Pubdate: Thu, 30 Dec 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: Karen Gullo, The Associated Press STREET DRUGS USED IN RESEARCH DRAW LITTLE FEDERAL SCRUTINY WASHINGTON - Thousands of university researchers buy cocaine, heroin and other street drugs with government grant money for studies on addiction but are almost never monitored by federal agents to make sure the narcotics are put to proper use. Even when evidence of abuse arises, the government doesn't always check up. A University of Minnesota researcher died of a cocaine overdose shortly after he bought a fresh supply of the drug with grant money. University officials told The Associated Press the Drug Enforcement Administration never investigated. DEA officials would not discuss the Minnesota case or any other investigation. But they said the DEA lacks the staff to do regular checks on the 4,500 researchers registered by the agency to buy drugs for experiments. Instead, it relies on universities and state agencies that license researchers for primary oversight. Agents perform background checks when researchers apply for registration, review research proposals and visit laboratories before granting permission. About 535 of those registered are authorized to conduct research with the most dangerous drugs, including heroin, morphine and LSD. The agency also tracks researchers' drug purchases, but it rarely conducts surprise checks because it lacks sufficient staff. Just 400 agents monitor drug manufacturers, distributors, analytical laboratories, pharmacies and doctors, so they ordinarily don't check a researcher unless they receive a report of a problem. "Monitoring is a local issue," said Dr. Alan Leshner, director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse, which provided $250 million in grants last year for researchers to study heroin, cocaine and marijuana. Between 1,500 and 2,000 of the institute's grant recipients employ street drugs in their research. Researchers undergo rigorous federal screening before they receive government grants. Research proposals are carefully scrutinized, and experiments are monitored by institutional review boards. Researchers and the DEA say the drugs must be kept under lock and key, and their use carefully recorded. Dr. Keith Kajander, who ran a University of Minnesota dental-school lab on pain research, fatally overdosed on cocaine in April shortly after he used federal grant money to buy a fresh supply from a California distributor. Kajander, 45, bought at least 80 grams (almost 3 ounces) of cocaine with federal money since 1996 even though his grant proposals did not mention the drug, police reports show. His DEA registration allowed him to buy the cocaine. The university receives $70 million annually in federal grants for medical research, half of which involve controlled substances, and has more than 1,000 researchers working with drugs. Yet the DEA never investigated the school after Kajander's death, said Dr. Richard Bianco, assistant vice president of the academic health center. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake