CONCORD, NH – Over the past six years, methamphetamine has risen from relative obscurity in New Hampshire to the second most prevalent illegal narcotic substance, according to the state crime lab.
As the landscape of illicit drugs found on the streets shifts, the evidence samples sent by police departments for testing to the New Hampshire State Police Forensic Lab reflects those changes. Lab Director Melisa Staples said illicit fentanyl remains the most popular and widely available drug found on the streets, but meth has grown to be a close contender.
“Meth has been
rising every year. And last year, in 2019, it took over as the No. 2 drug in
the state, behind fentanyl,” Staples said. Last year, the lab tested 1,718
fentanyl samples and 1,169 meth samples. For meth, that’s over a 2,100 percent
increase over six years.
The previous year, the second most prevalent drug
tested by the lab was black market pharmaceuticals, which consists of a mix of
opioids and anti-anxiety medications, predominantly.
In 2019, pharmaceuticals
were bumped to No. 3. In 2014, meth was only a “blip on the radar,”
according to Staples. The state lab received only 52 samples of meth, which
accounted for 0.9 percent of all the drug classes the lab tested that year,
behind every other. At the time, today’s most prevalent drug, fentanyl, was
also rare. The state only received 92 samples in 2014.
A number of things have
contributed to the rise of meth and its relatively growing share of the pie.
Staples said marijuana used to be the most tested drug by the state lab, but by
2017 decriminalization of marijuana made it less of a priority.
Statistics provided by the New Hampshire government |
Suddenly, a
drug that used to see an average of 2,000 samples in the lab each year dropped
to 289 last year. Around 2016, fentanyl was starting to overtake heroin
and replace it in the black market, and that shift is reflected in the lab’s
numbers. Synthetic cannabinoids (also called spice) have also become less
popular over the years.
At this rate, Staples said she wouldn’t be surprised if
meth were to overtake fentanyl in the top spot by 2021 or soon after. “It’s
getting closer,” she said. One of the biggest contributors to the growing
availability and supply of meth is a change in how it’s sourced.
In previous
years, meth would be produced locally by clandestine labs in homes or in
so-called “one-pot” labs, which were plastic bottles containing a volatile and
sometimes explosive mixture of household ingredients and pseudoephedrine. Sometimes,
people would order meth from dealers online and have it mailed to them.
Mexican Cartels
But
lately, the same Mexican cartels who have been illicitly manufacturing and
shipping fentanyl over the border and up to the Northeast have made significant
steps to increase its production and distribution of methamphetamine.
“Fentanyl
and meth often have very similar trafficking routes up from Mexico,” Staples
said. Timothy Desmond, a public information officer for the DEA’s New England
office, said the cartels are hoping to capitalize on the addiction crisis they
helped create and worsen with an alternative to the often-deadly opioids.
“New
Hampshire has historically had a small demand for methamphetamine that was
supplied by one-pot labs. Users would typically go around to retail stores and
purchase items to make the meth. Since the introduction of fentanyl
approximately five years ago into the U.S. market by Mexican cartels, they have
since tried to capitalize on producing tons and tons of meth and flood the
market and hopefully addictions would turn to meth as much as opioids, like
fentanyl,” Desmond said in an email.
DEA Associate Special Agent in Charge Jon
DeLena said he recently toured a massive meth lab in Sinaloa, Mexico, in June
2019. He said the cartels were producing seven tons of meth every three days at
that site alone. Staples said dealers may be marketing meth, which is a
stimulant, as a safe alternative to fentanyl, which is a powerful sedative that
can stop an overdosed user from breathing.
Scene from a meth lab visited by DEA Associate Special Agent In Charge Jon DeLena in June 2019. Photo/DEA |
Meanwhile, the number of clandestine
meth labs the state forensic laboratory is involved in assisting the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration with onsite testing has gone down, though she wasn’t
sure there was a direct link between that and the rising availability from
Mexico.
The number of clandestine labs they worked on peaked at 14 in 2017 and
dropped to three in 2019, and five so far this year, according to numbers
provided by Staples.
Interesting, the northeast of the united states had thud far avoided the meth plague. Will have to keep an eye on this. Almost nonexistent where i am judt north of New York City.
ReplyDeleteIt seemed like that in chi for a long time- but its here now also- i dont get how anyone with an opiate prob, would decide to do meth instead-
DeleteMeth is still looked down upon by a lot of drug users on East Coast but it's definitely on the rise and it is much more readily available than it was 5-10 years ago.
DeleteDue to its cheap price you gotta figure once cocaine users hit their bottom and run out of money they will switch to meth.
Hopefully it doesn't catch on here. It's much worse for a drug user than cocaine both mentally and physically and they give long prison sentences even for selling small amounts. It ruins people's lives, plain and simple.
"7 tons every 3 days??" Is that even possible to produce that much 99% pure meth that fast?. Anyone know?
ReplyDeleteYes it's possible, they hire lots of locals that are unemployed, it's like a factory they work 3 shifts and get the product done.
Deletethats crazy....makes you wonder how much drugs people are really doing..and thats just 1 lab
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