Pubdate: Thu, 17 Oct 2002 Source: Oklahoman, The (OK) Copyright: 2002 The Oklahoma Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.oklahoman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/318 LAWSUIT SEEKS TO CUT METH INGREDIENT SUPPLY Oklahoma's top law enforcement officials are turning to the state's civil court system in an attempt to stem the state's methamphetamine problem. Malcom Atwood, director of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control, and Attorney General Drew Edmondson on Wednesday announced a civil lawsuit against six Oklahoma County companies and two individuals alleged to be major suppliers of pseudoephedrine, one of the key ingredients in the manufacture of meth. The lawsuit is the first of its kind in Oklahoma and possibly the first state civil suit in the nation, Edmondson said. "While the attorney general does not have the direct prosecution authority of our district attorneys, we can pursue the raw ingredient suppliers for creating a public nuisance and under the Corrupt Organizations Prevention Act," he said. "When OBN brought us the evidence against these companies, we carefully examined the statutes to determine the legal mechanics involved." The 15-page petition, filed in Oklahoma County District Court, alleges public nuisance, negligence and civil conspiracy. The suit names as defendants Beck Services Inc.; Sun Distributing; Stevens Wholesale; Anna Wholesale; Thinh Quoc Kieu and Snow Kieu doing business as OK First Stop Inc. and First Stop Wholesale of Oklahoma City; and Moore Services Inc. of Midwest City. The Corrupt Organizations Prevention Act is the state's equivalent of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. According to the lawsuit, Beck Services sold more than 5.6 million tablets of pseudoephedrine during the first seven months of this year, and Moore Services sold about 1.3 million pills during the same period. The suit alleges Beck and Moore conspired to split invoices, allowing customers to buy large amounts of pseudoephedrine. Kieu, Stevens Wholesale, Anna Wholesale and Moore Services Inc. could not be reached for comment. Owners at Sun Distributing and Beck Services, Inc. said they did not want to comment on the lawsuit. "We are also addressing federal criminal cases," U.S. Attorney Robert McCampbell said. Federal law makes it illegal to sell large quantities of pseudoephedrine, commonly used in cold and allergy medicines, he said. McCampbell has filed criminal charges against Thinh Quoc Kieu in federal court. Federal criminal cases are harder to prove, officials said. The burden of proof in civil court is less. The suit seeks damages to help communities pay for cleanup of meth lab sites and punitive damages to punish these defendants and stop other companies from recklessly selling pseudoephedrine. "About 4,100 methamphetamine labs were seized statewide from 1996 through June of 2002," Atwood said. "The cost of meth lab-related law enforcement is about $4 million annually and Oklahoma spends about $3.3 million each year to clean up these illegal labs." Oklahoma ranks No. 4 in methamphetamine production. Oklahoma County ranks No. 1 in the nation in per capita meth production. William Newell, assistant special agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, said the lawsuit and criminal indictments are an example of a cooperative effort between agencies. Republican attorney general candidate Denise Bode, who attended Thursday's announcement, criticized Edmondson last week for not doing more to combat the meth problem in Oklahoma. "Methamphetamine production and meth labs are up 8,000 percent in Oklahoma versus 300 percent nationally," Bode said. "Over 40 percent of these meth houses contain children and 60 percent of them test positive for exposure." Bode said she would work to provide law enforcement with the tools they need against the fight and push for them to go in and take children from suspected meth lab sites. "We have to do much more than what we're doing now," Bode said. "I've been working on this for nine months. I don't have all the answers, but I would make this a priority." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens