Pubdate: Mon, 25 May 2009
Source: Maui News, The (HI)
Copyright: 2009 The Maui News
Contact:  http://www.mauinews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2259
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

POLICE: METH IS GROWING ON MAUI

Economy Driving Many To Sell, Use, Transport Narcotics, Experts Say

WAILUKU - Crystal methamphetamine and other narcotics are showing 
signs of a resurgence on Maui, due to the dismal economy, according 
to a Maui Police Department vice officer.

As people find themselves unemployed and desperate, they increasingly 
turn to the drug trade to try to make money, said police officer Ken 
Doyle. Others start using drugs like meth to stay awake while they 
work multiple jobs to support their children. And addicts of all ages 
often say they started using drugs to cope with a dysfunctional or 
broken family life, he said.

To get meth out of Maui, "We've got to make sure it's not profitable 
anymore, and we've got to help families stay together," he said.

Doyle and other experts spoke on drugs and addiction Friday at an 
all-day crystal methamphetamine prevention seminar organized by Big 
Brothers Big Sisters of Maui County and the Partnership for a Drug 
Free America. At the meeting at Maui Economic Opportunity's offices, 
staffers with Big Brothers Big Sisters said they were inspired to 
offer the seminar after seeing a number of the young children they 
serve being affected by family members addicted to "ice."

The high profit margins on meth for distributors and dealers are what 
make the drug so pervasive in Hawaii, Doyle said. A pound of the drug 
bought for $10,000 in Mexico can be sold for five times that amount 
on Maui, he said.

"That's why we have a problem," he said.

The current economic situation is making people more willing to 
participate in the drug trade, such as agreeing to transport packages 
of meth from the Mainland to Hawaii on their bodies, he said.

"Right now, it's all about the money," Doyle said, adding, "As people 
lose their jobs, times are going to be tough. People are going to do 
things they wouldn't normally do."

Young women and even children are increasingly being used to bring 
drugs onto the island, he noted.

Other trends seen in meth abuse include an increasing number of users 
"eating" the drug by taking it in pill form, rather than by smoking 
it; also, more and more meth users are elderly, old enough to be 
grandparents, Doyle added.

Heroin and cocaine are also making a comeback, and crimes related to 
drug use, such as vehicle break-ins, are increasing because of the 
surge, he said.

"If the economy doesn't get better, (the drug problem) is going to 
get worse," Doyle said.

The Maui police had "intel" that drug traffickers were using the 
Hawaii Superferry to transport meth from Honolulu to Maui, before the 
ferry service shut down, he added. That presented an especially 
difficult channel to block, because Maui police didn't have 
jurisdiction over activities on the high seas, he said.

Meth is rarely manufactured in Hawaii but is usually smuggled into 
the islands from "superlabs" on the Mainland and in Mexico, said 
federal Drug Enforcement Agency investigator Linda Martin.

"We don't really see the labs here," she said. "It's so much easier 
for them to body-pack it in."

The number of meth-related deaths in Hawaii decreased from 2007 to 
2008, indicating that programs to fight the drug are helping, she said.

A big part of the credit goes to a law passed several years ago 
requiring drugs that contain pseudoephedrine, like Sudafed, to be 
taken off store shelves and distributed by pharmacists, with buyers 
required to show identification. The chemical is a critical 
ingredient in meth, and drug labs had been sending runners to buy up 
whole shelfloads of the congestion medicine before its sale was 
restricted, she said.

"I know it's a pain for all of you. It's a pain for me when I get a 
cold," she said. "But these are actually wonderful deterrents."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom