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Alabama meth lab warning follows guilty plea


Describing Gerald Eugene Bennett as a methamphetamine "cook," Alabama officials used his guilty plea to attempted murder Monday to alert the public about proliferating meth labs in Mobile County, Alabama and to warn would-be manufacturers to stay out of the business.

Four years ago there were no meth lab busts in Mobile County, Alabama according to Alabama Capt. Bruce Lee of the Sheriff's Department. This year, he said, there were about 100.

One of them involved Bennett, 38, who opened fire with a .25-caliber gun when his Theodore home was raided in May 2002. He shot Mobile County, Alabama Deputy Roy Cuthkelvin according to federal court testimony.

Another Alabama deputy was severely burned by some of the chemicals Bennett used to concoct his brew of highly potent "speed," Lee said. Both deputies recovered from their injuries.

In November 2002, Bennett was convicted in federal court of attempted murder, among other crimes, and sentenced to 34 years in prison in connection with the raid and its aftermath.

On Monday, he pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of Cuthkelvin before Mobile County, Alabama Circuit Judge Rick Stout. Stout sentenced Bennett to 10 years in prison and ordered that it be served concurrently with the federal sentence.

"For the remainder of his life, he's not ever going to get out," District Attorney John Tyson Jr. said of Bennett during a news conference in his seventh floor offices at the courthouse.

The county's chief prosecutor warned potential meth makers that he, his colleagues in the DA's office and enforcement personnel are prepared to "use the full force of the law" to track down, stop and jail them.

Far more than most other criminal types, Lee said, the nature of making and using methamphetamine puts the perpetrators in a highly agitated, paranoid state of mind.

"Cooks," as Lee called meth manufacturers, usually produce an ounce of the stuff once or twice a week, either for sale or for their own use.

Both the process of making the chemical and the makers themselves, Lee said, are dangerously unstable.

He said his department's experience has shown that meth lab operators are inclined, like Bennett was, to use violence and weapons when faced with arrest.

"They are almost always armed," Lee said. "And these people will use their weapons."

As for Bennett, Lee said, he "was determined, he had a weapon and he was not going to go peacefully...He just didn't care. He was going to shoot it out."

Lee said he was unsure of why methamphetamine causes the reactions it does in users. Users may go several days without sleep, become paranoid and prone to violence, he said.

"They tell you they are going to shoot it out with police," Lee said.

Lee said there is no particular stereotype or economic bracket that defines manufacturers and users of methamphetamine.

Right now in Mobile County, Alabama Lee said, "there are $200,000 houses sitting next to meth labs."


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