Pubdate: Fri, 29 Jul 2005 Source: Enid News & Eagle (OK) Copyright: Enid News & Eagle 2005 Contact: http://www.enidnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2012 Author: Cass Rains Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ENID POLICE, DA'S OFFICE TO RECEIVE PORTION OF FUNDS FROM WALGREEN CO, SETTLEMENT Two agencies in Enid will share a portion of a $1.3 million settlement reached with Walgreen Co. after investigations into negligent sales of cold medication containing pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient for making methamphetamine. Garfield County District Attorney's Office and Enid Police Department will share $333,333 of the settlement between multiple agencies and Walgreen. The company also agreed to spend $1 million on a system to monitor purchases of the medicine. As part of the settlement, Walgreen did not acknowledge any wrongdoing. The settlement ends a dispute between Walgreen and law enforcement agencies over alleged violations of an Oklahoma law requiring monitoring of sales of over-the-counter cold pills containing pseudoephedrine and limiting the supply consumers may purchase to 9 grams in 30 days. Problems were discovered after an Enid Police Department patrolman began using pharmacy logbooks for tracking cold pill sales while investigating methamphetamine producers. Officer Jason Priest used the logbooks, required by Oklahoma law to be kept by pharmacies selling medications containing pseudoephedrine, as part of an investigation into small rings of know meth producers. "I'm proud," Priest said of the settlement. "There were a lot of the people at the department that backed me on it." Priest said there were some who questioned the effectiveness of using logbooks for investigative purposes. But, he said, after working with other agencies and making progress with his investigation, the proof of effectiveness is in the results. "This can be done. It works," he said. Robert McCampbell, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma, said an investigation by state and federal agencies showed "Walgreen was careless" in selling the restricted substance. After some of the cold medicine bearing the Walgreens label wound up in a meth lab busted in Enid, officials with Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs said Enid's Walgreens pharmacy accounted for 97 percent of the city's illegal pseudoephedrine sales. Larry Derryberry, Oklahoma legal counsel for Walgreen, applauded the work of Enid police but said the pharmacy was "victimized by the meth cooks." Walgreens is the only 24-hour pharmacy in Enid and serves a high volume of customers, Derryberry said. Scott Rowland of Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs divided blame between clerks and management at the store. He said store employees approached the law casually, but company policies were not in line with the law's aim. "Because of the corporate misbehavior of Walgreens, there were meth labs operated in the state of Oklahoma with all of the accompanying carnage that otherwise wouldn't have been," Rowland said. Garfield County District Attorney Cathy Stocker gave credit for the settlement to Priest. "This settlement resulted, in very large part, from the investigative efforts of Enid Police Department patrolman Jason Priest into the sale of cold medications containing pseudoephedrine by local Enid pharmacies to persons using them to help others manufacture methamphetamine," Stocker said. Enid Police Chief Rick West agreed. "We would concur with District Attorney Cathy Stocker's statement and commend our department's initiative and actions," he said. According to a press release from Stocker's office, based upon the investigation of Enid pharmacies, her office has charged 42 defendants with numerous felony drug offenses, the majority of which are directly related to the purchase of pseudoephedrine products at Enid's Walgreens pharmacy. Five of those charged have been convicted and sentenced to prison terms, according to the release. Stocker said The Trooper Nik Green, Rocky Eales and Matthew Evans Act, or House Bill 2176, also allows district attorneys, the attorney general and Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs to file civil lawsuits to recover damages from people or companies that sell pseudoephedrine in a negligent manner. The law states damages may be recovered for all costs of detecting, investigating and cleaning up clandestine drug labs, as well as prosecuting criminal cases resulting from methamphetamine manufacturing, including consequential and punitive damages. In light of the settlement, Stocker said no further action will be pursued. A spokeswoman for Walgreen said the company is going to go beyond what is required in the agreement. "We have spent $1 million on an integrated pseudoephedrine monitoring program," spokeswoman Tiffany Bruce said. "There is little to be gained in litigating," Bruce said. "It is better to use the money to fight meth. "We are ready to move forward." West said employees at the Enid pharmacy made changes in their operations before the settlement was announced. "They are working very diligently to correct it," he said. Bruce also said Walgreen committed to employ an internal monitor of pseudoephedrine purchases. The monitor would be a full-time employee of Walgreens who would monitor compliance with Oklahoma's pseudoephedrine law. Walgreen has 65 stores in Oklahoma. "Our message today is simple: If you want to sell pseudoephedrine in Oklahoma," McCampbell said, "you'd better follow every rule and regulation there is, because all of us in law enforcement are focused on meth." The $1.3 million settlement also will be shared with Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control and U.S. Attorneys for Northern, Eastern and Western districts of Oklahoma, as well as the Eastern District of Texas. Oklahoma's pseudoephedrine law, passed in April 2004, made it a criminal offense to purchase more than nine grams of pseudoephedrine in a 30 days of time. The law also made it mandatory only pharmacies could sell tablets containing pseudoephedrine, and then only after seeing identification and having the purchaser sing a logbook. CNHI Oklahoma report Luke Engan and The Associated Press contributed to this story, - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin