Pubdate: Tue, 21 Jun 2005
Source: Kentucky Post (KY)
Copyright: 2005 Kentucky Post
Contact:  http://www.kypost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661
Author: Joe Biesk, Associated Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

NEW ID LAW TARGETS ILLEGAL DRUG LABS

Similar Legislation Worked In 1 state

FRANKFORT - Kentucky law enforcement officials hope new legislation 
requiring people to show picture IDs and sign their names when buying 
medication containing pseudoephedrine will become a useful instrument in 
their arsenal against methamphetamine.

"Without controlling pseudoephedrine, it's going to be really hard to get 
our arms around the meth problem," said David James, head of the Kentucky 
Bureau of Investigation - an arm of the attorney general's office.

"Now that we have some controls on the pseudoephedrine, it will help law 
enforcement across the state better protect the citizens."

The law went into effect Monday. It requires that medication containing 
pseudoephedrine - a key ingredient in meth - be kept behind counters and 
that only pharmacists or technicians sell them. Private purchases are 
capped at no more than 9 grams, which is about 300 tablets, per month. It 
does not apply to the liquid and gel forms of the drug.

The law also makes it a felony for someone to make meth with a child nearby.

And anyone caught with at least two ingredients or pieces of meth-making 
equipment could be convicted of meth manufacturing.

The legislation was one of 158 new laws - from the official demise of 
public campaign financing to a designated state beverage - that the 2005 
Kentucky General Assembly created. The bulk of them took effect Monday.

While authorities are looking at the new meth law as a way to get the 
upper-hand on drug manufacturers, some people are bracing for what they 
consider an unnecessary intrusion into their personal privacy.

Being able to track who is buying large quantities of drugs containing 
pseudoephedrine could prove to be a valuable law enforcement tool, James 
said. It will allow police and other investigators to monitor who is buying 
the drug and where, he said.

But Beth Wilson, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union 
in Kentucky, said there are not "appropriate checks and balances" to guard 
against abuse of the new system. Better safeguards are needed to ensure the 
information is viewed only for legitimate law enforcement reasons, Wilson said.

"We have never been a country that supported a fishing expedition by law 
enforcement, and that's exactly what this does," Wilson said.

Other states that have implemented similar laws, such as Oklahoma, have 
witnessed up to a 40 percent reduction in the presence of meth labs, 
Kentucky State Police Commissioner Mark Miller said. That kind of benefit 
outweighs any personal privacy issues, Miller said.

"Security always requires some inconvenience and it requires some 
concessions in terms of ultimate privacy," Miller said.

"But I don't see this as being an abridgment of their privacy at all."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth