Police seized more methamphetamine labs in St. Joseph County last year than in 2012, mirroring a statewide trend, but officials said the local increase in seizures may have resulted more from vigilant police work than wider drug use.
In St. Joseph County, meth lab seizures increased by about 33 percent, from 30 in 2012 to a record-high total of 40 in 2013, according to recently released Indiana State Police statistics.
South Bend police Lt. David Ryans, commander of the countywide Metro Special Operations Section -- a unit that conducts drug raids in South Bend, Mishawaka and unincorporated parts of the county -- said officers uncovered more labs because his team is better trained than ever to spot meth operations.
"I think as the meth labs have popped up in our county, we've become better at noticing some of the components to it," Ryans said. "I don't think that it's prevalent in our area; it's just we're finding more because we're better trained at it."
Across the state, police seized more than 1,800 labs in 2013 compared with 1,726 in 2012 -- an increase that likely made Indiana the national leader in meth lab raids, state police reported.
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