Pubdate: Sat, 22 May 2004 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyiedmonton.com/htdocs/edmsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Doug Beazley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) JUMP IS CRYSTAL CLEAR An explosion in the volume of methamphetamine precursor seizures at the border has Alberta meth experts scratching their heads. The 2003-04 report of the Criminal Intelligence Service Alberta, released yesterday, says that ephedrine now accounts for more than 20% of the documented narcotics seized coming into Alberta from outside the country. Ephedrine is a methamphetamine "precursor" chemical - an ingredient used to make the cheap and highly addictive drug known as crystal meth. The CISA report notes the Canada Border Services Agency, the federal agency responsible for monitoring cross-border traffic with the U.S., recorded no ephedrine seizures in 2002-03. The spike in seizures itself is no mystery - new federal regulations controlling trade in precursor chemicals took effect in January of last year. The regulations list ephedrine as a Table 1 chemical, and require a licence and permit for import and export. "So if you're bringing the stuff in without the proper paperwork, it gets seized," said Sgt. Ian Sanderson, with RCMP K-Division's drug awareness service. But the fact that any ephedrine is crossing the border is a puzzle to meth experts - legal controls on ephedrine and pseudoephedrine are much more lax in Canada than in the U.S. The precursors, found in many over-the-counter cold medicines and athletic supplements, are routinely bought in bulk in Canada to feed meth labs south of the border. "Canada's always been seen as a net exporter of ephedrine," said Glenn Jenkins, a meth lab specialist with Capital Health. "Mexican groups purchase by the truckload here and drive it south." "It could be for the local meth market - anything's possible," said Sgt. Harold Trubish, who heads K-Division's clandestine lab investigation service. Police and the provincial government have been complaining for years about the lack of criminal law banning the collection of large amounts of meth precursors. Mounties busted nine meth labs in 2003 but failed to lay a single production or trafficking charge in any of them. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh