Alabama Police Report Finding and Shutting Down Meth Labs in Hale and Pickens Counties

The economy has made things difficult for everyone. But one industry that tends to thrive in hard times is crime, either organized groups or individual criminals. Bank robbery, auto theft, white-collar crimes like embezzlement, and of course illicit drug manufacture and sales. In my years as an Alabama criminal defense lawyer, I have represented clients who have been accused of alleged drug possession, drug trafficking, manufacturing, illegal growing of marijuana, and meth lab operation, to name just a few.

Working in Birmingham, AL, I have also seen the growth of the meth industry as a way for some people to illegally make money in a down economy. Recent reports show that police have shut down two alleged meth labs in the West Alabama area.
 
According to police, raids in Hale and Pickens counties halted operation of what authorities sais were two separate methamphetamine labs. Four people were reportedly taken into custody, with police officials in both counties searching for additional suspects.

Pickens County Sheriff David Abston described one of the suspects, Christopher Wayne Kelly, 28, as a “serial burglar.” He is asking burglary victims in four West Alabama counties to report missing items. Kelly, a Tuscaloosa resident who had been staying at his grandfather’s camp house in Pickens County, was taken into custody on Sept. 1, according to the authorities.

The man was charged with third-degree burglary, second-degree theft, manufacturing a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance, first-degree possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. Kelly was placed in the Pickens County Jail on $541,500 bail.

According to reports, police searched Kelly’s residence and turned up a suspected methamphetamine lab, plus several items believed to have been stolen during a burglary in south Pickens County on August 31. Pickens County police believe that the suspect took similar items from hunting camps in Tuscaloosa, Greene, Sumter and Pickens counties.

Law enforcement officials are also looking for 33-year-old Christopher Scruggs, an associate of Kelly’s who has several warrants out for his arrest in Jefferson and Tuscaloosa counties.

In Hale County, officials charged three suspects with manufacturing methamphetamine. According to reports, Charles Tucker, 39, and his wife, Tina Tucker, 35, were taken into custody, along with 34-year-old Wade Johnson, at the Tucker’s Millwood Road residence in Greensboro. The bust was the result of an undercover investigation, which led authorities to the home where at least three suspected methamphetamine labs were in plain sight.

Police say that all three Hale County suspects face charges of trafficking methamphetamine, manufacturing methamphetamine, possession of methamphetamine, and unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia.

The undercover probe that identified the Tuckers as suspects also led to the identification of other suspects who sold drugs to agents of the 4th Judicial Drug and Violent Crime Task Force. Authorities said that warrants and indictments have been obtained for other suspects as well.


Alleged meth labs found in Hale, Pickens counties, TuscaloosaNews.com, September 10, 2009

Alabama's Illegal Drug Manufacturers, Dealers Find New Way to Make Meth and Skirt Anti-drug Laws

As a Birmingham criminal defense lawyer, I find interesting the ingenuity of some people to invent new ways of doing things. From a criminal perspective, drug manufacturing is one of the more scientific pursuits. Not long ago, an Associated Press report disclosed that illegal drug manufacturers were using a new mix of ingredients to produce methamphetamine. But apparently this is nothing new to Alabama’s illicit drug industry.

While it may take a while for state and federal legislation to catch up with the new recipes that clandestine meth labs use to make their product, I’m certain that law enforcement agencies will still be arresting individuals for alleged drug manufacture and sale. The trouble for police and federal drug agents is the less conspicuous nature of this new approach.

According to news reports, most every meth lab in Alabama is using the new approach. “That’s all we’re seeing now as far as labs go,” said Albertville police Chief Benny Womack. “It’s much easier and quicker and doesn’t get as much attention. Somehow or another, these guys are better chemists than the ones who have degrees.”

Apparently, the new formula, or process, is called “shake and bake.” It uses a more simple recipe that requires just a two-liter soda bottle, cold pills and chemicals. The maker only has to mix the components by shaking the bottle. The resulting meth powder is reportedly highly addictive.

Reports for the AP reviewed lab seizures in 14 states, including Alabama, and found that the new method is spreading across the country and is contributing to a spike in the number of meth cases after years of declining arrests.

Because the volatile mixture requires fewer pills of common decongestants ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, it allows makers to skirt the law restricting over-the-counter sales of these medications. According to authorities, many meth users traveling from pharmacy to pharmacy, buying small quantities of pills to avoid attention.

The drug legislation and last year’s formation of the Safe Streets Task Force for Northeastern Alabama have combined to reduce the number of meth labs in the region, authorities said. The Birmingham Division of the FBI works directly with the Safe Streets Task Force, which includes 22 federal, state and local partners in Marshall, Etowah, DeKalb and St. Clair counties.


New meth formula avoids anti-drug laws, SandMountainReporter.com, September 8, 2009

Limestone County Police make Huge Crystal Meth Drug Bust in Northern Alabama

News reports out of Huntsville say six pounds of what drug dealers call “ice,” a crystallized form of meth, was seized in one of the largest drug busts in the history of North Alabama, according to police and drug enforcement officials. On September 3, officers from the Limestone County sheriff’s department arrested Bobby Ray Miller, a resident of Toney, Alabama, on criminal charges of drug trafficking and possession of drug paraphernalia. The 67-year-old was reportedly apprehended at his home on McKee Road along with six pounds of the illegal drug valued at nearly $200,000.

As a Birmingham criminal defense lawyer, I know that the drugs seized as part of this bust represent quite a sizeable piece of evidence, however, I also hold that every citizen is guaranteed under the Constitution to have his day in court. In our system of law, an individual is always considered innocent until proven guilty by a jury of his or her peers. My job as an Alabama criminal attorney is to provide an aggressive defense for those people accused of crimes by our justice system and to represent those clients well, both in the initial criminal case as well as any subsequent criminal appeals trials.

News reports of this incident stated that in addition to the large amount of crystal meth taken in the raid, deputies also seized $100,000 in cash, two Harley Davidson motorcycles, a semi-truck, two pick-up trucks, a Chrysler 300 sedan, and a trailer.

Law enforcement officials with the sheriff’s department say that this arrest for drug trafficking isn’t the first time that Miller has been charged with illegal activities in Alabama. Nearly 15 years ago, he was picked up on gambling charges. In 1995, police arrested the man and confiscated about $90,000 allegedly made off an illegal gambling operation.

 

6 lbs. of meth seized in Limestone County drug bust, WAFF.com, September 4, 2009