Crystal meth is also an example of how a drug can gain a larger market when it becomes easier to get and easier to use. When it was introduced, methamphetamine had to be injected. Most people are not too keen on the idea of jabbing themselves with needles and even crackheads pride themselves on the fact that they are not needle users, so this factor delayed the spread of the drug. However, some enterprising cooker made a few adjustments to the drug’s chemistry, and the result was crystal meth that could be smoked or snorted.
Not only was the new form of the drug easier to use, it was also cheaper and easier to make, and it offered the tweaker a more intense high for less money. Crystal meth is now sold in capsules, pills, powder, or chunks, and it can be injected, snorted, or smoked.
As most cops know, crystal meth is imported into the country and it is also produced domestically in a variety of cooking operations, including mobile labs that have been found in trucks, in cars, and even attached to motorcycles. Because the chemicals used to process the drug are both toxic and explosive, meth labs represent a great danger to people living nearby, to the cookers, and to law enforcement officers.
Club Drugs
Crystal meth is sometimes popular on the club scene, but the most common club drug is ecstasy, and the up-and-coming club drug is GHB (gamma-hydroxyl-butenal). Lt. Louis Feta, a narcotics officer with the Miami-Dade Police Department says GHB and other so-called “date-rape” drugs are common in local nightspots and at raves and parties. However, he adds that the availability of these drugs has declined since the Miami-Dade PD started working with local club owners to fight the problem.