The face of the drug epidemic in Eastern Kentucky is changing. New laws are making it tougher to get prescription drugs and as result officials say they are seeing meth make its way into every community.

The city of Salyersville, a town you could call the Mayberry of Magoffin County, is seeing the impact of the meth problem.

"The meth that's coming in here it's causing good people to do some crazy things," said Magoffin County Sheriff, Carson Montgomery.

And although the Sheriff says, "Salyersville is a good quiet town" meth is even in the courtrooms but now how you might suspect.

"While I was in court yesterday I was advised by two people that Telby Fields, who I had been talking to just a few minutes earlier, had been trying to sell them meth," said Montgomery.

Montgomery followed Fields outside where he says she got in a car with two men that were parked about 150 feet from his office. When he and Kentucky State Police searched the car they found what Fields was allegedly trying to sell.

"We found approximately 35 grams of meth, scales and hundreds of baggies for weighing it out and putting it in," Montgomery said.

As all three in the car were being detained one of the men, Cole Gaylord ran but was caught a few hours later.

Sheriff Montgomery says both men were from Indiana and believes they only had one purpose for being here.

"That's kind of what irks me you know they come in here from another state thinking they're gonna sell meth here and get by with it," said Montgomery. "It ain't gonna work."

Fields along with Collin Tenhundfeld and Cole Gaylord of Indiana were all charged with trafficking and several other charges.