Pubdate: Fri, 12 Nov 2004 Source: Watauga Democrat (NC) Copyright: 2004 Watauga Democrat Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.wataugademocrat.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2322 Author: Jerry Sena REGIONAL MEH TASK FORCE REPORTS SUCCESSFUL QUARTER Watauga County Sheriff Mark Shook has delivered a message to methamphetamine manufacturers: Watauga, Ashe and Wilkes counties are very dangerous places to practice your trade. And they're only going grow more and more hazardous as time goes on. Shook said the Northwestern North Carolina Methamphetamine Task Force has already made a serious dent in the number of meth labs operating in Watauga County, and the word on the street is that the cooks are already on the lookout for safer territory to operate from. Meth manufacturers are resourceful if nothing else, though. As Watauga, Ashe and Wilkes counties increase the pressure on meth labs, the cooks seem to be reacting by simply moving their toxic kitchens to areas where law enforcement is still well behind the curve. Mobile kitchens are popping up everywhere. In August, Watauga County Sheriff's deputies responded to a report of what appeared to be a routine traffic accident. When deputies arrived on the scene they found a severely damaged vehicle and two slightly injured occupants whom Sheriff Shook described at the time as "lucky to be alive." Their good fortune was short-lived. Witnesses at the scene had observed the driver and his passenger attempting to conceal a large duffel bag and a backpack beneath some nearby trees. Shook said the two had apparently been carrying everything necessary to cook up a batch of meth. All they needed was a site remote enough to set up in. What is to prevent meth manufacturers from moving their kitchens every time the heat gets too intense? Shook can see no solution unless retailers agree to impose tighter controls on the only two truly irreplaceable ingredients in the meth cooking process: the drugs ephedrine and pseudoephedrine found most commonly in over-the-counter cold medicines and diet pills. Many cold medicines list these two drugs as the active ingredient aimed at relieving nasal discomfort. Law enforcement officials such as Shook would prefer these drugs be placed behind the pharmacy counter and distributed with much the same scrutiny as other commonly abused drugs, Codeine, Vicodin and OxyContin among them. Retailers are reluctant to conform to such requests. At the Boone Wal-Mart, pharmacy manager Ron Proffit said law enforcement officials requested they move their broad line of cold remedies behind the pharmacy glass. He gestured toward a long aisle filled from top shelf to floor with the popular medicines and said, "But you can see what that would do to the shelves there." It's hard to dispute worries that empty shelves might thwart the kinds of sales that keep retailers like Wal-Mart operating, while providing billions of dollars in sales for the pharmaceuticals industry. Industry lobbyists have preached relentlessly the gospel of free trade in the offices of state and federal legislators since at least 1986. That's when the prospect of making ephedrine and pseudoephedrine available only by prescription first reared its head. An informal survey of retail managers throughout Boone revealed a common desire to help, and a shared loathing for the impact of methamphetemines on the community, but not to the point of depriving customers easy access to the cold medicines so many desire. Many retailers have limited to three the number of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine medicines available for purchase during any one transaction. At Wal-Mart, the computer invokes the rule automatically. Ever-resourceful meth lab shoppers have evaded the limits though, by combining carefully timed return trips with theft. "They'll come into the store and buy three packs," Shook explained, "but they've shoplifted six. Then they'll come back a few hours later, buy three more and steal six more." With the drugs out there on the aisles within easy reach, and the minimal packaging a cinch to conceal, Shook said their only remaining choice is to work in unison with each store's loss control department. Limiting the opportunity for shoplifting limits one more source of the drugs most essential to the methamphetemine trade. The home-cooked variety of meth, whose operators rely on bubble packs of around 24 tablets each, makes up only about a fifth of all the meth sold and used in the United States. The other 80 percent are tied largely to Mexican drug cartels, which use pseudoephedrine in the much larger quantities available on the wholesale market. About 1,300 to 1,800 metric tons of white powder ephedrine and pseudoephedrine are produced worldwide every year. A two-year investigation undertaken by the Portland Oregonian newspaper found that nearly all of it comes from a small number of factories in just four countries: Germany, the Czech Republic, India, and China. About 200 tons goes to supply so-called Super Labs (those capable of producing at least 10 pounds every 24 hours) in the United States. The White House Office of Drug Control Policy reports that the finished meth reaches North Carolina by way of Mexican and, to a lesser extent, Caucasian criminal groups who purchase the drug in Mexico, California, and southwestern states for transport into the state. Simple arithmetic suggests that even in the unlikely case Shook and his task force are able to totally wipe out every meth kitchen in the county, as much as 80 percent of the drug remains available to continue its destructive path through the lives of addicts, their families and communities. The meth problem has been slow to reach North Carolina and its East Coast neighbors. The explosion in the drug's popularity has its epicenter on the West Coast more than 15-years past, presumably due to the region's proximity to the Mexican border and the long-established presence of Mexican gangs and their intricate network of illicit drug smugglers and distributors. In Oregon, the meth epidemic had reached dire enough proportions to send Oregonian reporter Steve Suo across the globe in search of its causes and effects. Suo has gained high praise from sociologists for his ingenious use of scientific methodology in studying the problem. His contributions are included in a five-part series published in October and available online at www.oregonlive.com/special/oregonian/meth/. What Suo uncovered was both startling and hopeful. His research shows the methamphetamine trade had been all but wiped out in the mid-1980s by strict legislation requiring suppliers of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine to keep close tabs on exactly who was buying its product and where it was being used. Stiff fines encouraged compliance, and the increased risks to meth traffickers, as well as the rising cost of producing the drug, effectively drove a stake through the heart of the black market. It did not last long, as Suo discovered. The pharmaceuticals industry began a determined lobbying effort, partly out of fear the regulations were only the beginning of a slippery slope toward turning the highly profitable over-the-counter medicines into a prescription-only drug. Their efforts weakened the laws, meth manufacturers exploited the loopholes and the meth trade blossomed again. The Comprehensive Methamphetamine Control Act of 1996 closed some of those loopholes for a short while. But each time lawmakers add to the list of restricted chemicals, meth manufacturers craft new recipes with ingredients outside the regulations. It's a cat and mouse game that continues today. In December, 10 new chemicals will join the list in North Carolina. Exactly how meth traffickers will respond is yet to be seen. It seems likely that even as they scatter with law enforcement close on their tails, they'll be keeping a keen lookout for loopholes along the way. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake