to become part of that social setting," she says. It wasn't long before Martinson began using meth regularly, reaching a low point over the Christmas holidays -- the first since her kids went to live with their father. She started injecting meth. Six chaotic months of quitting and relapsing followed. Martinson lost so much weight, family members noticed and her mother urged her to get treatment. After discovering she was pregnant, Martinson quit using. She was arrested for driving while suspended. Her daughter convinced officials at the lock-up to place her mother on suicide watch, guaranteeing she would be behind bars for at last three days. "She knew I'd be clean that way," Martinson says. She relapsed again -- on Kayla's 15th birthday, and miscarried not long afterward. Being unable to look after her kids when her husband lost custody, however, was the final straw. She's grateful family treatment court has allowed her a chance to be a mother to her children again. "It's really going to be up to me now," she says. Meth crept into Washington from California, following a pattern police had seen in the past with other drugs. In 1998, there were no known meth labs in Spokane County, which is home to about 420,000 people in eastern Washington. A handful of labs appeared in 1999, and were easily handled by a Washington State Patrol team that responded to calls throughout the region. By 2000, however, meth labs were popping up all over the state and local police had to learn from scratch how to deal with them on their own. "It caught us totally off-guard," Toombs confesses. The SPD spent $400,000 on equipment and had trained 24 officers to respond at the height of the lab epidemic. At the same time, state officials recognized slowing the juggernaut was a job far bigger than the police alone could handle. In 39 counties, meth action teams with representatives from law enforcement, government agencies, the justice system and local businesses began meeting. In Spokane County, one of the biggest successes was the establishment in 2003 of a local Meth Watch program, which trains retailers to spot suspicious purchases and to report them to authorities. While cold remedies, camp fuel, acetone and lye are all legal products, buying any of them in large quantities or in combination now sets off alarm bells with educated retailers. Public education also involves speaking to students and community groups about the perils of meth in the belief prevention will have a big impact as time goes on. "Now that the labs are down and we have a pretty good handle on that, we're looking at doing presentations. That's been our new big focus," says Julie Alonso of the Greater Spokane Substance Abuse Council. Stores also agreed to move both ephedrine and pseudoephedrine products behind the counter to cut down on stealing. The problem was so bad, one veteran investigator recalls, that a large retailer found out half its stock had been stolen when employees began moving packages of cold pills behind the counter and discovered many were empty. Retailers are now required by law to put products with ephedrine or pseudoephedrine behind the counter after Washington's state legislature passed new rules that also restrict sales to customers over 18 with valid photo ID. Starting on Jan. 1, retailers also must begin recording purchases in a log and limit customers to two packages within a 24-hour period. A local legislator who supported the law says it will help, but it's not a cure-all. "We shouldn't harbour any illusions that if we get rid of the production, that we're going to eliminate (meth) here," says Rep. Timm Ormsby, a Democrat who represents an inner-city Spokane constituency. As long as people use crystal meth and are able to make it with legal ingredients and a little help from the Internet, the industrious are going to try. On a recent October morning, members of the SPD's special investigative unit process a lab found by patrol officers inside a camper parked on a city street. The camper has been towed to a secure enclosure, where team members don protective suits with breathing equipment. The precautions are necessary because chemicals used to make meth can be volatile and the fumes dangerous. You don't need to be a chemist to make meth, but disaster can result when amateur cooks try to cut corners. "They're still morons," Toombs says. "That's why we get explosions." There were three or four confirmed meth-related fires a year when the lab epidemic was at its worst, though police suspected many more. "One guy had skin coming off his face, his neck and his arms. He said he was making doughnuts and he got splattered by the grease," Toombs recalls. Inside the camper, officers find tins of camp fuel and glassware with layered liquids in them. The liquid likely contains meth in different stages of completion, which will be confirmed by laboratory tests. A meth recipe found on a chair and stolen prescription pills containing ephedrine are even more damning evidence. Officers fingerprint the articles to connect them to the suspects. As his team performs a task that has become all too commonplace, Toombs is optimistic the community's combined efforts against meth are making a difference. "We're never going to stop it, but I honestly believe we're gaining on it," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake