Pubdate: Mon, 13 May 2002
Source: Daily News (KY)
Copyright: 2002 News Publishing LLC
Contact:  http://www.bgdailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1218
Author: Deborah Highland
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

RETAILERS HELP COPS SPOT SIGNS OF METH

Businesses Give Police Tips About Those Buying Large Amounts Of Ingredients 
Used In Making The Drug

As methamphetamine production becomes increasingly popular in southcentral 
Kentucky, law enforcement agencies are depending on alert retailers to help 
fight the proliferation of the popular drug. "Retailers are giving quite a 
bit of help," said Capt. Wayne Mayfield, commander of west section of the 
Kentucky State Police Drug Enforcement Office in Bowling Green. "... That's 
part of the process of trying to combat this growing problem."

Illegal methamphetamine is manufactured in clandestine laboratories 
nationwide. The drug is easy to manufacture and is made from common 
household ingredients.

Components used to make meth include coffee filters, lithium batteries, 
rock salt, lye and common cold remedies that contain ephedrine or 
pseudoephedrine. Purchased alone, those products amount to nothing more 
than items on a shopping list. But purchased together or in large 
quantities can, and often does, mean that the intended purpose is illegal, 
Mayfield said.

It is the easy accessibility of the items used to manufacture the drug that 
have contributed to its popularity, he said.

"This problem has not nearly reached its apex," Mayfield said.

In Bowling Green, the number of clandestine labs uncovered by police has 
skyrocketed. There were none in 1997 and 1998, three in 1999, 14 in 2000, 
36 labs last year and 27 labs so far this year, said Tommy Loving, director 
of the Bowling Green-Warren County Drug Task Force.

With the ingredients so easily available and the drug's popularity 
increasing, police - who are limited in numbers - rely on retailers to tip 
them off to anyone buying large quantities of items used to make meth, 
especially large quantities of pseudoephedrine.

"If not for the retailers watching out for us, we're limited to undercover 
investigations. There's no way we can do the (necessary number) of the 
investigations to combat this problem ourselves," Mayfield said.

Many Bowling Green retailers, including Wal-Mart, Kmart, Dollar General and 
even family owned drug stores, either limit the sale of pseudoephedrine or 
have removed it from their shelves altogether, replacing it with a sign 
telling customers that they have to ask for the drug in order to purchase it.

"The biggest help they're providing us is many of them are putting Sudafed 
behind the counter so that you have to ask for it," Loving said. "Many more 
of the merchants ... are at least limiting the quantities that they sell."

Retailers locally started working to combat the problem within the last 
year and a half.

Dollar General removed certain cold medicines from their shelves. People 
wanting to buy those items have to ask for them. Kmart locally has the same 
policy.

"Ever since we realized that there was a problem, we're doing everything we 
can to make sure we're not contributing to it," said pharmacist Greg Hines, 
owner of Hines Pharmacy in Sugar Maple Square.

Hines limits the sale of Sudafed to one box per customer.

Wal-Mart has a nationwide policy of limiting the sale to three boxes per 
customer, company spokesman Rob Phillips said. That policy was enacted 
about 18 months ago.

"We put it in place company-wide in an effort to cooperate with law 
enforcement officials to make it more difficult for criminals to 
manufacture methamphetamine," Phillips said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom