DEA teaches meth-cooking 101From the Denver Post
Excerpt: Cooking methamphetamine takes only a few hours and requires simple household ingredients, like striker plates from matchbooks, the guts of lithium batteries, drain cleaner.
"It's pretty gross," said Matt Leland, who works in career services at the University of Northern Colorado and who recently helped cook the drug in a lab. "If someone was truly interested in manufacturing meth, it would not be that hard."
The Drug Enforcement Administration invited Leland and other citizens - such as software engineers, a teacher, a pastor and a school principal - to make methamphetamine last week in a lab at Metropolitan State College of Denver.
"At first, I thought, 'Man, I cannot believe they showed us how to do
Scott Grabendike listens to DEA chemists, who try to keep up with the latest changes in meth production so they can testify against makers of the illegal drug. it.' But you can find the recipe on the Internet," Leland said. "It just goes to show anybody who really wants to do it probably could."
The class was held as part of the DEA's first Citizens Academy in order to give the public a close-up view of what the agency does to keep drugs off the street.
MoreLabels: agency, DEA, War on Drugs