News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Cops Plot War On 'Ice' On Big Isle |
Title: | US HI: Cops Plot War On 'Ice' On Big Isle |
Published On: | 2002-08-28 |
Source: | Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-22 07:44:00 |
COPS PLOT WAR ON 'ICE' ON BIG ISLE
Crystal Meth Arrests More Than Quadrupled In 2 Years, Police Say
WAIKOLOA RESORT, Hawaii -- Hundreds of people including law enforcement
officials and politicians have gathered on the Big Island to draw up battle
plans in the war on crystal methamphetamine or "ice."
Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim, who last year declared war on the drug, told
the gathering of 300 people at a West Hawaii resort that Hawaii's way of
life is threatened.
"I have friends and family that drugs have ruined," he said. "We must make
this problem known to the people of this island."
U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye also delivered a warning: "This is a local problem."
Inouye said he has been told there is one town on the Big Island, which he
declined to name, where 50 percent of the teenagers are addicted to ice.
The event, put on by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the
private National Crime Prevention Council, was billed as the Hawaii Island
Methamphetamine Summit, the sixth such event in the nation.
Acting Hawaii County Police Chief Lawrence Mahuna said the amount of ice
confiscated and the number of related arrests more than quadrupled in 2000
from 1998.
DEA chief Asa Hutchinson said ice is "the No. 1 drug problem in rural
America." Crack cocaine and ecstasy are bigger problems in cities, but ice
is marketed more in rural areas, he said.
Ice is also so easy to make, a "laboratory" can be set up in the trunk of a
car, a conference handout said.
The primary ingredient, pseudoephedrine, used for colds, headaches and
allergies, is shipped by the ton to Canada, where there are no controls on
it, Hutchinson said. From there, it's smuggled into the United States. The
finished product is also smuggled from Mexico, he said.
Inouye warned: "There is no silver bullet. There is no easy answer."
But Hutchinson added, "Success is achievable." Drug use overall has been
reduced 50 percent in the past 20 years, he said.
President Bush has promised $1.6 billion over the next five years and Inouye
has obtained $4 million for the Big Island.
Hutchinson said a DEA "demand reduction coordinator," who will work on law
enforcement, education and treatment, is being assigned to the Big Island.
U.S. Attorney Ed Kubo said he wants to expand the Weed and Seed program to
the Big Island. The program "weeds out" criminals, then "seeds" federal
money to rejuvenate the community. It has been successful in Kalihi-Palama,
Chinatown and Waipahu, and is just starting in Ewa.
Conference attendees yesterday identified possible solutions, which will be
forwarded to Washington, D.C., then returned to the Big Island in an
interactive process over 12 to 18 months to develop a specific action plan.
Crystal Meth Arrests More Than Quadrupled In 2 Years, Police Say
WAIKOLOA RESORT, Hawaii -- Hundreds of people including law enforcement
officials and politicians have gathered on the Big Island to draw up battle
plans in the war on crystal methamphetamine or "ice."
Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim, who last year declared war on the drug, told
the gathering of 300 people at a West Hawaii resort that Hawaii's way of
life is threatened.
"I have friends and family that drugs have ruined," he said. "We must make
this problem known to the people of this island."
U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye also delivered a warning: "This is a local problem."
Inouye said he has been told there is one town on the Big Island, which he
declined to name, where 50 percent of the teenagers are addicted to ice.
The event, put on by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the
private National Crime Prevention Council, was billed as the Hawaii Island
Methamphetamine Summit, the sixth such event in the nation.
Acting Hawaii County Police Chief Lawrence Mahuna said the amount of ice
confiscated and the number of related arrests more than quadrupled in 2000
from 1998.
DEA chief Asa Hutchinson said ice is "the No. 1 drug problem in rural
America." Crack cocaine and ecstasy are bigger problems in cities, but ice
is marketed more in rural areas, he said.
Ice is also so easy to make, a "laboratory" can be set up in the trunk of a
car, a conference handout said.
The primary ingredient, pseudoephedrine, used for colds, headaches and
allergies, is shipped by the ton to Canada, where there are no controls on
it, Hutchinson said. From there, it's smuggled into the United States. The
finished product is also smuggled from Mexico, he said.
Inouye warned: "There is no silver bullet. There is no easy answer."
But Hutchinson added, "Success is achievable." Drug use overall has been
reduced 50 percent in the past 20 years, he said.
President Bush has promised $1.6 billion over the next five years and Inouye
has obtained $4 million for the Big Island.
Hutchinson said a DEA "demand reduction coordinator," who will work on law
enforcement, education and treatment, is being assigned to the Big Island.
U.S. Attorney Ed Kubo said he wants to expand the Weed and Seed program to
the Big Island. The program "weeds out" criminals, then "seeds" federal
money to rejuvenate the community. It has been successful in Kalihi-Palama,
Chinatown and Waipahu, and is just starting in Ewa.
Conference attendees yesterday identified possible solutions, which will be
forwarded to Washington, D.C., then returned to the Big Island in an
interactive process over 12 to 18 months to develop a specific action plan.
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