Pubdate: Thu, 3 Aug 2006
Source: News-Tribune (LaSalle, IL)
Section: Front Page
Copyright: 2006 News-Tribune
Contact:  http://www.newstrib.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3808
Author: Tom Collins, NewsTribune Senior Reporter

LA SALLE MAN SAYS HE'S AMONG THOSE RESPONSIBLE FOR BRINGING METH TO AREA

Editor's Note: Five inmates serving prison sentences for 
methamphetamine crimes agreed to talk to the NewsTribune about meth 
in the Illinois Valley. This is the last part in a four-part series.

EAST ST. LOUIS — Who brought methamphetamine into the Illinois 
Valley? Brian Cain admitted he had a hand in the arrival of meth.

Cain had moved to Fairfield, a town of 5,000 located 35 miles east of 
Mount Vernon, in 1998. Southern Illinois was — and is — awash with 
meth and within three days of his arrival Cain was smoking it from a 
makeshift container of tin foil.

I wouldn't say I was addicted (the first time), but I loved it — I 
loved everything about it," said Cain, 29, currently serving a 6-year 
sentence in Southwestern Illinois Correctional Center in East St. Louis.

The people in Fairfield who turned him onto meth showed him how to 
manufacture the illegal stimulant in a single try.

His meth use quickly spiraled out of control, and he moved back to 
Oglesby in an effort to distance himself from the drug and the people 
who used it.

Though heroin remains the Illinois Valley's scourge, methamphetamine 
has finally migrated to North Central Illinois from Missouri and 
southern Illinois. Meth labs have popped up in recent years and while 
police and prosecutors say the illegal stimulant has yet to reach 
epidemic proportions, recovering addicts warn that it is as addictive 
as heroin.

There wasn't much methamphetamine in the Illinois Valley area in 
2000, but Cain helped change that. He noticed that north central 
Illinois offered much greater access to the ingredients, including 
farm chemicals, needed to produce meth than Fairfield did. Depending 
on how much meth-making material he procured or stole, he could 
produce up to a half ounce (14 grams) in one sitting.

Local drug users soon took note of Cain's new product, and "more and 
more people were coming over wanting to try it," he said.

When the drug task force caught up with Cain in 2005 and seized 20 
grams from his apartment in east La Salle, they told him that unless 
he wanted to spend 40 years in prison he'd better give them the name 
of the supplier who was pumping meth into the Illinois Valley. Cain 
considered telling them, "Here I am."

I never intended to teach anyone how to do it and never intended to 
start a meth epidemic," he emphasized, "(but) pretty much all of the 
people that were with me 'cooking' are now in prison."

La Salle County prosecutors weren't as quick to link Cain to the 
arrival of methamphetamine, however. Brian Towne, first assistant La 
Salle County state's attorney, said Cain's complicity does not put 
him in a league with Charles Bartels or Michael Munson, who were 
largely responsible for the introduction of heroin and cocaine, 
respectively. He may have introduced people to meth," Towne allowed, 
"but that didn't create the widespread epidemic that heroin is."

Cain, for his part, insisted he did not deal meth for cash, even 
though the going price in southern Illinois was a tempting $100 a 
gram. He was battling a heroin addiction at the same time he was 
using meth, and he typically bartered meth for heroin on the streets 
of Chicago. Meth, he said, is worse than heroin, insofar as it's 
easier to procure.

Cain was married during this period and he tried to quit meth when 
their daughter was born in 2000. Within a year, however, a few 
friends came up from Fairfield and he soon was cooking again. He left 
his wife and moved to Mendota, where he cooked it every day. He 
suffered from meth-related paranoia and sleep-deprived hallucinations 
and was convinced authorities were following him.

Mendota police were always driving by real slow," he said. "It seemed 
like I couldn't go anywhere without the DARE van soon to follow, even 
on back roads.

At one time I went to the toilet and flushed about 8 grams just 
because the police turned around in my driveway."

Police eventually did bust him, first in 2002 after a concerned 
friend called the police in a desperate attempt to get him to quit 
using. He was caught with just  1/4 gram of meth and two boxes of 
Sudafed (a source of pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient), and was 
later sentenced to probation.

Between the heroin and meth, his life quickly came unhinged. He and 
his wife (with whom he later reunited) lost their jobs, their 
apartment, and turned their children over to relatives at the 
insistence of the Department of Children and Family Services. Cain 
overdosed in 2003 and nearly died after rolling his car eight times 
driving home from Chicago.

In the months that followed, he devoted himself to meth full time, 
making semiweekly trips into the woods to cook meth out of sight and 
with no one to smell the noxious chemicals downwind.

Chemical splashes burned his arms and the corrosive fumes ate holes 
in his clothes. As his addiction progressed, he took to using a 
syringe (a "frog" in drug parlance) to shoot  1/2 to  3/4 gram five 
or more times a day. The paranoia and hallucinations worsened and he 
began to see "tree people" lurking in the shadows.

I've seen all kinds of crazy things," he said. "I've seen an airplane 
land, and there was no airplane. I've seen a guy throwing a baby up 
in the air, and I flipped out. I'm yelling at everyone around me, 
'Look what that guy's doing.' And that's what set people off. 'What 
are you on? What's wrong with you?'"

Then in 2005, a neighbor noticed a chemical smell coming from his La 
Salle apartment and called the authorities.

I knew they were coming," Cain said. "I knew it was going to be in 
that week. I just didn't care. I was so far out of it. I was up for 
17 days. You know how they say you hit bottom? Well, I was under bottom."

The task force arrived with a search warrant and a cleanup crew 
wearing hazardous materials suits in case the cops found an active 
meth lab inside. They found no active lab, but did recover battery 
peelings and a Mountain Dew bottle fitted with a rubber hose remnants 
of an inactive, portable lab — in addition to 20 grams of meth.

In a theme common to most of the NewsTribune interviews, Cain said he 
was somewhat relieved to be caught, simply because he might have died 
without police intervention. His weight plummeted from 160 to 110 
pounds and he was suffering from "meth mouth."

I lost most of my back teeth," he said. "My teeth were all rotted 
out. I didn't eat at all. There were times when I had food in my 
mouth, chewed it until it was liquid, and then spit it out because I 
couldn't swallow.

My arms were so nasty looking when I got arrested that (an officer) 
took pictures of my arms and asked me if I knew how close I was to 
death." The worst part about his arrest was admitting he openly lied 
to his mother about his addiction. The night before his arrest, his 
mom visited, noticed his alarming condition and asked if he was using 
drugs again.

I kept telling her, 'No, Mom. I'm clean,'" Cain said. "The next 
morning I got arrested. My first month in jail, she wouldn't talk to 
me — and that kind of hurt."

Cain is receiving drug treatment in a minimum-security prison that 
was scheduled to open a meth-only unit in July. Cain said his drug 
counselors criticize him for going through the motions of his drug 
treatment instead of buying in.

They've told me I'm not clean because I want to be, I'm clean because 
I have to be," he said. "They say I'm 'white-knuckling it.' I keep 
trying to tell them that's not how it is. I want to be clean. I'm 
trying to work this program like they want me to. I've had a lot 
happen over the last couple of years."

[Sidebar]

Dealing With 'Meth Mouth'

Two of the methamphetamine addicts interviewed for this series have 
had teeth extracted because of methamphetamine.

Meth mouth," as dentists call it, is accelerated decay and rotting 
connected to the acidic components of methamphetamine and from the 
poor personal hygiene that results from being high for extended 
periods. The results are often revolting; teeth can become blackened 
and worn into nubs.

John Derango, a La Salle dentist who specializes in cosmetic 
dentistry, said he once assisted a colleague in Iowa in trying to 
help restore a meth addict's teeth. There weren't any to work with. 
"Most of the teeth were at a point where they were not restorable," 
Derango recalled. "He ended up losing most of his teeth."

Derango said meth isn't as prevalent in the Illinois Valley and that 
he has never personally treated a local person who admitted to meth use.

But then I look back to the days when we didn't know about meth," he 
allowed, "there were a few people in here who may have had it."

Among the meth-related causes of dental and periodontal decay:

| Corrosive ingredients: Meth is manufactured from a combination of 
anhydrous ammonia, lithium from batteries and starter fluid. Each 
promotes tooth decay.

| Dry mouth: Production of saliva, which protects teeth from decay, 
is reduced when ingesting methamphetamine.

| Poor diet: Meth addicts crave sodas with caffeine, both to 
alleviate dry mouth and to enhance the drug's stimulant effects. Meth 
also works as an appetite suppressant and a lack of nutrients such as 
calcium doesn't help.

| Grinding and clenching: Meth raises the heartbeat and promotes 
nervous behaviors. (Users may compound the problem by sucking on hard 
candies or lollipops to keep grinding.)

| Burning vapors: Smoking and snorting are considered the most 
harmful media for ingesting meth. Smoking meth may cause lesions in 
the gums and soft tissues.

| Gum disease: Meth causes blood vessels to contract, reducing 
necessary blood flow to the gums

| Poor hygiene: The drug provides a longer high (up to 12 hours) than 
many other stimulants or narcotics. Meth addicts typically fail to 
address their hygienic needs while under the influence.

(Sources: the American Dental Association and the Meth Awareness and 
Prevention Project of South Dakota.)
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