News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Methamphetamine Abuse Thrives In Hawaii |
Title: | US HI: Methamphetamine Abuse Thrives In Hawaii |
Published On: | 2003-09-13 |
Source: | Oklahoman, The (OK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 12:31:15 |
METHAMPHETAMINE ABUSE THRIVES IN HAWAII
HILO, Hawaii -- Hungry children sat quietly in a darkened living room,
terrified of their abusive father. In the kitchen, maggots and rotting food
filled the fridge. With the electricity out, cooking was done on a propane
stove. The furniture was repossessed. The welfare check was already spent. The
family was being evicted. None of this mattered to Wayne and Dina Tamura.
As long as the couple from the tiny town of Kau was high on crystal
methamphetamine, they were happy.
"I didn't think about the kids, I didn't want to spend money on diapers," said
Wayne Tamura, now a recovering addict. "All I wanted to do was smoke."
On the streets, it's known as "ice" - the highly pure, crystalline form of
methamphetamine whose use across the Hawaiian islands has reached epidemic
levels. The state's drug-fighting efforts culminate Monday when Lt. Gov. James
"Duke" Aiona convenes a statewide drug summit to discuss ways to beat back the
menace.
"It's just an insidious drug," said Aiona, a former prosecutor and judge. "I've
never seen the devastation from the other drugs like this." Smoking it provides
a high so intense and long-lasting that addiction can be instant, withdrawal is
excruciating and brain damage often permanent.
Since the drug's introduction from Asia in the mid-1980s, ice has burrowed into
every community in Hawaii, becoming widely used and readily available. The drug
threatens the very way of life in these multicultural islands, where close-knit
families often live three generations to a household, officials say.
Every level of government in Hawaii is focused on stopping the drug. Lawmakers
took the rare step of creating a joint House-Senate committee to formulate an
attack plan. Special police units are being established, and communities are
holding town-hall-style meetings and anti-drug rallies.
Most of the ice in Hawaii is produced in Mexico and California, according to
federal authorities. While meth in other states is often manufactured locally
and usually snorted, ingested or injected, Hawaii prefers the imported,
smokable crystal meth or "ice," which is higher in purity.
"It takes your soul away," said Joshua Lagmay, 26, a recovering user who
recalled how the drug made him prostitute himself and terrorize his community,
even his own family.
Though virtually every state has a meth problem, and the smokable form has
become established in other pockets of the country, including California,
officials in Hawaii have been calling the islands' problem the worst anywhere.
Some 37.4 percent of men jailed in Honolulu tested positive for methamphetamine
in 2001, higher than any other major U.S. city, the federal government says.
The Honolulu Medical Examiner's Office reported that on the island of Oahu,
deaths where ice was a principal cause quadrupled in the past decade to 62 last
year, surpassing deaths related to any other illegal drug or alcohol.
Also last year, crystal meth overtook alcohol as the primary substance used by
adults admitted to treatment centers in Hawaii, according to the state Health
Department. The 2002 total - 2,888 ice users admitted - was double the amount
just four years earlier.
"If we don't grab a hold of this moment in time, we're going to lose a lot more
lives before things get better," said Edward Kubo Jr., the U.S. attorney for
Hawaii.
"Clearly, Hawaii is being killed," Kubo said. "We're on our knees right now."
There's no precise count of Hawaii's ice users. Estimates range from 8,000 to
120,000 out of a state population of 1.2 million, mainly because officials say
its hard to get credible information from users and recovering addicts.
Officials say the state was a ripe target for ice dealers because of the rural
surroundings and no major organized crime group controlling the drug trade.
Sgt. Marshall Kanehailua, head of a new police ice task force for Hawaii
County, which encompasses the Big Island, said he believes high unemployment
rate and close-knit culture on the mostly rural island play a role in helping
the drug gain ground.
Police across the state blame ice for a surge in property crimes, domestic
violence and psychotic behavior. Said Sue Cuffe-Sykos, a drug counselor in the
small town of Hana: "It's the first time I've seen fear. ... People are afraid
of their own relatives."
For the Tamuras, addiction quickly mounted into a $500-a-day habit, leaving
them broke and unemployable. They would stay high and awake for more than a
week at a time, and Wayne Tamura became aggressive and paranoid to the point of
hallucinating.
"After you stay up for days, it's mean how the brain plays tricks on you," he
said.
It wasn't until the state took custody of their children for a third time that
the couple decided to get treatment.
As recovering addicts, the Tamuras find the allure of the drug is still there.
And while that feeling may never vanish completely, with help they are trying
to rebuild their lives and be reunited with their five children.
"I'm in love with him again," Dina Tamura said of her husband. "He has changed
so much. He's like a man again - a husband and father."
He is, to her, everything that ice had taken away.
HILO, Hawaii -- Hungry children sat quietly in a darkened living room,
terrified of their abusive father. In the kitchen, maggots and rotting food
filled the fridge. With the electricity out, cooking was done on a propane
stove. The furniture was repossessed. The welfare check was already spent. The
family was being evicted. None of this mattered to Wayne and Dina Tamura.
As long as the couple from the tiny town of Kau was high on crystal
methamphetamine, they were happy.
"I didn't think about the kids, I didn't want to spend money on diapers," said
Wayne Tamura, now a recovering addict. "All I wanted to do was smoke."
On the streets, it's known as "ice" - the highly pure, crystalline form of
methamphetamine whose use across the Hawaiian islands has reached epidemic
levels. The state's drug-fighting efforts culminate Monday when Lt. Gov. James
"Duke" Aiona convenes a statewide drug summit to discuss ways to beat back the
menace.
"It's just an insidious drug," said Aiona, a former prosecutor and judge. "I've
never seen the devastation from the other drugs like this." Smoking it provides
a high so intense and long-lasting that addiction can be instant, withdrawal is
excruciating and brain damage often permanent.
Since the drug's introduction from Asia in the mid-1980s, ice has burrowed into
every community in Hawaii, becoming widely used and readily available. The drug
threatens the very way of life in these multicultural islands, where close-knit
families often live three generations to a household, officials say.
Every level of government in Hawaii is focused on stopping the drug. Lawmakers
took the rare step of creating a joint House-Senate committee to formulate an
attack plan. Special police units are being established, and communities are
holding town-hall-style meetings and anti-drug rallies.
Most of the ice in Hawaii is produced in Mexico and California, according to
federal authorities. While meth in other states is often manufactured locally
and usually snorted, ingested or injected, Hawaii prefers the imported,
smokable crystal meth or "ice," which is higher in purity.
"It takes your soul away," said Joshua Lagmay, 26, a recovering user who
recalled how the drug made him prostitute himself and terrorize his community,
even his own family.
Though virtually every state has a meth problem, and the smokable form has
become established in other pockets of the country, including California,
officials in Hawaii have been calling the islands' problem the worst anywhere.
Some 37.4 percent of men jailed in Honolulu tested positive for methamphetamine
in 2001, higher than any other major U.S. city, the federal government says.
The Honolulu Medical Examiner's Office reported that on the island of Oahu,
deaths where ice was a principal cause quadrupled in the past decade to 62 last
year, surpassing deaths related to any other illegal drug or alcohol.
Also last year, crystal meth overtook alcohol as the primary substance used by
adults admitted to treatment centers in Hawaii, according to the state Health
Department. The 2002 total - 2,888 ice users admitted - was double the amount
just four years earlier.
"If we don't grab a hold of this moment in time, we're going to lose a lot more
lives before things get better," said Edward Kubo Jr., the U.S. attorney for
Hawaii.
"Clearly, Hawaii is being killed," Kubo said. "We're on our knees right now."
There's no precise count of Hawaii's ice users. Estimates range from 8,000 to
120,000 out of a state population of 1.2 million, mainly because officials say
its hard to get credible information from users and recovering addicts.
Officials say the state was a ripe target for ice dealers because of the rural
surroundings and no major organized crime group controlling the drug trade.
Sgt. Marshall Kanehailua, head of a new police ice task force for Hawaii
County, which encompasses the Big Island, said he believes high unemployment
rate and close-knit culture on the mostly rural island play a role in helping
the drug gain ground.
Police across the state blame ice for a surge in property crimes, domestic
violence and psychotic behavior. Said Sue Cuffe-Sykos, a drug counselor in the
small town of Hana: "It's the first time I've seen fear. ... People are afraid
of their own relatives."
For the Tamuras, addiction quickly mounted into a $500-a-day habit, leaving
them broke and unemployable. They would stay high and awake for more than a
week at a time, and Wayne Tamura became aggressive and paranoid to the point of
hallucinating.
"After you stay up for days, it's mean how the brain plays tricks on you," he
said.
It wasn't until the state took custody of their children for a third time that
the couple decided to get treatment.
As recovering addicts, the Tamuras find the allure of the drug is still there.
And while that feeling may never vanish completely, with help they are trying
to rebuild their lives and be reunited with their five children.
"I'm in love with him again," Dina Tamura said of her husband. "He has changed
so much. He's like a man again - a husband and father."
He is, to her, everything that ice had taken away.
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