Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jun 2002 Source: Evening Post, The (New Zealand) Contact: 2002 Independent Newspapers Limited Website: http://www.evpost.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/142 Author: Mark Stevens Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) KIDS SHOP FOR DRUG LABS Children as young as 13 are being used by drug syndicates to buy raw materials for the illegal drug methamphetamine (Speed) in Wellington, police say. Organised Crime Unit head Detective Senior Sergeant Mike Arnerich said the involvement of teenagers in the drug industry was a major concern for police. Criminal syndicates are known to organise shopping sprees for over-the-counter cold and flu medicines containing pseudoephedrine (PSE), one of the key raw materials used in the manufacture of speed. These shopping expeditions are spread across the country, with only small quantities of the medicines bought at each location, to avoid police detection. Chemists and drug warehouses in the Wellington region have been burgled for Speed ingredients in the past and Mr Arnerich said "PSE shoppers" were a problem. "We have had incidents of younger teenagers working for the methamphetamine syndicates to purchase PSE products, some as young as 13. They were working for gang syndicates," Mr Arnerich said. Some Wellington pharmacies are now demanding photo identification from buyers of PSE products and police are pushing for chemists to record the details of buyers. In some cases, pharmacists are refusing to sell people cold and flu remedies if they suspect that the medicines will be used illegally. Pharmacy Guild president Gray Maingay said pharmacists are asking for identification, particularly if the customer wasn't known to the pharmacist. "Every pseudoephedrine sale is treated on its merits and weighed up accordingly," he said. Four methamphetamine labs have been uncovered in Wellington so far this year and Mr Arnerich acknowledges there are more operating undetected. "Methamphetamine production is a very organised enterprise that requires several different cells (individuals) who are each tasked with acquiring the different resources that are required," he said. The Evening Post understands one difficulty for police is that the cells buying the pseudoephedrine-based products are low down the organised pecking order of the drug syndicates. The lower layers protect the top. Commissioner For Children Roger McClay said this was another of the "hair-raising and extraordinary ways" he'd heard of "lawbreakers and creeps" using children for their own gain. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk