Pubdate: Tue, 05 Mar 2002 Source: Deseret News (UT) Copyright: 2002 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124 Author: Clifford Krauss, New York Times News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CANADA IS METH CONDUIT Seizures Of Raw Ingredient At Border Increase TORONTO - The illegal production in the United States of popular stimulants like methamphetamine reflects lax regulations in Canada for the chemical ingredients, U.S. and Canadian law enforcement officials said. As a result, Canada has become the leading supply route for the raw ingredient - typically in the form of decongestants - to the United States where the substances are more tightly controlled. In the last 11 months, the U.S. Customs Service has seized more than 110 million tablets of decongestants that contain the primary ingredient for making methamphetamines, or "speed," as smugglers attempted to bring them across the border among shipments of everything from furniture to glassware. The seizures have become so huge that Robert C. Bonner, the commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service, recently joked that enough decongestant had been confiscated from one truck "to unplug about every nose in Michigan for several years." That truck had crossed the Ambassador Bridge into Detroit last year from Canada where the decongestant, pseudoephedrine, is perfectly legal and freely obtained even though it is a tightly controlled substance in the United States. Canada's connection to illegal U.S. methamphetamine production arose after Washington tightened controls over pseudoephedrine several years ago, and as trafficking routes through Mexico were shut down. Now, an alliance of diverse organized crime groups stretching from Mexico to Iraq and Jordan have found Canada an easy entry point into a growing U.S. market for synthetic drugs. Canadian businesses legitimately import the chemical substance in powder form mostly from China. Those imports have increased 14 times since 1995, U.S. and Canadian law enforcement officials said. Some of that has helped Canadian cold sufferers in the form of decongestants manufactured by several Canadian pharmaceutical companies. But a large portion of it has entered the U.S. black market for methamphetamine, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Canadian officials said. "The diversion of pseudoephedrine from Canadian suppliers to the illicit market is reaching a critical level," according to an intelligence report by the Drug Enforcement Administration and Royal Canadian Mounted Police in January. As methamphetamine, which gives users a seductive rush of power, confidence and energy, has grown in popularity since the mid-1990s, it has become a priority for law enforcement officials. The drug is an especially addictive narcotic that can cause brain damage and aggressive behavior and has been linked to 60,000 admissions a year in U.S. hospitals. Under prodding from the Bush administration, Canada has acknowledged the trafficking problem and the government here is drafting a number of regulations on pseudoephedrine imports and exports as well as enforcement strategies to close the Canadian connection. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager