Source: Advertiser, The (Australia) Contact: Fri, 26 June 1998 Author: Jeremy Pudney and John Merriman 'MOBILE' DRUG LABS IN VOGUE "MOBILE" drug laboratories are being used to avoid police detection as more Adelaide drug users turn to amphetamines, a new study has found. The sophisticated but often unhygienic laboratories can be shifted and housed in caravans, homes, sheds and even hotel rooms. Detective Senior Sergeant Eddie Sudrabs of the Drug Task Force said yesterday mobile drug labs were a relatively easy way to make money for criminals and were hard to detect. "Because they can be dismantled and moved so easily it is hard for police to keep observations on the set-ups," he said. "We have seized several mobile drug labs but they were not being used at the time. They do exist and police are very, very conscious of them." He said the increase in amphetamine production in the State was partly due to the increase of technology in exchanging information, such as the Internet. The South Australian Drug Trends study, released yesterday, revealed amphetamine use was increasing in Adelaide and the drug was more popular than heroin with first-time injecting drug users. Amphetamine had been injected by more users than heroin, was "easy" to obtain but often dangerously low in purity. Drug users, police, health and social workers were surveyed for the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC) study. NDARC spokesman Mr Paul Dillon said the level of amphetamine use in Adelaide indicated local production. He said amphetamine was also cheaper than heroin, selling for about $50 a gram compared to about $400. "It's cheaper and it's also a stimulant drug; it's an up drug and seen as a party drug," he said. "You can use it in so many different ways." The study also found heroin was easy to buy in Adelaide and was increasingly used. While the majority of heroin users injected the drug, heroin smoking had become increasingly common among young women and the Vietnamese community. The Federal Government-funded study also found: HALF of the drug users surveyed had committed a crime within the past four weeks. COCAINE use had increased but was still not widespread because it was "difficult" to buy. YOUNG illicit drug users pooled money to buy drugs more cheaply. CANNABIS was very easy to get and becoming more potent as more was grown hydroponically. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)