News (Media Awareness Project) - CN NK: Meth Seizures On The Rise In N.B. |
Title: | CN NK: Meth Seizures On The Rise In N.B. |
Published On: | 2009-03-24 |
Source: | Times & Transcript (Moncton, CN NK) |
Fetched On: | 2009-03-25 00:32:45 |
METH SEIZURES ON THE RISE IN N.B.
Methamphetamines Highly Addictive, Linked To Violence
Methamphetamine seizures are on the rise in New Brunswick and that's
not a good thing, according to police.
Wayne Jeffery, a Vancouver-based forensic drug expert who retired
after more than 30 years as a police officer, says meth is one of the
most addictive drugs a person can take, trailing only heroin. And
people hooked on meth are prone to violence, both because of the
psychological effects of the drug and the junkies' desperation to get
their next fix.
"The user is addicted before he knows it," says Jeffery. "He thinks
he's in control of himself when he's not and, by the time he's out of
control, it's already too late."
Coming from Vancouver, which has a rampant meth problem, Jeffery has
seen the consequences of this drug first-hand.
"There are lots of clandestine laboratories in B.C. and it's getting
worse and worse on a yearly basis," he says. "There's a lot of
violence that comes with meth."
Jeffery is in Moncton speaking to Atlantic Canadian drug
investigators at a police workshop, talking to investigators about
being expert drug witnesses, which involves being able to assess a
drug seizure and determine if the drugs are for personal use or trafficking.
As part of the training session, hosted by J Division's Synthetic
Drug Unit, police held a media event to talk about the dangers of the
growing meth trade in New Brunswick. Police are warning people about
the presence of meth and the dangers involved in taking it.
Jeffery says when people use meth over a long period of time, the
brain becomes depleted of natural "feel good" chemicals in the brain.
All that's left are the chemicals from homemade meth and they leave a
person no longer able to function, where they can't even control
their muscle movements. They are "hyper-vigilant" and on the verge of
psychosis.
"They see a police officer and they're going to fight," says Jeffery.
Their heart is so strained that when meth addicts are cuffed, subdued
or tasered by police, heart failure is not uncommon.
Meth has been in New Brunswick for several years now and is mostly
imported from Quebec.
"Because of the proximity to Quebec, meth is often found in the
northwest part of the province," says Sgt. MaryAnn MacNeil of the
RCMP's Drug and Organized Crime Awareness Services. "But that's not
stopping traffickers from moving it into other parts of New Brunswick."
Sgt. Daniel Nowlan, of the Bathurst and Edmundston Regional Drug
Unit, says over the past four years, police have broken up several
organized crime rings in the north that involved meth, including one
in Edmundston where 100,000 pills were seized.
"Meth is available in this province but I don't think it's a crisis
right now," he says. "But we are seeing more on the streets of New
Brunswick. It's growing."
Codiac RCMP Cpl. Mike Gaudet says meth is not a huge industry in
Moncton, but it is available here.
"We're trying to stop that wave from rolling to the east coast," he says.
One of the most dangerous things about meth is that it's a homemade
drug. When people buy it, they have no idea what they're getting.
"Unless you made the pill, how do you know what's in it?" asks MacNeil.
Because the stimulant is cheaply made, it's often sold to people as
ecstasy, which is a combination stimulant-hallucinogen that's more
expensive to make. Drug producers are substituting the cheaper,
highly addictive meth for the less addictive ecstasy. Not even a drug
expert could look at the two different pills and be able to tell the
difference, without lab analysis to say which is which.
Nowlan points to several bags of pills on the table, seized in 2005
up north, to illustrate how they all look the same.
"Even some of the people who sell the drugs don't know what they're
selling," he says.
Methamphetamines Highly Addictive, Linked To Violence
Methamphetamine seizures are on the rise in New Brunswick and that's
not a good thing, according to police.
Wayne Jeffery, a Vancouver-based forensic drug expert who retired
after more than 30 years as a police officer, says meth is one of the
most addictive drugs a person can take, trailing only heroin. And
people hooked on meth are prone to violence, both because of the
psychological effects of the drug and the junkies' desperation to get
their next fix.
"The user is addicted before he knows it," says Jeffery. "He thinks
he's in control of himself when he's not and, by the time he's out of
control, it's already too late."
Coming from Vancouver, which has a rampant meth problem, Jeffery has
seen the consequences of this drug first-hand.
"There are lots of clandestine laboratories in B.C. and it's getting
worse and worse on a yearly basis," he says. "There's a lot of
violence that comes with meth."
Jeffery is in Moncton speaking to Atlantic Canadian drug
investigators at a police workshop, talking to investigators about
being expert drug witnesses, which involves being able to assess a
drug seizure and determine if the drugs are for personal use or trafficking.
As part of the training session, hosted by J Division's Synthetic
Drug Unit, police held a media event to talk about the dangers of the
growing meth trade in New Brunswick. Police are warning people about
the presence of meth and the dangers involved in taking it.
Jeffery says when people use meth over a long period of time, the
brain becomes depleted of natural "feel good" chemicals in the brain.
All that's left are the chemicals from homemade meth and they leave a
person no longer able to function, where they can't even control
their muscle movements. They are "hyper-vigilant" and on the verge of
psychosis.
"They see a police officer and they're going to fight," says Jeffery.
Their heart is so strained that when meth addicts are cuffed, subdued
or tasered by police, heart failure is not uncommon.
Meth has been in New Brunswick for several years now and is mostly
imported from Quebec.
"Because of the proximity to Quebec, meth is often found in the
northwest part of the province," says Sgt. MaryAnn MacNeil of the
RCMP's Drug and Organized Crime Awareness Services. "But that's not
stopping traffickers from moving it into other parts of New Brunswick."
Sgt. Daniel Nowlan, of the Bathurst and Edmundston Regional Drug
Unit, says over the past four years, police have broken up several
organized crime rings in the north that involved meth, including one
in Edmundston where 100,000 pills were seized.
"Meth is available in this province but I don't think it's a crisis
right now," he says. "But we are seeing more on the streets of New
Brunswick. It's growing."
Codiac RCMP Cpl. Mike Gaudet says meth is not a huge industry in
Moncton, but it is available here.
"We're trying to stop that wave from rolling to the east coast," he says.
One of the most dangerous things about meth is that it's a homemade
drug. When people buy it, they have no idea what they're getting.
"Unless you made the pill, how do you know what's in it?" asks MacNeil.
Because the stimulant is cheaply made, it's often sold to people as
ecstasy, which is a combination stimulant-hallucinogen that's more
expensive to make. Drug producers are substituting the cheaper,
highly addictive meth for the less addictive ecstasy. Not even a drug
expert could look at the two different pills and be able to tell the
difference, without lab analysis to say which is which.
Nowlan points to several bags of pills on the table, seized in 2005
up north, to illustrate how they all look the same.
"Even some of the people who sell the drugs don't know what they're
selling," he says.
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