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Meth Lab Busted in Columbia Neighborhood Reflects Troubling Trend

Columbia Meth Lab Bust on Thursday

On Thursday afternoon, May 16th, officers from the Richland County Sheriff’s Department busted a meth lab in a home in Columbia’s Olympia neighborhood.

Department spokesman Curtis Wilson said that officers responded to a tip from the community. When they arrived at the duplex on Church St, they found two men and one woman in the home, and an active meth lab.

Meth labs can house several dangerous chemicals, and even breathing the air can pose health risks. When police find a meth lab, they often call in special narcotics forces to clean up the site and collect evidence. Officials may even have to screen indoor air to determine the level of contamination in the area.

The names of the suspects have not been released as yet.

The Rise of Meth Labs in South Carolina

Statistics from 2000 show that South Carolina had one of the lowest rates of methamphetamine use in the country. However, those numbers are changing as meth labs become more portable, and meth manufacturers become more savvy. Between 2007 and 2011, incidents of busted meth labs increased more than 10 times – 26 in 2007, to 267 in 2011. News reports show meth lab busts in some part of South Carolina nearly every week.

Portable meth labs are becoming more and more prevalent throughout both South Carolina and the nation. These labs, often referred to as “shake and bake” labs, create a small amount of meth with less paraphernalia. They are also more difficult to detect than larger meth labs, which often have to be situated in a house. Shake and bake meth labs use a 16-ounce plastic bottle, ammonia (which must be stowed since it comes in large containers, so meth manufacturers often hide the containers in the woods), and pseudoephedrine, often found in cough syrup and decongestant pills.

“The people doing this want to get what they can as fast as they can,” said an undercover agent. “That’s what makes it so hard to find and to catch these guys. It’s so portable. It’s aggravating.”

Two years ago, South Carolina lawmakers attempted to stop the fast-growing trend by placing limits on the amount of pseudoephedrine customers can purchase, and pharmacists – who keep the drug behind counters – swipe the customer’s driver’s license to see if limits have been met. Electronic tracking should, in theory, stop meth manufacturers from buying large amounts of the necessary chemical.

However, the portable meth labs use less of the drug by creating smaller amounts of methamphetamine.

However, all meth labs use dangerous, deadly chemicals, and are prone to explosions – even the portable ones. In the shake and bake method, manufacturers must constantly unscrew the lid of the bottle to relieve pressure. When not monitored closely, the bottles can explode, spraying dangerous chemicals everywhere.

The Strom Law Firm Can Help with Drug Crimes Charges for Meth Labs

Drug crime charges and meth lab busts in South Carolina are very serious. If you have been charged with possession, trafficking, or manufacturing drugsincluding manufacturing at a meth lab, the attorneys at the Strom Law Firm can help. We offer free, confidential consultations to discuss the facts of your case, so contact us today by calling (803)252-4800.