Joint task force hits Westside drug lab
Deepa Bharath
Police and state drug task force members Wednesday afternoon arrested
two Costa Mesa residents in their home, where officers found a lab
used to manufacture a drug commonly used in date rape, officials
said.
The bust was initiated by two state agencies, the Orange County
Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement and the Orange County ProActive Lab
Group, Costa Mesa Police Lt. John FitzPatrick said. Costa Mesa police
officers assisted with the bust, he said.
Police arrested 47-year-old David Noel and Chris Mazzie, 32. Both
were released on Wednesday pending further investigation, FitzPatrick
said. No charges had been filed against Noel or Mazzie, he said.
Officials went into the home in the 800 block of Governor Street
and dismantled the GHB lab, FitzPatrick said. He would not comment
further because of the ongoing investigation.
Neighbors on Governor Street said they were shocked at the police
activity and disappointed to learn about a drug lab in their
otherwise peaceful neighborhood.
“I was unaware of anything going on in that house,” said James
Lynott, who has lived on that street for 45 years.
Lynott was out getting his mail Wednesday afternoon when he saw a
helicopter flying over his house, a white truck as big as his motor
home and several cars parked across the street.
“No one was in uniform, so I thought the people there were having
a housewarming party,” Lynott said. “But then I saw the big trailer
the forensic experts were in and a lot of people wearing the jackets
marked ‘police.’”
Noel and Mazzie are new to the neighborhood and bought the home
about four or five months ago, he said.
“Governor Street is a sleepy, little street with long-time
residents,” Lynott said. “We’ve raised four children and three
grandchildren here, and it’s been a safe neighborhood. I’m
disappointed.”
Another neighbor, who did not give her name fearing her safety,
said she was curious to know what all the officers were doing at the
home. She said she saw the undercover officers place a clear, plastic
bag on the hood of a car and take pictures.
“The big bag had a lot of smaller bags in it with some stuff,” the
neighbor said. “And when I asked one of the officers what was going
on he said, ‘It’s a domestic dispute.’ I knew it was more than that.”
She said she was “ticked off” that the people who were handcuffed
on Wednesday were released hours later.
“I don’t care how much drugs the police found there,” she said.
“We don’t want anyone selling that stuff in our neighborhood. It gets
me really upset.”
Several other neighbors declined to comment.
GHB labs are not only common all over the country, but also easy
to operate, said Trinka Porrata, a retired Los Angeles Police
Department narcotics detective, drug consultant and president of
Project GHB, a Pasadena-based nonprofit organization that operates an
informational website about the drug.
GHB or gamma Gamma hydroxy butyrate is basically paint stripper
mixed with a drain cleaner, Porrata said.
“It’s usually found in liquid form,” she said. “But it can also be
made into a powder when mixed with acetone.”
GHB labs are not dangerous when used to produce the liquid form,
but can explode if someone sets out to make the powder using acetone,
Porrata said. Many people now use “analogs,” basically “a chemical
cousin” to the drug with similar chemical properties, which when
ingested turns into GHB, she said.
Such labs have rarely been seen in Orange County, although its use
is rampant here, Porrata said.
“It is used quite a bit by athletes to build muscle,” she said.
“But it’s also a big focus in Orange County night clubs, especially
in the beach cities.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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