San Diego Meth Town USA

jspun

Bluelighter
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I posted some of this stuff in previous forums. San Diego has an interesting history and love/hate relationship with meth. During WWII, the Japanese and the Germans were using methamphetamine to fuel their war effort. The Americans prefered Benzedrine and millions of units of the drug was produced before wars end. So important was the drug during the war that one source mentioned that two factories devoted to producing the drug were built at Naval Base San Diego. After the war, Japan was demoralized and its pharmaceutical companies had huge stockpiles of the drug. The drug was sold OTC and set off a huge epidemic. I think the route of administration of choice at that time was IV. US service personel came into contact with the drug in Japan were it was wide spread in red light districts. They brought this preference for meth back across the Pacific to San Diego were alot of discharged service personel ended up. Apparently, an underground scene for meth specifically help on through the 60s when restrictions were placed on meth. The defence industry (missles/ space) were big after the war and meth fit in with the assembly line lifestyle. After the crackdowns a small cotage industry grew up while and continued through the 80s were coke replaced amphetamines in alot of places. I have listed one story and one transcript from a radio program (hard to get through- but interesting- i'll break up into two posts). By the 90s, so much meth was being produced in the San Diego area that the DEA bestowed "source country" status on the country. The point is not just scale, lots of places have claimed the title of "meth capital of the US or World." What is interesting is the survivability of the scene just like places like Japan and Sweden or Czech Rep, it never went away.

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This article describes the chemical supply companies that were present in San Diego until a sting in 1989 closed them. At the stores, one could by the chemicals to make meth which came with detailed instructions on making the drug.


1980s: Meth explodes in San Diego
By: GARY WARTH - Staff Writer | Sunday, September 16, 2007 12:36 AM PDT ∞

Enter first comment.Increase FontDecrease Font email this story print this story For most of its history, methamphetamine had been a second-class drug, never as popular as amphetamines and never as glamorous among drug users as cocaine, heroin or LSD.

Then, about 60 years after it was first created by a Japanese scientist, the drug of choice for outlaw bikers and the rural poor suddenly was being used in Southern California by white-collar workers, young mothers, high school students, nurses, teachers and other seemingly unlikely groups.

The drug's popularity particularly soared in San Diego, which became known to many as the methamphetamine capital of the nation in the 1980s.

Several factors have been associated with the drug's rapid rise in popularity among such broad demographics, but among the most significant was a change in the way methamphetamine was produced.

In 1980, the federal government classified as a controlled substance the chemical phenylacetone, also known as P2P, which until then had been a main ingredient of methamphetamine, which was being made in illicit labs.

Within a year of that new classification, federal Drug Enforcement Agency raids in San Diego were discovering labs making meth with ephedrine, the active ingredient in over-the-counter decongestants. The new meth was easier to make, its ingredients were legal and easy to find, and the drug itself was stronger and more addictive.

San Diego also was in a perfect storm, geographically speaking, for meth use to spread. Since the 1960s, the drug had been distributed in California by the Hells Angels motorcycle club, which was founded north of San Diego County in San Bernardino.

Just to the south, methamphetamine was being made in Mexico, where labs operated with little interference from the law.

Adding to the county's meth explosion, unscrupulous entrepreneurs who saw a booming market opened businesses and started selling the drug's active ingredients, known as precursors, and lab equipment directly to drug manufacturers.

Precursors such as ephedrine, hydriodic acid, red phosphorus and Freon were available at several chemical firms, but two stood out as the biggest supplier for meth labs in the 1980s.

Chuck, a retired undercover officer who spoke on the condition of anonymity, remembers those labs well. As an Oceanside Police Department sergeant, he participated in the raid on one of the firms. As an undercover agent with the state Department of Justice, he snared almost 100 meth-makers and shut down 29 labs in the biggest meth bust in history.

Retired since 2003 from a career that included 20 years in the Marines, Chuck sports tattoos, a finely trimmed gray beard, and still rides a Harley-Davidson. A martial-arts expert, he also still has the intense look of a man only a fool would cross.

"Basically, I looked and had to walk and talk the outlaw attitude," he said in a deep gravely voice not unlike actor Sam Elliott's.

The anatomy of meth busts

Chuck was a clean-cut Oceanside police officer from 1972 to 1988, and in his final year on the force helped shut down a chemical company called Quantum on Palomar Airport Road in Carlsbad.

Quantum was little more than a convenience store for meth manufacturers, Chuck said. While the business sold only goods that were legal at the time, they broke the law because they knew their products were being used to make an illegal drug.

Chuck said dozens of customers came into Quantum daily, and the business operated for several years before investigators gathered enough evidence to justify a search warrant and a raid in 1988.

"They were shocked," Chuck said about the day he and other officers came through Quantum's front door. "They were sitting there in their shorts."

Quantum's owner fled the country but was arrested years later, Chuck said. Others working in the shop feigned ignorance about how their products were used but were convicted, he said.

Quantum was not the only company capitalizing on San Diego County's new drug problem in the 1980s.

Beginning in 1982, the DEA began investigating RJM Laboratories, another precursor wholesale business.

Operating a cash business with little paperwork, RJM made a difficult target for the DEA, which suspected the company of supplying more than 2,000 meth labs in California, Texas, Tennessee, New Jersey and Washington, Frank Owen wrote in his book, "No Speed Limit."

In 1986, RJM owner Robert Miskinis brazenly hired a lobbyist who persuaded lawmakers to delay implementing a bill that required bulk purchases of ephedrines to be reported to the state Department of Justice, Owen wrote. After the media reported that Miskinis had been charged in 1978 with making methamphetamine, embarrassed politicians revoked the delay that they had agreed to earlier.

Two years later, the DEA had built a case and raided three RJM labs, including one in Lakeside, where agents found a 200-liter flask capable of making 80 pounds of meth and enough ephedrine and other chemicals to make 50 tons of the drug.

In 1989, the DEA raided three other chemical houses believed to be owned by Miskinis, including one in Carlsbad that sold assembled meth kits and instruction books.

Miskinis was sentenced to 40 years but served only four after an appeals court decided he was not adequately represented by his attorney, Owen wrote.

Undercover bust nabs nearly 100

Chuck, a state Justice Department agent at the time, said RJM and Quantum appeared to be businesses unique to San Diego County, although he knew of a smaller chemical business in Las Vegas that was investigated by authorities there.

There was one other illicit chemical lab in San Diego County, though, and Chuck was the man behind the counter.

With a gun tucked under his belt and a tape recorder strapped to his back, Chuck worked the back room of Triple Neck Scientific on Magnatron Boulevard in Kearny Mesa for nine months in 1988 and 1989.

With hidden cameras capturing the transactions, Chuck trapped his customers in a well-orchestrated ruse. The business advertised in magazines aimed to attract dealers, and its very name ---- Triple Neck ---- referred to the type of round-bottomed flasks commonly used in meth labs.

Looking every bit as tough as his worst customers, Chuck warned Triple Neck clients to keep an eye out for cops who might spot them coming and going to the business. Meanwhile, he made notes of the license plates of the cars pulling out of his lot.

Chuck also asked customers to bring in the meth they were making, explaining that he wanted to supply some to his friends but didn't want to make it himself. When offered the drug, he declined and said he was a recovering heroin addict who no longer used.

"You didn't pay income tax on any of this, did you?" he would ask his customers selling the drug.

"Hell no!" they would reply with a laugh, oblivious to the hidden cameras that were further incriminating them.

Chuck's act included questioning customers about whether they themselves were actual undercover agents. When a biker turned the tables and patted him on the back and felt his tape recorder, Chuck said it was a concealed gun. The biker asked to see it.

"You'll see my gun only if I need you to see it," Chuck told him. "And it'll be the last thing you ever see."

The biker was satisfied.

But not all customers were hardened bikers. One was a soccer coach, another a nurse, and another was a Neighborhood Watch captain.

Chuck specifically remembers a man who sent his children, ages 10 and 15, into his business to buy chemicals. He didn't blow his cover, but he did blow his cool.

"I told them to go back home and called the dad and said, 'Don't you dare send your kids in here; this stuff is very volatile," Chuck said.

Sting had immediate effect

After nine months, the list of Triple Neck customers was used for a massive raid on a Sunday in March 1989, when 350 officers from state, local and federal agencies raided dozens of homes throughout the county, closing 29 labs and arresting almost 100 people. It still stands as the country's biggest meth raid.

Faced with incriminating videos, 90 percent of the suspects pleaded guilty and the remaining 10 percent were found guilty. Chuck said most were sentenced to 10 to 20 years. The man who sent his kids to buy chemicals pleaded not guilty, he said, and received a stiffer sentence.

Chuck said the operation also revealed, to the surprise of many agents participating in the raids, that meth was no longer just a drug made and used by bikers.

The sting operation, Operation Crankcase, has been criticized because Triple Neck Scientific provided precursors that were turned into methamphetamine used on the streets for nine months. Chuck defended the operation, saying manufacturers would have found their precursors anyway from other sources.

Operation Crankcase had an immediate effect on the county, he said. All measures of the drug's use, from admission rates in rehab centers to urine tests in jails, indicated that the drug's use had decreased.

But Pandora's box was already open. With precursors from San Diego supplied to several other states, meth use began to rise nationally.

"When we took those 100 suspects down, we lost the dubious distinction of being the meth capital of the world," Chuck said. "But sadly, enough of it had spread throughout the United States."


1980s: Meth explodes in San Diego
By: GARY WARTH - Staff Writer | Sunday, September 16, 2007 12:36 AM PDT ∞

Enter first comment.Increase FontDecrease Font email this story print this story For most of its history, methamphetamine had been a second-class drug, never as popular as amphetamines and never as glamorous among drug users as cocaine, heroin or LSD.

Then, about 60 years after it was first created by a Japanese scientist, the drug of choice for outlaw bikers and the rural poor suddenly was being used in Southern California by white-collar workers, young mothers, high school students, nurses, teachers and other seemingly unlikely groups.

The drug's popularity particularly soared in San Diego, which became known to many as the methamphetamine capital of the nation in the 1980s.

Several factors have been associated with the drug's rapid rise in popularity among such broad demographics, but among the most significant was a change in the way methamphetamine was produced.

In 1980, the federal government classified as a controlled substance the chemical phenylacetone, also known as P2P, which until then had been a main ingredient of methamphetamine, which was being made in illicit labs.

Within a year of that new classification, federal Drug Enforcement Agency raids in San Diego were discovering labs making meth with ephedrine, the active ingredient in over-the-counter decongestants. The new meth was easier to make, its ingredients were legal and easy to find, and the drug itself was stronger and more addictive.

San Diego also was in a perfect storm, geographically speaking, for meth use to spread. Since the 1960s, the drug had been distributed in California by the Hells Angels motorcycle club, which was founded north of San Diego County in San Bernardino.

Just to the south, methamphetamine was being made in Mexico, where labs operated with little interference from the law.

Adding to the county's meth explosion, unscrupulous entrepreneurs who saw a booming market opened businesses and started selling the drug's active ingredients, known as precursors, and lab equipment directly to drug manufacturers.

Precursors such as ephedrine, hydriodic acid, red phosphorus and Freon were available at several chemical firms, but two stood out as the biggest supplier for meth labs in the 1980s.

Chuck, a retired undercover officer who spoke on the condition of anonymity, remembers those labs well. As an Oceanside Police Department sergeant, he participated in the raid on one of the firms. As an undercover agent with the state Department of Justice, he snared almost 100 meth-makers and shut down 29 labs in the biggest meth bust in history.

Retired since 2003 from a career that included 20 years in the Marines, Chuck sports tattoos, a finely trimmed gray beard, and still rides a Harley-Davidson. A martial-arts expert, he also still has the intense look of a man only a fool would cross.

"Basically, I looked and had to walk and talk the outlaw attitude," he said in a deep gravely voice not unlike actor Sam Elliott's.

The anatomy of meth busts

Chuck was a clean-cut Oceanside police officer from 1972 to 1988, and in his final year on the force helped shut down a chemical company called Quantum on Palomar Airport Road in Carlsbad.

Quantum was little more than a convenience store for meth manufacturers, Chuck said. While the business sold only goods that were legal at the time, they broke the law because they knew their products were being used to make an illegal drug.

Chuck said dozens of customers came into Quantum daily, and the business operated for several years before investigators gathered enough evidence to justify a search warrant and a raid in 1988.

"They were shocked," Chuck said about the day he and other officers came through Quantum's front door. "They were sitting there in their shorts."

Quantum's owner fled the country but was arrested years later, Chuck said. Others working in the shop feigned ignorance about how their products were used but were convicted, he said.

Quantum was not the only company capitalizing on San Diego County's new drug problem in the 1980s.

Beginning in 1982, the DEA began investigating RJM Laboratories, another precursor wholesale business.

Operating a cash business with little paperwork, RJM made a difficult target for the DEA, which suspected the company of supplying more than 2,000 meth labs in California, Texas, Tennessee, New Jersey and Washington, Frank Owen wrote in his book, "No Speed Limit."

In 1986, RJM owner Robert Miskinis brazenly hired a lobbyist who persuaded lawmakers to delay implementing a bill that required bulk purchases of ephedrines to be reported to the state Department of Justice, Owen wrote. After the media reported that Miskinis had been charged in 1978 with making methamphetamine, embarrassed politicians revoked the delay that they had agreed to earlier.

Two years later, the DEA had built a case and raided three RJM labs, including one in Lakeside, where agents found a 200-liter flask capable of making 80 pounds of meth and enough ephedrine and other chemicals to make 50 tons of the drug.

In 1989, the DEA raided three other chemical houses believed to be owned by Miskinis, including one in Carlsbad that sold assembled meth kits and instruction books.

Miskinis was sentenced to 40 years but served only four after an appeals court decided he was not adequately represented by his attorney, Owen wrote.

Undercover bust nabs nearly 100

Chuck, a state Justice Department agent at the time, said RJM and Quantum appeared to be businesses unique to San Diego County, although he knew of a smaller chemical business in Las Vegas that was investigated by authorities there.

There was one other illicit chemical lab in San Diego County, though, and Chuck was the man behind the counter.

With a gun tucked under his belt and a tape recorder strapped to his back, Chuck worked the back room of Triple Neck Scientific on Magnatron Boulevard in Kearny Mesa for nine months in 1988 and 1989.

With hidden cameras capturing the transactions, Chuck trapped his customers in a well-orchestrated ruse. The business advertised in magazines aimed to attract dealers, and its very name ---- Triple Neck ---- referred to the type of round-bottomed flasks commonly used in meth labs.

Looking every bit as tough as his worst customers, Chuck warned Triple Neck clients to keep an eye out for cops who might spot them coming and going to the business. Meanwhile, he made notes of the license plates of the cars pulling out of his lot.

Chuck also asked customers to bring in the meth they were making, explaining that he wanted to supply some to his friends but didn't want to make it himself. When offered the drug, he declined and said he was a recovering heroin addict who no longer used.

"You didn't pay income tax on any of this, did you?" he would ask his customers selling the drug.

"Hell no!" they would reply with a laugh, oblivious to the hidden cameras that were further incriminating them.

Chuck's act included questioning customers about whether they themselves were actual undercover agents. When a biker turned the tables and patted him on the back and felt his tape recorder, Chuck said it was a concealed gun. The biker asked to see it.

"You'll see my gun only if I need you to see it," Chuck told him. "And it'll be the last thing you ever see."

The biker was satisfied.

But not all customers were hardened bikers. One was a soccer coach, another a nurse, and another was a Neighborhood Watch captain.

Chuck specifically remembers a man who sent his children, ages 10 and 15, into his business to buy chemicals. He didn't blow his cover, but he did blow his cool.

"I told them to go back home and called the dad and said, 'Don't you dare send your kids in here; this stuff is very volatile," Chuck said.

Sting had immediate effect

After nine months, the list of Triple Neck customers was used for a massive raid on a Sunday in March 1989, when 350 officers from state, local and federal agencies raided dozens of homes throughout the county, closing 29 labs and arresting almost 100 people. It still stands as the country's biggest meth raid.

Faced with incriminating videos, 90 percent of the suspects pleaded guilty and the remaining 10 percent were found guilty. Chuck said most were sentenced to 10 to 20 years. The man who sent his kids to buy chemicals pleaded not guilty, he said, and received a stiffer sentence.

Chuck said the operation also revealed, to the surprise of many agents participating in the raids, that meth was no longer just a drug made and used by bikers.

The sting operation, Operation Crankcase, has been criticized because Triple Neck Scientific provided precursors that were turned into methamphetamine used on the streets for nine months. Chuck defended the operation, saying manufacturers would have found their precursors anyway from other sources.

Operation Crankcase had an immediate effect on the county, he said. All measures of the drug's use, from admission rates in rehab centers to urine tests in jails, indicated that the drug's use had decreased.

But Pandora's box was already open. With precursors from San Diego supplied to several other states, meth use began to rise nationally.

"When we took those 100 suspects down, we lost the dubious distinction of being the meth capital of the world," Chuck said. "But sadly, enough of it had spread throughout the United States."


1980s: Meth explodes in San Diego
By: GARY WARTH - Staff Writer | Sunday, September 16, 2007 12:36 AM PDT ∞

Enter first comment.Increase FontDecrease Font email this story print this story For most of its history, methamphetamine had been a second-class drug, never as popular as amphetamines and never as glamorous among drug users as cocaine, heroin or LSD.

Then, about 60 years after it was first created by a Japanese scientist, the drug of choice for outlaw bikers and the rural poor suddenly was being used in Southern California by white-collar workers, young mothers, high school students, nurses, teachers and other seemingly unlikely groups.

The drug's popularity particularly soared in San Diego, which became known to many as the methamphetamine capital of the nation in the 1980s.

Several factors have been associated with the drug's rapid rise in popularity among such broad demographics, but among the most significant was a change in the way methamphetamine was produced.

In 1980, the federal government classified as a controlled substance the chemical phenylacetone, also known as P2P, which until then had been a main ingredient of methamphetamine, which was being made in illicit labs.

Within a year of that new classification, federal Drug Enforcement Agency raids in San Diego were discovering labs making meth with ephedrine, the active ingredient in over-the-counter decongestants. The new meth was easier to make, its ingredients were legal and easy to find, and the drug itself was stronger and more addictive.

San Diego also was in a perfect storm, geographically speaking, for meth use to spread. Since the 1960s, the drug had been distributed in California by the Hells Angels motorcycle club, which was founded north of San Diego County in San Bernardino.

Just to the south, methamphetamine was being made in Mexico, where labs operated with little interference from the law.

Adding to the county's meth explosion, unscrupulous entrepreneurs who saw a booming market opened businesses and started selling the drug's active ingredients, known as precursors, and lab equipment directly to drug manufacturers.

Precursors such as ephedrine, hydriodic acid, red phosphorus and Freon were available at several chemical firms, but two stood out as the biggest supplier for meth labs in the 1980s.

Chuck, a retired undercover officer who spoke on the condition of anonymity, remembers those labs well. As an Oceanside Police Department sergeant, he participated in the raid on one of the firms. As an undercover agent with the state Department of Justice, he snared almost 100 meth-makers and shut down 29 labs in the biggest meth bust in history.

Retired since 2003 from a career that included 20 years in the Marines, Chuck sports tattoos, a finely trimmed gray beard, and still rides a Harley-Davidson. A martial-arts expert, he also still has the intense look of a man only a fool would cross.

"Basically, I looked and had to walk and talk the outlaw attitude," he said in a deep gravely voice not unlike actor Sam Elliott's.

The anatomy of meth busts

Chuck was a clean-cut Oceanside police officer from 1972 to 1988, and in his final year on the force helped shut down a chemical company called Quantum on Palomar Airport Road in Carlsbad.

Quantum was little more than a convenience store for meth manufacturers, Chuck said. While the business sold only goods that were legal at the time, they broke the law because they knew their products were being used to make an illegal drug.

Chuck said dozens of customers came into Quantum daily, and the business operated for several years before investigators gathered enough evidence to justify a search warrant and a raid in 1988.

"They were shocked," Chuck said about the day he and other officers came through Quantum's front door. "They were sitting there in their shorts."

Quantum's owner fled the country but was arrested years later, Chuck said. Others working in the shop feigned ignorance about how their products were used but were convicted, he said.

Quantum was not the only company capitalizing on San Diego County's new drug problem in the 1980s.

Beginning in 1982, the DEA began investigating RJM Laboratories, another precursor wholesale business.

Operating a cash business with little paperwork, RJM made a difficult target for the DEA, which suspected the company of supplying more than 2,000 meth labs in California, Texas, Tennessee, New Jersey and Washington, Frank Owen wrote in his book, "No Speed Limit."

In 1986, RJM owner Robert Miskinis brazenly hired a lobbyist who persuaded lawmakers to delay implementing a bill that required bulk purchases of ephedrines to be reported to the state Department of Justice, Owen wrote. After the media reported that Miskinis had been charged in 1978 with making methamphetamine, embarrassed politicians revoked the delay that they had agreed to earlier.

Two years later, the DEA had built a case and raided three RJM labs, including one in Lakeside, where agents found a 200-liter flask capable of making 80 pounds of meth and enough ephedrine and other chemicals to make 50 tons of the drug.

In 1989, the DEA raided three other chemical houses believed to be owned by Miskinis, including one in Carlsbad that sold assembled meth kits and instruction books.

Miskinis was sentenced to 40 years but served only four after an appeals court decided he was not adequately represented by his attorney, Owen wrote.

Undercover bust nabs nearly 100

Chuck, a state Justice Department agent at the time, said RJM and Quantum appeared to be businesses unique to San Diego County, although he knew of a smaller chemical business in Las Vegas that was investigated by authorities there.

There was one other illicit chemical lab in San Diego County, though, and Chuck was the man behind the counter.

With a gun tucked under his belt and a tape recorder strapped to his back, Chuck worked the back room of Triple Neck Scientific on Magnatron Boulevard in Kearny Mesa for nine months in 1988 and 1989.

With hidden cameras capturing the transactions, Chuck trapped his customers in a well-orchestrated ruse. The business advertised in magazines aimed to attract dealers, and its very name ---- Triple Neck ---- referred to the type of round-bottomed flasks commonly used in meth labs.

Looking every bit as tough as his worst customers, Chuck warned Triple Neck clients to keep an eye out for cops who might spot them coming and going to the business. Meanwhile, he made notes of the license plates of the cars pulling out of his lot.

Chuck also asked customers to bring in the meth they were making, explaining that he wanted to supply some to his friends but didn't want to make it himself. When offered the drug, he declined and said he was a recovering heroin addict who no longer used.

"You didn't pay income tax on any of this, did you?" he would ask his customers selling the drug.

"Hell no!" they would reply with a laugh, oblivious to the hidden cameras that were further incriminating them.

Chuck's act included questioning customers about whether they themselves were actual undercover agents. When a biker turned the tables and patted him on the back and felt his tape recorder, Chuck said it was a concealed gun. The biker asked to see it.

"You'll see my gun only if I need you to see it," Chuck told him. "And it'll be the last thing you ever see."

The biker was satisfied.

But not all customers were hardened bikers. One was a soccer coach, another a nurse, and another was a Neighborhood Watch captain.

Chuck specifically remembers a man who sent his children, ages 10 and 15, into his business to buy chemicals. He didn't blow his cover, but he did blow his cool.

"I told them to go back home and called the dad and said, 'Don't you dare send your kids in here; this stuff is very volatile," Chuck said.

Sting had immediate effect

After nine months, the list of Triple Neck customers was used for a massive raid on a Sunday in March 1989, when 350 officers from state, local and federal agencies raided dozens of homes throughout the county, closing 29 labs and arresting almost 100 people. It still stands as the country's biggest meth raid.

Faced with incriminating videos, 90 percent of the suspects pleaded guilty and the remaining 10 percent were found guilty. Chuck said most were sentenced to 10 to 20 years. The man who sent his kids to buy chemicals pleaded not guilty, he said, and received a stiffer sentence.

Chuck said the operation also revealed, to the surprise of many agents participating in the raids, that meth was no longer just a drug made and used by bikers.

The sting operation, Operation Crankcase, has been criticized because Triple Neck Scientific provided precursors that were turned into methamphetamine used on the streets for nine months. Chuck defended the operation, saying manufacturers would have found their precursors anyway from other sources.

Operation Crankcase had an immediate effect on the county, he said. All measures of the drug's use, from admission rates in rehab centers to urine tests in jails, indicated that the drug's use had decreased.

But Pandora's box was already open. With precursors from San Diego supplied to several other states, meth use began to rise nationally.

"When we took those 100 suspects down, we lost the dubious distinction of being the meth capital of the world," Chuck said. "But sadly, enough of it had spread throughout the United States."


San Diego Meth Town
 
San Diego: A City With a Long & Distinguished History In the Annals of Crystal Meth

METHAMPHETAMINE: FROM THE STREETS OF SAN DIEGO


This is a transcript of a broadcast that documents the long and glorious meth scene in San Diego. A scene that has its roots as far back as World War II. It also is a good example of the priniciple that drug prohibition creates many, many more problems than it attempts to fix. I've pruned this but I will post the link incase anyone is interested. According to the authors, the illicit meth scene got its toehold here first.


Methamphetamine: From the Streets of San Diego


FOR METH MANUFACTURING AND USE. METHAMPHETAMINE WAS KNOWN AS “IN THE 1980’S, SAN DIEGO WAS THE METH CAPITAL OF THE NATION - THE CENTER BLUE COLLAR” OR THE WORKING MAN’S COCAINE. BUT NOW, A MUCH STRONGER FORM OF METH IS ON THE STREET AND IT IS THE DRUG OF CHOICE FOR A NEW GENERATION OF TWEAKERS.



DR. STALCUP:

If you look at the history of the drug, certainly the origin of our problems began in World War II where the drug, there are many people say had

WWII ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE : military applications, was used during the war.

Bombs sound up
IN THE 1940’S, GERMAN, JAPANESE AND AMERICAN MILITARIES EXPERIMENTED WITH EARLY FORMS OF METHAMPHETAMINE TO FIND WAYS TO KEEP SOLDIERS ALERT AND FEELING INVINCIBLE. AMERICAN BOMBER PILOTS WERE GIVEN FORMS OF SPEED TO STAY AWAKE ON THE LONG FLIGHTS, LIKE THOSE FROM SAIPAN TO JAPAN. MANY OTHER AMERICAN MILITARY PERSONNEL WERE INTRODUCED

Post WWII footage: TO METHAMPHETAMINE DURING THE POST-WAR YEARS IN JAPAN.

STALCUP cont.

At the end of the war, the Japanese methamphetamine epidemic was really quite widespread. It was probably the first major drug epidemic the world had ever seen, was Japan at the end of World War II. Lots of American military personnel, men and women, became involved in methamphetamine. And when they mustered out of the military, we saw a spread of methamphetamine use from Japan to the Marshall Islands to the

Returning soldiers, sailors to SD: Philippines, Guam, Hawaii and then the first sight on the mainland was really San Diego because this was the major transshipment route that folks coming out of the military from the Pacific Theater came through San Diego. So San Diego is really first hit.


Archival post war photos: THE MILITARY PROVIDED A STRUCTURE AND CAMARADERIE THAT WAS DIFFICULT TO DUPLICATE IN CIVILIAN LIFE, SO MANY VETERANS FORMED ASSOCIATIONS, OR CLUBS. A SMALL NUMBER

Bomber nose art: OF THESE CLUBS EVOLVED INTO “OUTLAW” BIKER GANGS.



FOR MUCH OF THE BIKER WORLD, METH WAS THE TICKET TO WILD TIMES AND MONEY.

BY THE 1980’S METHAMPHETAMINE WAS BIG BUSINESS.



“BILL”
FORMER METH COOK

BILL:

V/o to o/c: I first started making methamphetamine in 1979///

I cooked probably, approximately every 3 weeks, made $25 to $40,000, and I started to enjoy making money, making a large amount of money. And it was easy, it was really easy (laughing) very easy.



More S.D./HA’s Biker file footage: BILL WAS NEVER A BIKER, BUT BIKER GANG’S PROFITTED FROM METH THAT BILL AND OTHERS MADE BY CONTROLLING DISTRIBUTION OF THE DRUG.



Pan East County: THE BIKER’S STRONGHOLD WAS SAN DIEGO’S EAST COUNTY, PLACES LIKE

City signs: LAKESIDE, SANTEE AND EL CAJON. FROM HERE, THE BIKERS RULED THE BUSINESS OF METHAMPHETAMINE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FROM THE 1960’S TO THE 1980’S.



BUT IN 1989, ALL THAT CHANGED.



BIRKMEYER:

Dissolve to O/C: ...Operation // Triple Neck was an undercover operation where a law enforcement officer along with a confidential informant and others worked in a chemical supply business...

What would happen is people would come into the

archival footage of front desk undercover store front//

and people at Triple Neck store and purchase chemicals, and they would engage in discussion about methamphetamine manufacture, just as they had done in other businesses with the person they believed to be the owner and the person they believed to be working in the store. And all of their conversations and the items they purchased were caught on tape.





SOUND-UP HIDDEN CAMERA FOOTAGE

Meth cook passes bag of meth

To Chuck Potter

Potter: How long did it take you to cook it?

Meth cook: About 42 hours

Potter: 42?

Meth cook: uh huh.



V/o over hidden camera footage: CHUCK POTTER WAS THE UNDERCOVER AGENT WHO WORKED IN THE STORE. HE BROUGHT MANY AN UNSUSPECTING METH COOK INTO HIS BACKROOM.



v/o to o/c: POTTER:

...it went for 9 months, with me being in the store on

a daily basis until March of 1989 when we closed the store, got our indictments put together, put targeted packages together, and we had the largest single roundup in San Diego County history.







Archival footage:

CALIFORNIA STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL

JOHN VAN DE KAMP

March 20, 1989

TNS Press Conference “Indeed, this was the largest single drug enforcement action ever undertaken against illicit drug manufacturers in the United States. And I must tell you that based on what I’ve heard today and yesterday, it was an extraordinary, unqualified success”





Triple Neck news footage of arrests: TRIPLE NECK WAS A TRIUMPH FOR LAW

Sound-up police: ENFORCEMENT, BUT IT ALSO CREATED AN OPENING IN THE METH TRADE. ONCE

Pan from TJ to INS Bronco AGAIN SAN DIEGO WAS IN A PIVOTAL LOCATION FOR THE BUSINESS OF METHAMPHETAMINE.

BIRKMEYER:

O/c: With great efficiency, Mexican cartels began to take over the manufacturing of methamphetamine throughout San Diego County and elsewhere in California.


THE MEXICAN

N. County pan CARTELS CENTERED THEIR METH PRODUCTION IN THE RURAL FARMLANDS AND AVOCADO GROVES OF SAN DIEGO’S NORTH COUNTY, ACRES AND ACRES
w/shots of groves, migrants in field: OF REMOTE AREAS WITH EASY ACCESS TO CHEAP MIGRANT LABOR.

THE MOST NOTABLE OF THE MEXICAN METH

ORGANIZATIONS ARE THOSE CONTROLLED

Wanted poster of Ramon Arreleno: BY THE ARRELANO-FELIX FAMILY AND THE GUADALAJARA BASED AMEZCUA

Photos of Amezcua Brothers: CONTRERAS BROTHERS.



THESE ORGANIZATIONS NOW CONTROL METHAMPHETAMINE AS THE COLOMBIAN CARTELS CONTROLLED COCAINE.
MIKE KELLY,

CALIFORNIA BUREAU OF NARCOTICS

ENFORCEMENT

v/o to o/c: They’re highly armed, they’re absolutely fearless. They will not hesitate to use violence, //And they

Guns: carry big guns, assault rifles, automatic, fully automatic weapons.




Police hidden camera footage of MEXICAN LABS PRODUCE AS MUCH AS 200

Mexican meth lab/cook POUNDS OF METHAMPHETAMINE AT A COOK. THEIR ORGANIZATIONS HAVE ESTABLISHED DRUG SMUGGLING CORRIDORS TO DISTRIBUTE METH AND ITS PRECURSOR CHEMICALS. METHAMPHETAMINE HAS NOW SPREAD FROM SAN DIEGO THROUGHOUT

Meth Headlines from heartland: CALIFORNIA, ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND INTO THE AMERICAN HEARTLAND.


W/s San Diego pan: SAN DIEGO IS NO LONGER THE METH CAPITAL OF THE NATION. BUT IT IS WHAT LAW ENFORCEMENT CALLS A SOURCE COUNTRY FOR METH, MEANING A CRITICAL
INS Bronco overlooking TJ: STAGING POINT FOR THE TRANSPORTATION OF CHEMICALS AND METHAMPHETAMINE TO THE REST OF THE UNITED STATES.


BIRKMEYER:

o/c: There is also a very significant second type of cook, or operator, and those are the smaller, what some people call "stove-top cooks," that is, they do it in their home, generally, where Mexican national labs

Police footage of labs: are done in rural areas, sheds, farms, places like

that, the stove-top cook would be done in somebody's backyard, in their garage, in their

kitchen on top of their stove.



THE HOME, OR STOVE-TOP LABS CAN VARY IN SIZE. MOST ARE PRIMITIVE, OFTEN USING SIMPLE RECIPES TAKEN RIGHT OFF

Internet meth recipe: THE INTERNET, AND INCORPORATING

Shots of chemicals: CHEMICALS SUCH AS RED DEVIL LYE, ACETONE, EVEN BATTERY ACID.



Move to sign in drug store: IN RECENT YEARS, LOCAL, STATE AND FEDERAL LAWS HAVE BEEN ENACTED TO RESTRICT SOME OF THE CHEMICALS USED TO MAKE METH.



If you could look at the bulk quantities of pseudoephedrine tablets, for instance that pour into San Diego County and elsewhere in California, you would be shocked. There is no way on this Earth that you could have that much postnasal drip or cold symptoms in one particular community.



Pan of chemicals: LIKE PSEUDOEPHEDRINE, MANY OF THE

Can of alcohol: CHEMICALS USED TO MAKE METHAMPHETAMINE HAVE LEGITIMATE USES. THIS HAS MADE LAWS TO RESTRICT ACCESS TO THESE CHEMICALS

Shot of drug: DIFFICULT TO ENFORCE. AND THERE ARE TOO MANY WAYS TO MAKE METH.



BIRKMEYER:

O/C: One of the biggest problems with attempting to stop a methamphetamine manufacturer by denying access to certain chemicals is that cooks are very clever, and they immediately look for a substitute ingredient.



BILL T4B P3

o/c: There is always gonna be a way for them to adapt. //

Police meth lab footage: When they stop one synthetic route of making methamphetamine, they’ll stop it but there’s sure gonna be another way that’s gonna become

O/C: predominant. //The demand is too great.



B-roll Bill on street: TO PROTECT HIS PRIVACY, BILL ASKED THAT WE NOT USE HIS NAME IN THIS STORY. HE NOW WORKS AT A LOCAL DRUG TREATMENT CENTER, BUT FOR 12 YEARS, HE MANUFACTURED LARGE AMOUNTS OF METHAMPHETAMINE IN SAN DIEGO.



BILL:

o/c: It’s a feeling of power actually, it’s a feeling of success, control, and there’s like a certain amount of magic involved. //

I would put the chemicals in// and I know that just by putting those chemicals in, and adding heat to it, that it’s going to turn into money. It’s like counterfeiting kinda, it’s kinda like, I would smell the smells of the chemicals, I would put them together, put them together, and it was like exciting, it’s like counterfeiting almost, it’s money, put it in, I smell it, and I know that’s money, here it comes, the money is coming.



Meth lab explosion footage: COOKING METHAMPHETAMINE IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS. IF THE SLIGHTEST ERROR IS MADE, THE ENTIRE LAB, HOME, OR APARTMENT CAN EXPLODE.



BILL:

I would start out thinking clearly, and the more fumes I would breathe, and the closer I got to having an end product of methamphetamine, I would a, become so high on the fumes, that I would be delusional.



BIRKMEYER:

O/c: First off, you have a very volatile chemical reaction that’s occurring, and secondly, you have somebody who, if they're using the drug, is sleepless, paranoid, and probably not thinking clearly. So if they believe that somebody perhaps is watching them or violating the rules of the methamphetamine operation, they could be very dangerous.



BILL:

We wanted to be ready, we actually had sat down and talked about if anything comes down, we are not gonna be taken alive. If the police come, we’re just gonna, we’re just gonna shoot it out. You know, we don’t want to go to jail for the rest of our lives.





BUT THESE LABS ARE NOT JUST IN THE EAST AND NORTH COUNTIES ANYMORE.





BIRKMEYER:

If you took out a map of San Diego to point out every place where methamphetamine//was // made, you would find the places that you would think ordinarily, North County, East County. What would shock you though is that you would also find it in very well-to-do neighborhoods, University Heights,

Montage: Shots of towns named La Jolla, Pacific Beach, certainly the South Bay area,

or signs identifying towns :



BILL:

Mira Mesa, Kearny Mesa, Chula Vista, El Cajon…



BIRKMEYER:

Map graphic which goes red: If you were to put a red dot on every home or business or place that was affected by either methamphetamine manufacturer or methamphetamine use, the whole city of San Diego would be covered with red dots.// It’s pervasive throughout San Diego County.




KYLE:

o/c: I started using meth in ninth grade. And at first I thought it was God send.



Group of kids on street: IN 1997, NEARLY 20% OF TEENS ENTERING

Juv. Hall cafeteria: JUVENILE HALL IN SAN DIEGO TESTED POSTIVE FOR METHAMPHETAMINE.

Kyle on street: KYLE IS NINETEEN YEARS OLD. HE’S BEEN IN DRUG TREATMENT FOR 3 MONTHS.





:

Kyle cont.

V/o to o/c: Prior to my use I had always been isolated and alone. I had very few friends. I was overweight and did extremely poorly in school. And as soon as I started using crystal, I felt like everything changed almost overnight.



All of a sudden I had the energy to do everything that I wanted to. I could go to parties, I could talk to people, I could make friends, I could talk to girls. I could start getting good grades, and I had never gotten good grades before and all of a sudden I could get A's and B's easily



“Vista” sign: KYLE KNOWS HE CAN BUY METH ALL OVER SAN DIEGO, BUT HE TOOK US HOME, TO VISTA.



KYLE:

O/C: If you wanted to buy meth in Vista, there is a street called Santa Fe // about a block away from Vista

Pan of Santa Fe Ave community: High, and the whole community around Vista High was made up primarily of tweakers//

O/c: There was a house that we used to call it the store. And at the store there was a window that was either

opened or closed. If the window was open, then the store was open. If the window was closed, then the store was closed. And behind the window was an old Mexican guy with a rifle who dealt crystal. And you’d just go up there twenty-four hours a day and put your money through the window and he’d give you your crystal back.



Santa Fe drive-by: It seemed sometimes like every third house was a

Cutaways: kid on bike/on phone: drug house. Everybody you saw on the street was either dealing or using or involved in some way with

Kyle walking down storefront the process. At least that’s how it seemed to me

he used to deliver meth to: being in that world.


http://www.leeharvey.net/meth/script.htm
 
I lived in Yucaipa for a while. Tons of meth labs up there exploding left and right... I've also read that it's the town with the most meth users per capita in the US, but don't knowif there's an article about it online somewhere.

Anyway, interesting read about San Diego. I didn't know the whole history but it makes more sense now

-G
 
I lived in Yucaipa for a while. Tons of meth labs up there exploding left and right... I've also read that it's the town with the most meth users per capita in the US, but don't knowif there's an article about it online somewhere.

Anyway, interesting read about San Diego. I didn't know the whole history but it makes more sense now

That may very well be true about Yucaipa. I read a book about meth that was very well written. I'll list the name when I remember it saying that had a chapter entitled San Diego, meth capital or something like that. Anyway, as a result of new recipes that didn't need P2P, and because of the waining popularity of cocaine, and other factors, meth began to spread. In the 80s, meth was primarily a west coast phenomena- it was pretty big in the bay area and rural N CA (called crank). San Diego was flooded with it, what made it a meth capital is that it cut across socioeconomic lines. LA basin- some of the counties to the east: San bernadino/ Riverside had bid scenes. The drug was also popular in rural Oregon and Washington. It is also of note, that there were isolated scenes in Texas and the city of Philadelphia in the early 90s had a scene that was somewhat of an anomaly, geographically speaking. Then it spread East and you had all kinds of places that began claiming the title of "meth capital". Try typing the term into google and you'll see what I mean.

So on the topic of "meth capital" being self bestowed by several cities, including places in the Midwest and Northwest who had legitimate claims to the title here is a discussion from the drudge report discussing the Matanuska valley. This is traditionally an agricultural area and has become a bedroom community in recent years. Also the home of the legendary "Matanuska Valley Thunderfuck" super strain of cannabis, well known by a couple of conoisseurs for its incredible potency. I started a thread on this legendary strain for anyone who is interested here in canabis forum:Matanuska Valley Thunderfuck Cannabis Strain A couple of years ago they were calling themselves the meth capital. I know it lived up to its reputation to a degree because I have relatives that lived in the valley around that time and Eagle River which I think is between there and Anchorage. They claim there was a tweeker around every Igloo. Here is a transcript from a local forum. ( thought it was somewhat humorous8), alot of inside jokes that only Alaskans would get. The reference to P Diddy is that he made some kind of statement to the effect that the only place in the USA were there are no crack or crack heads is Alaska because there are no black people there to sell it to so no market for the drug. He was wrong on all counts and offended a few Alaskans. Incidentally as an aside, in an article I read about the rising of black street gangs and sale of cocaine in America in the late 80s, they mentioned Anchorage as having its street coke trade controlled by Jamaican gangs of all things (as opposed to the crips and bloods). I'm sure Anchorage would be quite a change from Kingston. At any rate, I'll try to write a little synopsis of the 2 original articles I posted when I find the time later and tie them together as well as the history of meth in the US. Anyway here is the thread:

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Wasilla: Alaska's Meth Capital
WASILLA - The Matanuska-Susitna area is the methamphetamine capital of Alaska, according to Alaska State Troopers.


In 2003, authorities uncovered nine meth labs in the area. Last year, the number increased to 42, said Kyle Young, an investigator with the troopers who works with the Mat-Su narcotics team.


Comments
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That makes sense...pit bulls and meth go well together.



Posted by Angrydad at 2008-09-06 02:10 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


Geez I thought San Diego had that title?



So there is crime in AK..

Posted by MURPHY at 2008-09-06 02:25 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


There goes Diddy's crackhead theory...

Posted by American1st at 2008-09-06 02:27 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


Democrats and Republicans should both be pleased by this news, in fact, Gov. Palin should use this as a talking point:


The enterprising citizens of Walrusilla are involved in a burgeoning cottage industry. Rather than turning to those commies in Columbia and Venezuela or the terrorists in Afghanistan for their narcotics needs, these brave patriots in Alaska indulge only in illegal drugs stamped "Made in America".
Posted by Sarcasmo at 2008-09-06 03:01 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


Meth is filling the void created when Palin and her secessionist pals smoked Matanuska Thunderfuck into extinction.

Posted by reinheitsgebot at 2008-09-06 03:08 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


This proves that Palin will be uniquely qualified to deal with the nation's drug problem.


The Right.

Posted by BlueInBushland at 2008-09-06 03:14 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


what else you gonna do in bumfucked alaska?

Posted by goblinsrreal2 at 2008-09-06 08:06 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


Alaska is the capital of yellow snow.

Posted by grumpy_too at 2008-09-06 08:18 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


I wonder what percentage of each operation she gets?

Posted by frankf55 at 2008-09-06 09:49 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


But Diddy said there were no crackheads there.


/wrong again

Posted by shirtsbyeric at 2008-09-06 11:06 PM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


eric - p. diddlysquat made an apology for that lie. his peeps have made sure it's EVERYWHERE!

Posted by nanc at 2008-09-07 01:09 AM | Reply | Flag: Flag: (Choose)FunnyNewsworthyOffensiveAbusive


Post a comment
Comments are closed for this entry.

http://www.drudge.com/archive/112017...s-meth-capital
 
Thanks for the kind words DM. As I think I've mentioned before, this has rapidly become my favorite forum. I love period pieces and every aspect of drugs and drug culture. Also, the quality of discussion on this forum is exceptionally high. Anyway, I got alot of good info on the meth scene in America in a book I read called : No Speed Limit: The Highs and Lows of Meth. Recomend this to people interested in the issue.

Essentially, the summary I promised .
1.) Japanese invent methamphetamine.

2.) During the depression, Alles and his buddies I think at UCSF or UCLA began doing research with benzedrine. It enjoys a wide range of applications.

3.) The Axis uses meth as the drug of choice. The Japanese make extensive use of it but the Germans have reservations (some limitations and unpredictability in its action become apparent after its use in the Blitzkrieg despite I forget the term used by the Nazi's but something like (the drug underwent precision doseage studies in the german manner so they were puzzeled. Small thing but mad under the trade name Pervetin or something like this, still the street name for the drug in former Czechleslovokia. Despite this, drug use was pervasive among the German political elite, socialites, and General staff with Goering being the classic example, though this proclivity for the elites proclivity to do drugs like cocaine, heroin, and morphine was advertised. However, Hitler was making extensive use of meth with barbituates and other sedatives to put him to sleep. He began using them parenterally in the end if the evidense is correct with vitamins and other supplements in the same way as JFK did years latter. His (Hitler's) irrational behavior, though an unstable individual to begin with fit the profile. JFK was getting his injections IM in his ass during the cuban missle crisis, thankfully his personality wasn't as unstable as Hitler's but look what a fiasco and near catastrophe of epic proportions that whole standoff turned out to be.

4.) Japan surrenders- war stocks of meth dumped on demoralized population. I think it was the IV formulation that was OTC and starts with a P, the slang name for IV meth in Japan to this day. An edidemic insues and swift action on the part of the government plus meth burnout so a decrease in the 50s. Take into account the Japanese are a different culture were obedience and social dynamics are different than the west but the scene never went away.

5.) Sweden experiences an epedemic of speed use. The DOC was preludin which never regained its prefered status an atypical example of an ATS stimulant choice patern doesn't fit the model of the "prague effect or phenomena"- a term I coined8) (I know what your thinking- kinda cheesy I'm coining my own terms). Sorry could have thought of something better name wise, but I mention this phenomena elsewere in another thread. Although the epedemic wained, a speed scene exists in Sweden to this day despite their antipathy for drugs as a culture, in other words the drug never totally went away despite the governments best efforts.

6.) Amphetamines: different formulations, stuff like methedrine, desoxyn, dexedrine, benzedrine, combinations with sedatives (dexamyl)- this is a match made in heaven barb + amphetamine FYI and a plethora of other things were available in the 50s and widely used for a number of reasons. My Dad was a med student @ Penn in the 50s and he said that drug companies would come on campus a give med students free physician's samples of methedrine around midterms and finals.=D;) They were considered safe and effective.

7.) Sevicemen after the war:
At the end of the war, the Japanese methamphetamine epidemic was really quite widespread. It was probably the first major drug epidemic the world had ever seen, was Japan at the end of World War II. Lots of American military personnel, men and women, became involved in methamphetamine. And when they mustered out of the military, we saw a spread of methamphetamine use from Japan to the Marshall Islands to the

Returning soldiers, sailors to SD: Philippines, Guam, Hawaii and then the first sight on the mainland was really San Diego because this was the major transshipment route that folks coming out of the military from the Pacific Theater came through San Diego. So San Diego is really first hit.
In Okinawa, meth was widepread in the red light district in the 50s as well as other parts of Japan. The Korean War saw alot of soldiers come into contact with this drug either deployed (movie MASH maybe not far from truth). Also, came across drug on R & R in Tokyo. What is interesting, I don't know much about the meth scene in the Marshall Islands, but the other places mentioned: Philippines, Guam, Hawaii, all have thriving meth (Ice or Shabu scenes as the case changes with slang). There is an expert in the Ice scene in I think UC Berkley who I would like to email with questions one of these days- place has a large japanese immigrant/ philippino immigrant population, but I have a feeling that a small scene for meth existed in these area that held on. Rach documents the Phillippines well in FDS. I mention Guam I think in a thread I started about scenes in the South Pacific (I know its in the north pacific but wanted to keep everything in one thread.

In the late 40s, outlaw motorcycle gangs begin forming by disinfranchised WWII personel that want to live free the way they want. Amphetamines used extensively until the late 60s when scare stories in news papers appear. Illicit production and distributio begins to appear in the bay area (orchestrated by the Hells Angeles. Meth is credited for killing the scene in the Haight by 69'. "Speed kills" become a common slogan. Outlaw MC produce illicit meth in the counties east of LA. Biker gangs control production in San Diego, a city traditionally more conservative than other towns. A cottage industry in the hills surrounding the city to make meth becomes established. What is unique is that it is used by a wide range of groups including people in the "straight" world.
Then, about 60 years after it was first created by a Japanese scientist, the drug of choice for outlaw bikers and the rural poor suddenly was being used in Southern California by white-collar workers, young mothers, high school students, nurses, teachers and other seemingly unlikely groups.

The drug's popularity particularly soared in San Diego, which became known to many as the methamphetamine capital of the nation in the 1980s.

Several factors have been associated with the drug's rapid rise in popularity among such broad demographics, but among the most significant was a change in the way methamphetamine was produced.

Also, in the early 80s, biker gangs in San diego were rolled up and their bussiness curtailed. That cotage industry that existed in peoples homes, back yards, garages, and ranches making moderate amounts quickly ramped up production to pick up the pace. At one point there was an underground publication on meth production written by someone with the psudonym "Darth Chewbaka" or vice versa. Named something like transmittance for production of illict meth or something like that (name he actually came up with was actually kind of cool I thought).

Anyway, so in San Diego, there was demand that needed to be filled. In the late 80s, to pick up the slack for a drug very much in demand these chemical supply houses sprang up. They were places that seemed to do legit business but I think they were focused on the ephedrine based synthetic routes. Along with your reagent purchase some places included detailed instructions for producing meth. Opertation crankcase- put and dent in the local supply here, but the market changed to meet changing exigencies.

which was being made in illicit labs.

Within a year of that new classification, federal Drug Enforcement Agency raids in San Diego were discovering labs making meth with ephedrine, the active ingredient in over-the-counter decongestants. The new meth was easier to make, its ingredients were legal and easy to find, and the drug itself was stronger and more addictive. [I remember in 89' getting ahold of some crclear crystal glass like substance. I was used to the penut butter cranck, or yellow powder crank or cranck dyed purple, orange, or red. Sometimes some good pwder off white crank. These were distict, like pieces of broken glass. I did a higher end normal dose (1/4 gram) and my nose burned up so much I was wondering if this was really choped up glass. It hit me hard and I was getting mild paranoia-almost psychedlic change followed by a strong extreem euphoria/wakefullness. Stayed up for 3 days on that dose. Remember I was in highschool and had to volunteer at a hospital for my school requirements. I had a job that sent me around the hospital but I remember not wanting the elevator b/c I was scarred of people, and taking the steps was giving me chest pain (and this was when I was in shape on swim team.]8o

San Diego also was in a perfect storm, geographically speaking, for meth use to spread. Since the 1960s, the drug had been distributed in California by the Hells Angels motorcycle club, which was founded north of San Diego County in San Bernardino.

Just to the south, methamphetamine was being made in Mexico, where labs operated with little interference from the law.

Adding to the county's meth explosion, unscrupulous entrepreneurs who saw a booming market opened businesses and started selling the drug's active ingredients, known as precursors, and lab equipment directly to drug manufacturers.

Precursors such as ephedrine, hydriodic acid, red phosphorus and Freon were available at several chemical firms, but two stood out as the biggest supplier for meth labs in the 1980s.

So this summarizes some of the stuff I mentioned, but what it doesn't state clearly is that other less brazen organizations began selling precursors throughout the US. This contributed in the eastward spread of the drug that was no longer produced in as large numbers in San Diego by mom and pop labs. What was produced was produced by well finaced mexican corporations rather than mom and pop operators. These were the Amezcua/CONTRERAS BROTHERS who began smuggling precursors up north and then controlled the trade with there own labs in southern CA. What happened was the quality of tweek improved- I remember alot of good glass. shards being on the street in 93-94. But the capital flowed back to mexico rather than staying entireky in the US. Another good one Narcoswine. The Amezcua's were shut down in I think 95' because I remember a noticeable drought and drop in quality around memorial day (may) of 95' but the facts would fit. Then the mexicans began to move production south of the border and get reagent, having come under stricter mex control from China and other countries.

DM I heard from other Australians and kiwi's that meth is expensive and a status dru. Here it was usually considered a working class white drug "white trash" but cut across lines in San Diego and subcultures: metal heads, punks, goths,, gays, clubbers, ravers, hipsters, chicano gangsters, proffesionals. In the 90s, crystal meth ruled everywhere else but La Jolla ( a Beverly Hills by the beach" had a bizarre underground scene for coke, crack, and heroin, when these drugs were hard to find outside the ghetto. People continue to live with this drug and generations have used and produced it-kind of like moonshine.
If it is no longer a capital, it is a spiritual home. San jose, a little known fact, enjoys that status for PCP. In the 80s use cut across cultural lines and although most is produced in the compton area now a days according to the DEA, San Jose if no longer the "capital" remains the spiritual home for this enigmatic and hardcore drug. I come to this conclusion based on several loose criteria filled that I applied to the San Diego meth scene. There is a cottage industry in its production- not all from South Central LA and long term cadre of enthusiasts to this day that don't make it to official figures. PCP Spiritual Home of The World . I think this is a fact the major city in the Silicon Valley, the safest city in the US (acording to the FBI) and the highest per capita income of any major city in the US is more than happy to downplay its angoing association with KJ.
 
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^ Meth is quite expensive but it is far from a status drug, it is commonly used by many working class people both at work and on the weekends. When you consider the bang for the buck meth has it isn't that expensive when compared to some other drugs here.

Cocaine is really the only drug that could be described as a status drug, it is so expensive over here it is crazy and its usually of crap quality.
 
^ Meth is quite expensive but it is far from a status drug, it is commonly used by many working class people both at work and on the weekends. When you consider the bang for the buck meth has it isn't that expensive when compared to some other drugs here.

Cocaine is really the only drug that could be described as a status drug, it is so expensive over here it is crazy and its usually of crap quality.
Today 02:00

Sounds similar to here then from a socioeconomic stanpoint cept when occasionally comes across decent coke quality- status drug here too especially in 06' it had a renaissance. Sometimes good quality though. Ironically, with coke- when imported, typically it travels north to LA first then south, although this might have changed- that use to be one drug that couls be obtained at better average quality in LA than SD but scene changes. On the IV speedball front- alot of people into 1:1 (used to call them Beluchais (in honour of john Belushi), head south to get the white. Hell, now its theoretically legal to have a 1/2 gram of coke or less down there (in TJ) on your person., I am following the scene closely down there and will hopefully be able to update FDS post soon.
 
I'd always heard this growing up in SD in the 80s/90s .. But I felt isolated in the upscale suburbs (surprised to see my hometown named in the article!)
In high school MDMA came around at just the right time for me & my friends ...

Much of Oregon/the NW, though, still shows effects of its meth decade, when there was nothing else .. While production has virtually been eliminated, I-5 runs from the border thru San Diego and than 1500 miles up , the great NAFTA Interstate highway ..

I know too well that the crime statistics for San Diego usually match that of the other tweaked-out western cities, in that a sizable majority of crime (of the non-victimless variety) involvs meth and the people who abuse it.
 
This might be completely different than the community you mentioned but I remember La Jolla in the late 80s and early 90s was some what an anomaly, I might have mentioned this in another post (it sounds familiar) but although tweek was widepread everywhere else in the county, the hard drug scene there was big into coke unsuprasably and heroin too. La Jolla is a kind of Beverly Hills by the beach. Heroin was available in south east, Logan, and city heights (and other oarts of easr San Diego it was eare and cinsidered a straight ghetto drug. Downtown had a huge black & white scene (32 and commercial was the spot- atleast before the neighborhood was gentrifyed to make way for stadium. Also, there was a small bario in coastal Solano that goes waaay back- like a hundred years ago tht was also center of the chiva trade for coastal North Coastal. In 95 I saw the price of heroin go down and quality increase. Now the scene in Mex has even gotten crazier. My friend relapsed recently- was there this weekend. He said that people were being alittle more brazen with drugs. To give an example, he was doing coke off some strippers tits when he was down their this which was prety much verboten befiore decriminalization when he was there about 5 weeis ago.

Withh MDMA the city had huge amounts going around about 91'-95'. Those were the good old days. Easy to find, cheap. and and I was friends with a few chemists (guys that had actual formal training in organic chemistry.);)=D
 
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Great read. All the regions you meantion in the county in the article have at one time or another been a place I used to tweak. And yes, there are definately home labs in miramesa, poway, etc
 
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