Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jul 2005 Source: Parkersburg News, The (WV) Copyright: 2005, The Parkersburg News Contact: http://www.newsandsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1648 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) LAW A NECESSARY INCONVENIENCE Laws dealing with criminal matters are written with the intent to protect the innocent citizens from the criminal element. Most laws do this. However, many of the laws do this while at the same time inconveniencing the very people the laws are written to protect. On Friday, we will again witness this when a law official comes on the books to combat the making of methamphetamine. Last week, on July 8, all stores selling any over-the-counter cold and allergy medication in which pseudoephedrine is the single active ingredient was required to be moved from the shelves to the counter. Before a sale can be made, stores require a picture ID, a signature and a reporting of the sale to the state Pharmacy Board. In addition, customers are only be allowed to purchase up to three packages of the drug every month. And, because of the limited amount of counter space at pharmacies, the fear is many drug stores will now carry fewer brands of these cold medications. Many people in the Mid-Ohio rely on these over-the-counter drugs for relief from both colds and allergies-a common ailment here, as we all know. There is no doubt these new regulations will cause some inconvenience to legitimate users of these products It is unfortunate that the growth of meth manufacture and use has caused this inconvenience. However, lawmakers and prosecutors who have been on the front lines of this battle for several years have testified this law is necessary. Pseudoephedrine is extracted from the medication and is the main ingredient in making meth. To get an idea of the volatility of meth, some of the other chemicals used in its manufacture are brake cleaner, camping fuel, drain cleaner, engine starter fluid and gasoline additive. No wonder meth manufacturing and its use are so dangerous. The fight against meth has taken many different forms. Stores were enlisted before and encouraged to report customers who bought huge amounts of the products needed in its manufacture. This has led to the breakup of many labs and the arrest of many of the drug's makers. However, its use is still prolific. And for every step taken by law enforcement agencies and lawmaking bodies, makers take one also. This was shown recently in the Mid-Ohio Valley recently when a bust at a Marietta residence revealed evidence that the occupants of the home may have been manufacturing meth on Neale Island, part of the federally-owned Ohio River National Wildlife Refuge. A subsequent search of the island did revealed many used in its "cooking" process. That the new law-and its provision that levels an additional felony charge against makers if their labs cause injury to police offices or firefighters- will help. As Phil Morrison, executive director of the West Virginia Prosecuting Attorney's Institute told the Associated Press: "There are a ton of different things in there that are going to arm prosecutors a lot better than they have in the past," he said. "There are all kind of steps that this bill puts into effect that weren't there before." Including, unfortunately, the inconvenience of law-abiding citizens. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth