Dayton Daily News

Police seize less marijuana, meth in Ohio as usage soars

Mexican cartels ship powerful, cheap drug to Ohio.

- By John Caniglia

Police across the state have uncovered a puzzling trend: The number of seizures of marijuana and methamphet­amine has dropped drasticall­y in recent years, while usage of the drugs continues to soar.

Authoritie­s said the reason stems from greater sophistica­tion: Many marijuana growers are developing potent plants inside their homes and barns in elaborate grow operations, while Mexican drug cartels have establishe­d networks to ship cheap, yet powerful methamphet­amine into Ohio, reducing the need to manufactur­e the drug here.

In fiscal year 2012, authoritie­s reported shutting down 607 methamphet­amine labs across the state. Five years later, police closed 239, according to records police department­s filed with the Ohio Attorney General’s office. That’s a drop of 61 percent.

The amount of marijuana uprooted has also dwindled. In 2010, authoritie­s pulled a record 105,121 plants, many of which were planted in large plots in Southeast Ohio’s rural hillsides. This year, authoritie­s chopped down 20,468 plants, a reduction of 81 percent, the records show. Most of the plants were spotted in an eradicatio­n program in which state agents use a helicopter.

Across the state, as heroin and synthetic opioids fuel a deadly epidemic, police, lawmakers and addiction services profession­als also are struggling with the increased usage of marijuana and methamphet­amine.

The Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network, which tracks drug trends, reported earlier this year that the availabili­ty of marijuana and methamphet­amine has been on the increase across the state.

In Southeast Ohio, for instance, methamphet­amine “was as widely available as heroin,” state reports said. In Columbus, authoritie­s said, methamphet­amine “produced in ‘superlabs’ in Mexico has been shipped with heroin.”

Exactly how and when Mexican cartels began targeting users in Ohio and other Midwest states is unclear.

But officials said the cartels have found fertile ground here.

The organizati­ons produce the high-quality methamphet­amine and distribute it through couriers, who ferry it across the border.

That’s the opposite of how it worked in Ohio for many years.

Meth cookers brewed a concoction that featured anhydrous ammonia, a farm fertilizer. Later, they simplified it by mixing household ingredient­s that included cold tablets in a 2-liter pop bottle known as “the onepot cook.”

The attempts to mirror the work of Walter White on the television series “Breaking Bad” were so inept that cookers blew the roofs off homes and buildings.

The attempts also produced a subpar product, authoritie­s said.

“Today, there is better quality and better prices,” said Joseph Pinjuh, an assistant U.S. Attorney in Cleveland who has handled major drug cases for years. “We’re now seeing kilo-sized amounts of methamphet­amine.”

Dennis Cavanaugh, the leader of the Lorain County Drug Task Force, agreed. He said super-labs are producing larger and purer quantities of the drug at lower prices. Cavanaugh’s unit recently plugged a California-to-Ohio pipeline that brought pounds of pure methamphet­amine into rural Eaton Township, outside of Elyria, he said.

The drop in the number of methamphet­amine operations can be seen most clearly in Summit County.

In fiscal 2012, police reported shuttering 207 methamphet­amine labs, nearly a third of all the labs closed in the state that year.

This fiscal year, from Oct. 1, 2016, through Sept. 30, 2017, Summit County officials broke up just 10 labs.

Counties across the state have seen a reduction in local drug manufactur­ing, as well.

Take Noble County, population 14,000, in Southeast Ohio, a county smaller than the city of Rocky River. Sheriff Robert Pickenpaug­h said the number of seizures of one-pot labs there has dropped dramatical­ly.

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