News (Media Awareness Project) - US OK: Oklahoma One Of Nation's Leaders In Methamphetamine |
Title: | US OK: Oklahoma One Of Nation's Leaders In Methamphetamine |
Published On: | 2000-10-24 |
Source: | Shawnee News-Star (OK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 04:30:29 |
OKLAHOMA ONE OF NATION'S LEADERS IN METHAMPHETAMINE
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- Oklahoma has become one of the nation's leaders in
methamphetamine labs, arrests, addicts and cases, and no drug treatment or
police tactic has stemmed the tide.
"We don't know what caused it, why Oklahoma," said John Duncan, a chief
agent at the Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs
Control. "Somewhere, the information became more available."
Statistics show that meth cases have increased more than 8,000 percent
since 1994, which comes as a surprise since state officials thought they
had the problem under control after an outbreak the previous decade.
According to a 1992 report from the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotic and
Dangerous Drugs Control, Oklahoma ranked fourth nationally in the number of
meth laboratories seized each year in the 1980s. The number declined,
partly because of the passage of state and federal laws regulating the
chemicals needed to make it.
But more than the availability of the chemicals, recipes to make
methamphetamine may have triggered the latest craze.
"It used to be the recipes were secretly guarded," said Robert Surovec,
assistant special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration's Oklahoma
City branch. "It used to cost thousands of dollars to get a recipe. Now
it's on the Internet."
The increase in usage coincides with the emergence of the World Wide Web.
In 1994, the Drug Enforcement Administration seized 263 meth labs, but that
figure climbed to 879 in 1996 and 1,627 in 1998.
Meth numbers also indicate the drug has yet to spread to the East Coast.
Cities such as Oklahoma City and Omaha, Neb., have worse meth problems than
New York City or Detroit.
According to the DEA, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Des Moines, Iowa, Las Vegas and
Sacramento, Calif., have far more males testing positive for meth when
arrested than Dallas, Atlanta, Chicago and Miami, Fla.
Oklahoma City reported that 8 percent of males arrested tested positive for
meth in 1998, a greater percentage than Atlanta, Chicago, New York City and
Miami combined.
Meth accounts for nearly 90 percent of all drug cases in the Midwest,
according to the Koch Crime Institute.
Oklahoma ranks in the top five in almost every meth category. Oklahomans
are 42 percent above the national average in all age groups for meth use,
the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation reports.
The state medical examiner's office also reports the number of death cases
testing positive for meth has been higher than for cocaine for the past
three years. The office also reports meth is found in more cases of
homicides and motor vehicle accidents screened for drugs.
Officials aren't sure why Oklahoma has become a haven for meth, but one
theory is that methamphetamine fits the state's low economic status
compared with the rest of the country.
The estimated cost of making meth is $100 an ounce, with a street value of
$800 an ounce.
To clean up after a meth lab, the OSBI estimates that it costs an average
of $2,000. The OSBI spent $1 million on cleaning services last year.
This year, both the state Legislature and federal government have increased
funding to prosecute meth manufacturers.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- Oklahoma has become one of the nation's leaders in
methamphetamine labs, arrests, addicts and cases, and no drug treatment or
police tactic has stemmed the tide.
"We don't know what caused it, why Oklahoma," said John Duncan, a chief
agent at the Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs
Control. "Somewhere, the information became more available."
Statistics show that meth cases have increased more than 8,000 percent
since 1994, which comes as a surprise since state officials thought they
had the problem under control after an outbreak the previous decade.
According to a 1992 report from the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotic and
Dangerous Drugs Control, Oklahoma ranked fourth nationally in the number of
meth laboratories seized each year in the 1980s. The number declined,
partly because of the passage of state and federal laws regulating the
chemicals needed to make it.
But more than the availability of the chemicals, recipes to make
methamphetamine may have triggered the latest craze.
"It used to be the recipes were secretly guarded," said Robert Surovec,
assistant special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration's Oklahoma
City branch. "It used to cost thousands of dollars to get a recipe. Now
it's on the Internet."
The increase in usage coincides with the emergence of the World Wide Web.
In 1994, the Drug Enforcement Administration seized 263 meth labs, but that
figure climbed to 879 in 1996 and 1,627 in 1998.
Meth numbers also indicate the drug has yet to spread to the East Coast.
Cities such as Oklahoma City and Omaha, Neb., have worse meth problems than
New York City or Detroit.
According to the DEA, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Des Moines, Iowa, Las Vegas and
Sacramento, Calif., have far more males testing positive for meth when
arrested than Dallas, Atlanta, Chicago and Miami, Fla.
Oklahoma City reported that 8 percent of males arrested tested positive for
meth in 1998, a greater percentage than Atlanta, Chicago, New York City and
Miami combined.
Meth accounts for nearly 90 percent of all drug cases in the Midwest,
according to the Koch Crime Institute.
Oklahoma ranks in the top five in almost every meth category. Oklahomans
are 42 percent above the national average in all age groups for meth use,
the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation reports.
The state medical examiner's office also reports the number of death cases
testing positive for meth has been higher than for cocaine for the past
three years. The office also reports meth is found in more cases of
homicides and motor vehicle accidents screened for drugs.
Officials aren't sure why Oklahoma has become a haven for meth, but one
theory is that methamphetamine fits the state's low economic status
compared with the rest of the country.
The estimated cost of making meth is $100 an ounce, with a street value of
$800 an ounce.
To clean up after a meth lab, the OSBI estimates that it costs an average
of $2,000. The OSBI spent $1 million on cleaning services last year.
This year, both the state Legislature and federal government have increased
funding to prosecute meth manufacturers.
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