Pubdate: Tue, 27 Dec 2005
Source: Daily Home, The (Talladega,  AL)
Copyright: 2005 Consolidated Publishing
Contact:  http://www.dailyhome.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1632
Note:  also listed as contact
Author: Chris Norwood
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

THE FACE OF METH ADDICTION

These people, of both sexes, white and black, of all  ages and from various 
locations, have only one thing in  common. All of them have been convicted 
of various  crimes involving methamphetamine.

They are, tragically, the cutting edge of a rapidly  growing problem.

A Long History

The methamphetamine scourge is not new by any means.

"Meth has actually been around since the 1800s," said  Bruce Freeman, an 
emergency response trainer for the  Alabama Department of Environmental 
Management. "It was  used by the Germans during World War I and by 
the  Germans, Japanese and Americans during World War II to  help keep 
bomber pilots awake for 30 hours at a time.

"In fact, it was commonly used for that purpose up  until about 1972, but 
in small doses in a controlled  environment under a doctor's supervision.

"And it was around in the 1960s and 1970s as a  recreational drug, too. The 
song 'Mother's Little  Helper' by the Rolling Stones is about 
methamphetamine," Freeman said.

What sets the current meth situation apart is the rapid  proliferation of 
home-based laboratories, which first  began appearing in Southern 
California in the early  1990s.

"The California labs were a different situation than  what we see here," 
Freeman said. "You would have a  bunch of guys with Uzis set up in a 
chicken house or a  national forest or an abandoned building, cook 
1,000  pounds of meth, then move on. Now we're seeing smaller, permanent labs."

The problem first showed signs of becoming an epidemic  when it grew out of 
California into the rural Midwest,  according to Talladega County Chief 
Deputy Assistant  District Attorney Barry Matson.

"Once you get out into the Midwest a little bit, it  gets easier to set up 
a lab because you've got  anhydrous ammonia in fertilizer everywhere," 
Matson  said. "At about the same time, you have people all over  the 
country finding meth recipes on the Internet, and  you start to see the 
number of labs just skyrocketing."

Alabama learned from the mistakes of states farther  west as the problem 
began to spread.

"I went to a conference in San Antonio around 1993 or  1994, when we had 
seen maybe one or two meth cases  here," Matson said. "I was talking to a 
guy from  Wyoming, where they were having serious problems.

"And those guys had never even had to deal with crack  cocaine before. They 
were going straight from bootleg  whiskey to meth. It was unbelievable what 
they were  dealing with.

"Since then, we've been able to send people to Drug  Enforcement 
Administration schools to give them special  training. But that first 
generation that worked the  cases out West, those guys are just about all 
dead  right now."

Even now, east central Alabama is still at the edge of  the epidemic, 
according to Mary Ashcraft, Talladega  County Department of Human Resources 
director.

"It's going to get a lot worse here, I expect," she  said. "We're 
definitely seeing an impact here, but it's  nowhere near as bad as what 
they're dealing with in the  northeastern part of the state, around DeKalb, 
Jackson  and Cherokee counties. They're dealing with a tremendous caseload 
up there."

Matson agreed.

"I think meth is going to continue to strike a broader  portion of the 
community," he said. "Meth users, at  this point, do not typically want to 
fool with crack,  and crack users are scared of meth users. But the 
lines  between the two groups are starting to blur a little bit, and that's 
really scary."

The economics of the meth trade will be a major factor  in its expansion, 
he said. "Right now we're dealing  primarily with home labs, but we're 
starting to see  major operations in Mexico, Texas and California  putting 
out ice (a crystalline but not necessarily  purer form of methamphetamine) 
and selling it on the  street," Matson said. "That'll hurt the local 
labs  initially, but as the price goes up, the locals will  come back.

"You'll also probably start to see people who used to  deal in crack 
handling meth also. Those kinds of people  don't care what kind of poison 
they're selling. I hope  there's a special room in hell for people who 
would  bring that into somebody's life."

Impact

Aside from the obvious influx of new drug crimes  stemming from meth use, 
the drug also impacts the  justice system in other ways.

"Both meth and crack are very addictive, terrible  drugs, but the paranoia 
associated with meth use is  much worse than what you see with crack 
users," Matson  said. "The violence associated with crack 
generally  involves robberies to get more money or things like  that.

"With meth, you have that too, but you also have an  intrinsic violence 
that comes from being very paranoid.  One of the guys from Wyoming told me 
a story back then  about a meth addict who hung her baby up in a 
door  hanger and then kicked it to death. It was just unbelievable."

The epidemic has also impacted DHR, Ashcraft said.

"Probably 75 to 80 percent of our foster care caseload  involves parents 
with addictions," she said. "And those  numbers have been on the rise. As a 
parent becomes more  dependent, their basic parenting skills just go out 
the  door. Their next hit becomes more important than their  children."

In the years since meth became a problem in Talladega  County, the average 
number of children in foster care  has climbed from about 115 to about 135 
per month.

"Those numbers are subject to change, and I don't  really have solid 
figures on how many of those are  directly meth related," Ashcraft said, 
"but it's still  a pretty sobering statistic."

Placing children of meth-addicted parents presents a  unique set of 
challenges, Ashcraft said.

"The first thing you want to do in a family crisis is  find a relative to 
place the child with if he or she  has to be removed," she said. "It's 
strange, but with  meth we're seeing entire families that are 
addicted,  grandparents, aunts and uncles -- everybody."

Physical damage

Meth takes its toll in other ways as well. According to  Jane Haney, a 
nurse practitioner at Talladega County  Health Department, "anytime you're 
dealing with severe  drug abuse it inhibits your judgment. You're a lot 
more  likely to do risky things like have unprotected sex or  to prostitute 
yourself in exchange for the drug. We see  a lot more cases of HIV and 
syphilis among meth users."

Severe weight loss is considered a classic symptom of  meth abuse.

"When we see cases of malnutrition and weight loss,  that's a reason for 
suspicion right there," Haney said.  "That, and people with a lot of little 
sores from  scratching. I'm not really sure why that is."

The home manufacture of meth also carries a whole host  of dangers in and 
of itself, Freeman said.

The manufacture of meth usually involves three  categories of hazardous 
substances.

"You have flammable, reactive chemicals that are used  as solvents," 
Freeman said. "Then you have the  corrosives, strong acids or bases that 
give off  dangerous vapors and can burn the skin if it's splashed on. These 
substances also generate heat and can ignite  the flammable substances.

"Then you have toxic inhalation hazards in smaller  quantities, 
particularly if you're using red  phosphorous and iodine. When you heat 
that up, it  produces PH3, or phosphine gas, a blistering agent similar to 
phosgene gas, which has been used as a  chemical weapon.

"Only phosphine is actually much deadlier, and it is  produced in small 
quantities every time that method is  used so there is potential for 
long-term damage."

The signs

The distinctive odor of ammonia is probably the most  widely known 
indication of a meth lab, but as anhydrous  ammonia becomes more difficult 
to come by, the red  phosphorous and iodine method of cooking have 
become  more common, Freeman said.

"The odor is going to vary according to which method  they are using. But 
anytime your eyes and nose start  running or burning, that could be an 
indication. Also,  if you see a $10,000 surveillance system on a 
$3,000  shack, that could be another sign. Or if they have a camouflage 
tarp over the roof to prevent detection from  the air."

The methods for cleaning up a meth lab are now fairly  well established, 
but the long-term repercussions  remain largely unknown.

"The DEA will hire contractors to come and properly  dispose of the 
chemicals, but they don't take out the  drapes, carpet, countertops, 
clothes or any of the  porous surfaces inside the house," Freeman said. 
"And  what happens if a new family moves into that house without knowing 
what used to be in there? There is just  no standard on how clean is 
actually clean."

The impact on the area surrounding a lab is also  unclear.

"It would be prohibitively expensive to sample all of  the soil and water 
surrounding a lab just to identify  substances without addressing them," 
Freeman said.

"There are at least 10 different ways to make meth," he  said. "Seven or 
eight of them require Ph.D.-level  knowledge of chemistry. Unfortunately, 
the others can  be accomplished with things that most people have 
lying  around the house anyway."

Actually, Matson said, there is another method of  producing the drug that 
probably doesn't require a  doctorate.

"We're starting to see some pee labs now," he said.  "Addicts will actually 
resell their urine and sweat  while they're high to extract and recycle the 
meth. If  that isn't the sign of a desperate addiction, I don't  know what is."
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