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'Meth' usage ravages Indiana

A new wave of drug manufacturers and addicts is overrunning Indiana, say officials at Indiana Criminal Justice Institute.
Statistics show that methamphetamine usage has been growing throughout Indiana, both in urban and rural areas, with the Indiana State Police forensics laboratory processing twice as many busted methamphetamine labs each year since 1994. Law enforcement and Indiana officials are warning the public of methamphetamine's potential health risks.

According to the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute, "methamphetamine is a powerfully addictive stimulant that dramatically affects the central nervous system." The institute warns that methamphetamine trafficking and production are equally, if not more, dangerous to public health and well-being than the effects the drug has on the user. "The reckless practices of the untrained people who manufacture it in clandestine labs result in explosions and fires that injure or kill not only the people and families involved, but also law enforcement or firemen who respond to the scene," reads a statement on the institute's Web site.

A representative from the Tippecanoe, Indiana Drug Task Force, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that the problem is at a very high level and has been that way for the last two years

"We've busted 15 labs this year and so far that is in keeping with the number busted last year," he said.

The spokesman added that the drug is seemingly non-discriminatory; it can affect people from all social strata and is produced both in rural areas and cities.

One former methamphetamine user and recovered drug addict, Jeff Stuckey of Crawfordsville, Indiana said this is true of his experiences with the drug.

"When I grew up in California, meth was everywhere — cheerleaders did it, everybody did. It was just the drug to do."

Stuckey said that when he came to Indiana for the first time, he brought several eight balls (one-eighth of an ounce) of methamphetamine. He said he went out drinking with some girls one night and accidentally broke one of their car windows with a beer bottle. As payment for the window, he offered to give the girl a half-pound of the drug.

"She was, like, 'OK,' and she took it," Stuckey said. "I came through again about a year later and I asked what happened to it and her friend said she threw it away; she didn't know what it was.

"That was about five or six years ago. I came back out this time and it's everywhere."

The Indiana drug task force spokesman said it can be disheartening to see a lot of parents going to prison for two to 30 years just because they weren't thinking about their families when they decided to produce, buy or sell the drug. Consequently, many young children throughout the state have found themselves without one of or both of their parents.

Part of the reason there is a rise in production is the ease with which methamphetamine can be manufactured. "You can use household chemicals to do it," Stuckey said, "but there is one chemical that is regulated by the government, but they found away around using that. And that used to be what they did. They'd import that chemical from Mexico and now they've just found a way of making it without that chemical. It isn't as good as the stuff I used to do, but it's still goddamn cheap and it still (messes) your life up; that’s what it comes down to."

Data from the House Enrolled Act 1082, went into effect on July 1 in an attempt to curb methamphetamine use among Hoosiers. Various reports from county drug task force agencies show that methamphetamine use and production are on the rise.

The Tippecanoe, Indiana Drug Task Force spokesman said he doesn't think Indiana can ever get rid of the problem.

Stuckey says (the police) may report a lab bust, but there might be 20 other labs they haven't identified.

"You can't stop it; it's here," Stuckey said. "It's here to stay and there is not a damn thing they can do about it."

The Indiana task force spokesman said part of the attraction of methamphetamine, unlike other drugs such as cocaine, is the length of the high. "The approximate length of a cocaine high is between two to three hours but a (methamphetamine) high can last up to12 hours," he said.

The usage problem is magnified by the price of the drug.

"It's really cheap, it lasts a long time and it makes you feel damn good," Stuckey said.

The Purdue, Indiana Police Department reports that there is no significant sign of methamphetamine usage on campus. Lt. Fred Davis of the Purdue Police said that even though he finds it surprising that methamphetamine isn't found on campus, it doesn’t seem like the drug students would choose first.

"I'd be wrong to say that it's not here," he said, "but I think our college kids will take drugs like ecstasy or smoke dope before they would even think about trying meth."

Davis also said it would be wholly impractical for there to be a methamphetamine lab on or near campus because of the strong odor that production of the drug gives off. He added that the Purdue, Indiana Police have not found any signs of the drug being produced or pulled over any vehicles transporting supplies or trafficking the drug around or through campus.

"I think that (the police) are doing what they can because it does (mess) people's lives up," Stuckey said. "It will make you hollow, false, stupid, skinny and desperate."


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