A garbage pickup worker noticed plastic bottles with tubing believed used in methamphetamine production and called Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office. This is the second meth-related call in two days to Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office.
Deputy James Davis determined the trash contained materials possibly used to manufacture the illegal methamphetamine. Narcotics Lt. Egon Grissom said Special Enforcement Bureau Capt. Jason Mathis and Detective Sedric Fields found in the trash plastic bottles with tubing, chemicals such as muriatic acid, packaging for ephedrine and open lithium batteries. “Everything was consistent to making meth,” Grissom said. Mathis and Fields obtained consent to search the home where a mother and adult son lived at 704 Aberdeen Parke off Stewarts Valley Road.
"They donned their hazardous materials suits, searched the residence and found items throughout the house used to cook meth,” Grissom said. They quarantined the house and notified the Tennessee Methamphetamine Task Force who cleaned up the site. The residents have the responsibility of cleaning their own house. Detectives questioned the mother and son. Charges may be pending.