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Colorado couple arrested in meth raid

The Larimer County, Colorado Drug Task Force on Wednesday raided a family's rental home, where an active methamphetamine lab was discovered in the garage, Colorado authorities said.

Jon and Stephanie Grosse, ages 36 and 31 respectively, were arrested and face charges of manufacturing a controlled substance and possessing it, both felonies, and reckless endangerment, a misdemeanor child-abuse offense.

Their 4-year-old daughter was decontaminated with neutralizing liquids at the scene before being sent to the hospital for testing and turned over to Larimer County, Colorado Department of Human Services.

Her hot-pink Glamour Girls bicycle with training wheels sat in the front yard Wednesday, surrounded by evidence pulled out of the house by detectives.

"It's upsetting the child was affected," said neighbor Mark Rosoff, who did not know the Grosses. "And it's upsetting that their own safety wasn't even a factor."

It's a scene becoming all too familiar to Larimer County, Colorado law enforcement and prosecutors, who say methamphetamine use and production in this area are reaching epidemic proportions.

From July 2001 to June 2002, the Larimer County Drug Task Force dismantled 20 meth labs. In the year prior, it broke up 29. Last year, officials in the District Attorney's Office estimated that 75 percent of felony case filings could be attributed to meth use. Those cases ranged from fraud and forgery to property crimes, as well as distribution, possession and manufacturing.

Detectives on Wednesday served a search warrant around 1:15 p.m., after a weeklong investigation that resulted from a citizen's tip, said detective Todd Brubaker.

Stephanie Grosse was arrested at the residence near the busy intersection of Summit View Drive and Prospect Road and decontaminated by Poudre, Colorado Fire Authority's hazardous-materials unit. Jon Grosse was taken into custody by Fort Collins, Colorado police, who stopped his vehicle not far from the house after the raid was under way.

Once members of the drug task force arrived on scene and realized there was an active "cook," everyone inside the house was evacuated. The odor of methamphetamine lingered in the air as investigators dressed in protective suits were sent in to dismantle the lab and pull evidence such as pipes and several guns from the house.

"We had a pretty good idea of where the lab was," Brubaker said.

It is unknown how much methamphetamine was recovered, but the Larimer County, Colorado Sheriff's Office said the equipment was capable of producing less than 1 ounce of the drug. The street value of that amount would range from $650 to $1,200, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Also discovered at the residence were surveillance equipment and a scanner, set on Colorado sheriff's office channels. At least two video cameras were found -- one in the front window, the other in a front-yard tree. In the search of the house, video and audiotapes from the surveillance equipment were uncovered. Colorado authorities think the suspects used the equipment to watch for law enforcement and monitor potential drug buyers.

Ray Lanthier, who lives across the street from the Grosses, said he never thought there was a problem. But looking back, there were some indications of drug use and distribution.

"The only thing I noticed was there was constant cars all hours of the day and night," he said. "I didn't really put two and two together."

The news Wednesday that a meth lab had been discovered shocked neighbors, but what worried them even more was the welfare of the couple's 4-year-old child.

A study by National Jewish Medical and Research Center, reported Monday, showed that children in homes where methamphetamine is produced face health risks as great as users do.

In July, the Colorado Alliance for Drug Endangered Children told a crowd of Larimer County social workers that an estimated 35 percent to 70 percent of kids removed from meth homes test positive for the drug.

Statistics and facts such as those probably played a role during the last legislative session in the passage of House Bill 1169, which broadened the definition of child abuse to include exposure to meth labs. That in turn factored into charges faced by Jon and Stephanie Grosse.

On Wednesday, detectives said the arrest of Jon Grosse came as no surprise to the agency.

"He's kind of been on the drug task force's radar screen for a while," Brubaker said.

Jon Grosse has a Colorado arrest record dating back to 1993, with offenses ranging from driving under the influence of alcohol to obstruction of police and probation violation.

Stephanie Grosse does not have a criminal record in Colorado, according to a Colorado Bureau of Investigation check.

"I can't believe they're into that crap," said Joseph Larson, who owns the Summit View residence and has rented to the Grosses for the past three years. "They seemed like good tenants. They seemed like decent people."

The couple is being held at the Larimer County, Colorado Detention Center, and no bond has been set. They are scheduled to appear in court today via video from the jail.
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