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UNNECESSARY EPIDEMIC Hidden Powerhouses Underlie Meth's Ugly Spread
The Oregonian ^ | April 3, 2005 | STEVE SUO

Posted on 04/05/2005 12:06:43 PM PDT by Travis McGee

FRESNO, Calif. A cross the West and Great Plains, small-town residents blame the arrival of meth abuse in their communities on the influx of local meth labs.

They are mistaken.

The reality is that 80 percent of meth comes from Mexican drug cartels operating here, in the rural expanses of Central and Southern California. According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, only 20 percent of the supply is made by local users themselves.

A decade ago, the cartels in California pioneered a technique for industrial-scale production of meth that police dubbed the "superlab."

Built with commercial-grade lab equipment and fueled by hundreds of pounds of chemicals, a single superlab can churn out 100,000 or even 1 million doses of meth in a two-day production run. A typical "user" meth lab can make a maximum of 280 doses at a time.

The cartels' prodigious supply of methamphetamine, sent out across the Plains as far east as North Carolina, created a demand where none existed before. Many of the supply lines lead back to the nation's agricultural powerhouse: the Central Valley of California.

"This," said Carl M. Faller Jr., a Fresno federal prosecutor, "is Colombia for meth."

The influence of the superlabs is overlooked because although they account for the bulk of the drug's production, they represent only 4 percent of the labs. The vast majority of meth labs nationally -- 8,000 of the 8,300 seized in 2001 -- are home-user labs.

Home labs can become an obsessive outlet for users on the multiday runs without sleep known as "tweaking." The designs are primitive and vary widely. They consist of a jumble of over-the-counter pseudoephedrine, household lye and scraped-away matchbook covers. The reaction vessel usually is a jelly jar. The output might provide a cook $250 to $500 worth of meth to sell, with two weeks' worth left over for personal use.

Although tweaker labs are costly to clean up when they explode or spill, their role in supplying meth to U.S. users is minor. The main culprit is the superlab.

Bubbling glass globes

California superlabs achieve a level of sophistication, uniformity and efficiency seldom seen in tweaker labs.

The superlab's signature is a globe-shaped piece of glassware that drug agents call a "22." Designed for scientific research, the 22-liter reaction vessel could hold the contents of 11 two-liter soda bottles. The 22 sits in an aluminum cradle lined with heating coils. The cradle and globe together sell for $3,000 to $4,000.

Inside the glass ball, a blood-red brew of pseudoephedrine, red phosphorus and hydriodic acid reacts to form meth. The temperature dial is turned up to set the mixture bubbling, then down to cook. Orange hoses stretch like octopus arms from the neck of each 22 to a box filled with cat litter, which absorbs reaction gases.

Jerry Massetti, a chemist with the California Bureau of Forensic Services, recalled the first rumors of such monster labs in San Diego in the early 1990s.

"You'd wonder whether it was an exaggeration," Massetti said. "Then you'd hear similar stories of labs in Riverside, Orange County, Los Angeles."

Then the monster headed north, he said, "like a shadow passing over the landscape."

In the Central Valley, the highly standardized superlabs arrived en masse one week in July 1992, according to Massetti's notes and a journal article he wrote at the time. The labs, he wrote, "corroborated rumors about multiple tons of ephedrine being processed in this way."

The biggest Massetti ever saw came eight months later, in a Tulare County fruit-packing shed. The lab was so enormous that operators used a forklift to crush all the cans of Freon emptied during manufacturing. Twelve glass 22s were strung together, creating a capacity of 144 pounds of pure meth per batch. Cut to street purity, that could keep 21,000 serious addicts high for a week.

The labs are so standardized that the first time police found high-thread-count Martha Stewart sheets -- used to filter solid meth from surrounding liquids -- in one lab, identical sheets were discovered the next day in a lab 100 miles away. The smallest detail, down to the way in which hoses are duct-taped together, is replicated from one superlab to the next.

Police say the cookie-cutter approach reflects the guiding hand of Mexico-based drug cartels, which run the labs in California and distribute the finished product across the country.

Labor comes from migrant workers. California drug agents call these lab operators "mopes" -- police lingo for low-level henchmen.

The mopes don't use meth but hire themselves out in standing crews of four or five, available for a weekend's hard work cooking the drug. From the Central Valley, a typical crew of mopes could travel across Pacheco Pass through the Coast Range on a Friday night to the Bay Area. They'd pick up a stash of chemicals from a San Jose storage locker, then return to a small valley town such as Merced, where their employer would secure a secluded barn or farmhouse by bribing a ranch foreman.

After laying in a supply of groceries, the mopes would work for two days without sleep to monitor the delicate reaction. A misstep could cost $50,000. Some are told their families in Mexico will be killed if they speak to the police. At times, drug agents have come upon mopes in a lab padlocked from the outside.

At the end, a supervisor arrives to haul away the finished meth for delivery.

In Medford, Ore., police say 15 major dealers ferry the drugs regularly from the Central Valley. In Woodburn, Ore., police once seized 30 pounds of meth shipped directly by a top member of the Amezcua cartel in Southern California. The local dealers had customers up and down Interstate 5, from the Portland suburbs to the Grants Pass area of Southern Oregon.

Patron saint of traffickers

The Central Valley offers a perfect locale for the mopes to hide their work.

Blinding dust billows across county roads. Derelict outbuildings, rusting farm implements and 100-foot stacks of wooden pallets dot mile after mile.

Through long experience, the 20-member Fresno Methamphetamine Task Force has learned the routine of catching mopes in the act.

Team members cull junk mail at lab waste dumps for addresses. They watch abandoned farmhouses where the occasional car has been seen to come and go. On a stakeout, they'll ask permission to park in a rancher's yard by saying they're investigating the theft of farm implements.

If they're lucky, they'll sneak up on what Fresno Sgt. Don Mitchell calls a "real nice lab" -- 22s bubbling, surrounded by a smell some liken to rotting citrus.

Agents tell of moonlit "low crawls" with camouflage and automatic weapons through rows of grapevines; of the leg broken in a fall through a rotting barn roof; of mopes who ran, or "leg bailed," and ones who slowed down long enough to be deported.

Whether the mopes get caught or get away, they often leave behind relics of Jesus Malverde -- the mustachioed 19th-century bandit whom Mexican traffickers have made their patron saint. The relics offer prayers like this one, printed on a container of incense:

"You that dwell in heaven near God, hear the sufferings of this humble sinner.

"Oh Miraculous Malverde, Oh Malverde my Savior, grant me this favor and fill my heart with joy.

"Grant me good health, Lord, give me peace, give me comfort, and I will rejoice."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; meth; smuggling; superlabs; wodlist
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"The reality is that 80 percent of meth comes from Mexican drug cartels operating here, in the rural expanses of Central and Southern California. According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, only 20 percent of the supply is made by local users themselves."

Police say the cookie-cutter approach reflects the guiding hand of Mexico-based drug cartels, which run the labs in California and distribute the finished product across the country.

Labor comes from migrant workers. California drug agents call these lab operators "mopes" -- police lingo for low-level henchmen.

After laying in a supply of groceries, the mopes would work for two days without sleep to monitor the delicate reaction. A misstep could cost $50,000. Some are told their families in Mexico will be killed if they speak to the police. At times, drug agents have come upon mopes in a lab padlocked from the outside.

Don't worry about our open borders, folks. These hardworking undocumented immigrants are just running the meth "superlabs" Americans are too lazy to run.

1 posted on 04/05/2005 12:06:47 PM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: HiJinx; Spiff; B4Ranch; wardaddy; Dead Corpse; Boot Hill; Eaker; Squantos; Brad's Gramma; Czar; ...

Disgusted ping.


2 posted on 04/05/2005 12:08:48 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: Travis McGee
Don't worry, the Mexicans are only making the meth that Americans refuse to make...
3 posted on 04/05/2005 12:09:31 PM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - They want to die for Islam, and we want to kill them.)
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To: Bernard Marx; pacpam; hoppity; MayflowerMadam; capitan_refugio; Kviteseid; Val E. Girl; merry10; ...

Interesting and probably closer to home than we think.


4 posted on 04/05/2005 12:13:03 PM PDT by Rabid Dog (Make a difference in your community - Join your local Free Republic Chapter!)
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To: Travis McGee
Anybody with a couple of semesters of college organic chemistry could probably set up a superlab if they were so inclined.

It's not rocket science, unless you are a meth user.

5 posted on 04/05/2005 12:16:11 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Drug prohibition laws help fund terrorism.)
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To: Travis McGee

Bastards. No wonder R-12 is so friggin hard to get for us "real car" drivers. (yes, I know the drug is a far worse problem, but this just adds insult to injury).


6 posted on 04/05/2005 12:18:02 PM PDT by Little Pig (Is it time for "Cowboys and Muslims" yet?)
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To: Travis McGee
It would be nice if President Bush would get as angry about the fact that Mexican drug cartels are operating within the U.S. as he is about American patriots defending our borders against the influx of these cartels (and other criminals).
7 posted on 04/05/2005 12:18:18 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: Little Pig

What's the freon for?


8 posted on 04/05/2005 12:19:25 PM PDT by Calusa (it’s a mere fig leaf of fairness.)
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To: 2banana

Thank GW for allowing Mexicans to deal the drugs Americans dont want to deal. Bush is a disgrace and the reason all of us will be calling Hillary, Pres. Clinton in 08. GW is just like his dad, refuses to listen to the American public and act like he knows best while most of us realize he is could care less about our welfare as long as business and the world order are served.


9 posted on 04/05/2005 12:19:47 PM PDT by sasafras (Innocent blood is on Bush's hands for doing nothing to protect our border)
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To: Calusa

Air conditioning. The new R-134 can't get nearly as cold as the old R-12 did, plus you have to replace damn near the whole A/C system to convert an R-12 system to R-134.


10 posted on 04/05/2005 12:24:29 PM PDT by Little Pig (Is it time for "Cowboys and Muslims" yet?)
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To: Travis McGee
Designed for scientific research, the 22-liter reaction vessel could hold the contents of 11 two-liter soda bottles.

It would be nice if news didn't have to be written on the level of not too bright 4th graders.

11 posted on 04/05/2005 12:26:11 PM PDT by CGTRWK
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
So you are a supporter of easy access to massive amounts of meth.

Nice to know.

12 posted on 04/05/2005 12:26:26 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: CGTRWK

Is that only if you pour the soda out, or can you fit the entire bottles into the reaction vessel? I'm so confused....


13 posted on 04/05/2005 12:27:33 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: Little Pig

Sorry. I mean why is it used in the illegal labs?


14 posted on 04/05/2005 12:28:18 PM PDT by Calusa (it’s a mere fig leaf of fairness.)
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To: 1_Inch_Group; 2sheep; 2Trievers; 3AngelaD; 3rdcanyon; 4.1O dana super trac pak; 4Freedom; ...
Click to see other threads related to illegal aliens in America
Click to FR-mail me for addition or removal

Travis, do you suppose - a la the Boston Globe article - the owners/operators of these superlabs are contributing to the solvency of the US Social Security Administration? /rhetorical question

15 posted on 04/05/2005 12:29:21 PM PDT by HiJinx (Report Illegals ~ 1-877-USBP-HELP (872-7435))
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To: Travis McGee
So you are a supporter of easy access to massive amounts of meth.

Nice to know.

No, I just don't see how you are going to stop it unless you are a supporter of censoring the Journal of the American Chemical Society or some other Fascist response.

16 posted on 04/05/2005 12:34:27 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Drug prohibition laws help fund terrorism.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
For one thing, keeping criminal aliens (who are running the superlabs) out of the USA.

If you read the article, you would know that the Mexican syndicate run superlabs are making 80% of the meth.

17 posted on 04/05/2005 12:37:43 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: HiJinx

These are not "drug dealers"; they're "undocumented pharmaceuticals distributors"


18 posted on 04/05/2005 12:38:38 PM PDT by azhenfud ("He who is always looking up seldom finds others' lost change...")
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To: HiJinx

Maybe we better ask the NYT about the economic benefits of meth superlabs operated by Mexican criminal gangs.


19 posted on 04/05/2005 12:38:48 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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