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Oklahoma Meth Drug Crimes

Since Oklahoma banned the unregulated sale of pseudoephedrine in 2004, the availability of methamphetamine declined for a while. Now it’s coming back.  Last year, 743 meth labs were discovered, and this year is on track to exceed that at 300 labs seized to date.  Most of the labs were of the one-pot lab variety, also called “shake-and-bake” process of cooking or concocting meth.  Most of them have been located in Northeast part of the state or around the Tulsa area. Last May, the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control found one one-pot lab in Oklahoma City, while 23 were discovered in Tulsa.  The ingredients are cheap: one 20-ounce bottle of water, pseudoephedrine, camp fuel, chemical ice packs and some other easily-obtained materials are all it takes to make some meth with this method.  Recipes can be found online, along with step-by-step videos explaining how to do it. So far this year, the state’s Medical Examiner has identified 26 deaths associated with meth, from overdoses of meth to burns from accidents in the cooking process.  Nathan Knapp of Luther was one of those, burned with third-degree burns from an accidental fire and later died.  No chemists are needed to try this process, no laboratory, and they usually yield only enough for the cook’s own addiction.  But sometimes several people will contribute pseudoephedrine to share in the product. In the year before the regulation of pseudoephedrine went into effect, the number of labs exceeded 1200.  The number shrank by 90% until the one-pot labs started springing up in 2008.  Mexican cartels brought their product to Oklahoma to meet the demand with ice, a crystallized, smokable meth.  Last month, agents arrested one Albert Gomez-Gomez, whom they claim is a member of the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel, here to establish an operation to rival the established Juarez Cartel. The OBNDD claims 20% of the meth consumed in Oklahoma comes from Mexico, brought overland on the highways.  The agency also claims to have b locked 54,349 sales of pseudoephedrine since enactment of the law last November that requires a would-be purchaser to provide his date of birth and Oklahoma driver’s license.  They claim that prevents those previously convicted of meth-related crimes from purchasing pseudoephedrine for up to 10 years.  They are still pushing to make pseudoephedrine a prescription drug. Ingestion of meth triggers release of dopamine, a neurochemical in the brain.  Meth causes high amounts of dopamine to collect in the brain, causing a rush of euphoria.  It makes the user wanting more.  Too much dopamine in the brain causes schizophrenia, a condition characterized by delusions, hallucinations and bizarre behavior.  Too little pseudoephedrine causes Parkinson’s disease and affects motor areas of the brain. A meth addict will do whatever he can to get more.  Well known is the addictive aspect of meth, psychologically, of course, but also physiologically and neurologically, such that, once use of meth is stopped, the user should have medical supervision.  That’s for those lucky enough to quit.

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A case of “Threatened” Criminal Charges Lingering on

Posted by Edmond Geary on 07-07-2010

Suzanne Wooten was sworn in as judge of the Texas 380th District Court in January, 2009. She defeated Charles Sandoval in the 2008 Republican primary. Sandoval had held the judgeship for the 12 previous years and had never previously had an opponent.  The 380th District Court is in McKinney, Texas, in Collin County, the county immediately north of Dallas County.

Collin County District Attorney John Roach has been investigating now-Judge Wooten, apparently for election fraud.  This investigation has been going on for a year, and Peter Schulte, a lawyer representing Judge Wooten says that is too long to keep her under a cloud of suspicion.  Roach’s office has presented evidence to several grand juries, but has never asked the grand jury for an indictment.

In Texas, as in United States District Court, all criminal charges must come for the indictment of a grand jury.  Oklahoma law permits, in addition to proceeding by indictment, the signing of an Information by the prosecuting attorney to initiate such charges.  Without an indictment, there are no criminal charges. Grand juries are in session for only so long, to be replaced by a grand jury with different members.  The grand jury that hears the evidence must act on that evidence to decide whether to indict.

Now Judge Wooten, through her lawyers, has filed an objection to this continuing saga in a 12-page document.  She claims Roach is seeking her resignation, saying this latest grand jury, possibly the fifth grand jury to be used to invade her private, personal and professional life for purely political, harassment and/or intimidation purposes.  She claims the judge she defeated, Charles Sandoval, met with district attorney supervisors the day after the election and said Sandoval believed the only reason he lost was that Wooten “must have cheated.”  She offered to talk to prosecutors several times but was not accommodated.  According to Peter Shulte, Assistant District Attorney Chris Milner, chief of the special crimes unit, mentioned election fraud but refused to give any specific allegations that were being investigated.  Milner allegedly encouraged Wooten to resign, and Schulte claimed, even urged Wooten to resign immediately before authorities took “her law license, her family, her home, her liberty and her reputation.”  If those words were indeed used, that is the most gross of threats. It is so strong, it sounds like a bluff.

Roach asked the Texas attorney general’s office a year ago to assign a prosecutor to the investigation.  Assistant Attorney General Harry White wanted Judge Wooten to appear before the grand jury a week ago, but a judge ruled that the grand jury’s term ended and evidence would have to be presented to a future grand jury.  District Attorney Roach says he is not directing White’s investigation.  Another grand jury begins this month.

Now three former prosecutors who served under District Attorney John Roach have criticized the lingering investigation.  Sharon Curtis, Mitch Nolte, and Hunter Biederman, have spoken out publicly against the length of time it has taken to investigate without bringing charges. One said even the most complex of cases should not take more than two or three months to go to the grand jury.

Roach’s response is to essentially a stone-wall and to criticize his criticizers.  He responded that the case against Wooten is taking so long because it is complicated but would not elaborate.   He said Wooten could have ended things if she had agreed to appear before the grand jury last week.  Wooten’s lawyer, Peter Shulte, however, said Wooten said she received only 48 hours notice after a year-long wait.  He said a sitting district judge was entitled to more notice than that.

Roach has been district attorney since 2002 and has not filed for re-election in this year’s Republican primary.  His term of office will end December 31st.

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