Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jan 2004 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2004 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Molly Parker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/methact.htm (Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act) METH FEAR CUTS COLD-PILL ACCESS Pseudoephedrine Used In Illegal Drug SPRINGFIELD -- Responding to the growing use of over-the-counter medications to make illegal drugs, an increasing number of stores are restricting access to commonly used cold, sinus and allergy remedies that contain ingredients of powerfully addictive methamphetamine. Walgreens, Dominick's, Jewel-Osco, Wal-Mart and CVS Pharmacy are among large chains that have clamped down on cold-product sales. All now limit the quantity that a shopper can buy in one transaction, and some have allowed individual stores to move the remedies off open shelves and put them behind service counters. The moves are aimed at cracking down on thefts of such well-known products as Sudafed, Actifed, Dimetapp Extentabs and other non-prescription decongestants, as well as at helping law enforcement in the fight against the burgeoning meth trade. The key ingredient that the illegal meth manufacturing labs have been extracting from over-the-counter drugs is pseudoephedrine, a stimulant. Meth can be produced cheaply, and it produces a euphoric high that can last for days--much longer than the high associated with cocaine, authorities said. "Methamphetamine is the fastest-growing drug problem in the country," said Illinois Atty. Gen. Lisa Madigan, who plans to seek legislation that would limit the sale of products with pseudoephedrine. In 1997, state police raided 24 meth labs in Illinois. Five years later, the number hit 677. During that time, only one raided lab was in Cook County. As methamphetamine use swells, particularly in rural areas, retailers face the vexing question of how to strike a balance between preserving the easy availability of common products and acting to deter their conversion into illegal drugs. Authorities said meth manufacturers send accomplices, whom police refer to as smurfs, into stores to steal or buy large quantities of pseudoephedrine products. Increasingly, authorities said, Downstate meth makers are sending smurfs into the Chicago area, where the concentration of stores is higher. Under voluntary programs, big chains in Illinois have limited sales of cold and allergy tablets containing pseudoephedrine to three packages per customer. Madigan wants the state to impose mandatory limits, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) is working for additional federal restrictions. Officials press stores Officials in some Downstate communities have been pressing retailers to participate in a crackdown. Last fall in Decatur, police asked stores that sell cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine to deter thefts by keeping them behind a counter, in a locked case or near a checkout aisle. The request came after police in the central Illinois community said smurfs had been caught with maps highlighting stores that were prime targets. The process of making meth from cold tablets is tricky and has resulted in numerous explosions, fires and injuries. The end result is a powdered form of pseudoephedrine. The drug produced from it can be smoked, snorted or injected into a vein. Typically, a person can get high on as little as one-third of a gram of meth but may use more to keep the high going for several days. Pseudoephedrine is "like the flour for the bread. If you don't have the flour, you don't have the bread," said Tom McNamara, director of a multicounty narcotics group in far southern Illinois. Arkansas, California, Missouri, Oregon and Washington are among states that have clamped down on sales of products containing pseudoephedrine, with Missouri last year making it a misdemeanor for stores to sell customers more than two packages at a time of such products. Meanwhile, Iowa's drug czar is pressing to force all such products behind store counters. 'Getting worse and worse' "It's just getting worse and worse, and it's really getting at younger and younger people," said Craig Campbell, senior policy adviser for Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski. "It's cheaper, it's purer, and you get a better high." Big pharmaceutical companies have expressed reservations about the restrictions. "Putting them behind the counter really hurts access of consumers to the product," said Jay Kosminsky, a spokesman for Pfizer, the maker of Sudafed. Donna Edenhart, a spokeswoman for the Consumer Healthcare Products Association, an industry lobbying group, said, "We believe that education, not legislation, is the way to solve the meth problem in the United States." Authorities said the crackdown in Missouri has driven an increasing number of smurfs to raid store shelves in Illinois. Earlier this month, Hy-Vee Foods, a food and drugstore chain based in Des Moines with stores in northwestern and central Illinois, removed 18 products from store shelves and put them behind service counters. Hy-Vee customers are now limited to buying two packages of pseudoephedrine products per visit. Anyone buying any of the 18 drugs must provide his or her signature to the store, said Hy-Vee spokeswoman Ruth Mitchell. "We've had a tremendous problem with theft," Mitchell said. In recent months at Jewel-Osco, at least one store in Chicago and one in Springfield have taken Sudafed and other pseudoephedrine products off their shelves and put them behind counters. In Springfield a sign at one store directed customers: "See camera clerk for all Sudafed products." Wal-Mart was among the first of the major chains to limit cold-medicine sales. Not only are pseudoephedrine products limited to three packages a customer, but sales of lithium batteries, which contain another meth ingredient, are also limited to four packs per customer, according to a company spokeswoman. Broad action needed But the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy said restrictions on the sale of common decongestants will not by themselves end the problem. "Simply limiting access to cold medication is not going to cut it," said Scott Burns, the deputy director who oversees state and local policies in the federal office. "There has to be education, there has to be prevention, there has to be law enforcement, and the business community and citizens have to all come together as a community, or they're kidding themselves." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek