Pubdate: Sun, 21 Aug 2005 Source: Record, The (Stockton, CA) Copyright: 2005 The Record Contact: http://www.recordnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/428 Author: Jeff Hood, Lodi Bureau Chief Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) A BITTER PILL FOR METH MAKERS Drug Companies Aim To Rid Goods Of Criminal Potential Your stuffy nose might not notice the difference between a methyl and hydroxyl group when it comes to what's in a cold pill. But to a dope cooker converting decongestant pills into the potent drug methamphetamine, it's all the difference between a valuable street drug and worthless muck. That, law enforcement officials say, could result in fewer drug labs in San Joaquin County and elsewhere. Pharmaceutical companies, pressured by federal and state governments, are replacing pseudoephedrine -- the base chemical used in meth labs -- in many sinus medicines. Congress is considering a bill, which is co-sponsored by California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, that would require all sales of pseudoephedrine to be closely monitored. Cold sufferers have long used pseudoephedrine in products such as Sudafed to clear their nasal passages, but more and more will find over-the-counter medicines containing phenylephrine, a substitute chemical that will frustrate meth cookers. "It's very related in a pharmacological sense, but in terms of chemical conversion, it won't work," said David Fries, a professor at University of the Pacific's pharmacy school. "You won't come up with methamphetamine. It doesn't go into the brain quickly, and it's not abusable." Sudafed-maker Pfizer is making a replacement medicine containing phenylephrine, called Sudafed PE. Leiner Health Products, which makes store-brand cold pills for retailers such as Target and Wal-Mart, also is reformulating some cold pills with phenylephrine so they can remain on store shelves instead of being moved behind counters. Leiner spokeswoman Crystal Wright said cold sufferers may not like having reduced access to a proven product. About 4,200 medicines contain pseudoephedrine, she said. "We need to strike a balance between access to the legitimate consumer and the criminal," she said. Kent Yep, pharmacy manager at Longs Drugs on Quail Lakes Drive, said he's glad store officials decided to move pseudoephedrine behind the counter several months ago. Yep, however, said he'd like to see it eliminated altogether. "There was a big shoplifting problem because we're a 24-hour store," Yep said. "You go up in the morning where the Sudafed is, and it's all wiped out. But that's minor compared to the epidemic of people addicted to methamphetamine." Even those measures, authorities said, aren't expected to eliminate toxic drug labs or even put a dent in the supply of methamphetamine. The vast majority of methamphetamine is made by what law enforcement officials call "super labs." These high-volume laboratories mostly in Mexico and California are typically operated by Mexican criminal organizations, according to the U.S. Justice Department. Sgt. Dave Seawell, who heads the investigations division for the Calaveras County Sheriff's Office, said 25 trash bags found in February along a road near Valley Springs were likely the remnants of a large lab. But Seawell and other officials said they hope newer, stricter controls and the change in cold formulas will discourage the small manufacturer from making methamphetamine in kitchens, closets or even the trunks of cars, and dumping their hazardous waste alongside rural roads, on farms or in Delta waterways. "On the smaller, the 'Beavis-and-Butthead' labs, where they do them in a coffee pot with some soda bottles, there will be fewer of those," Seawell said. "It's encouraging to see the private sector doing something about it." Drug lab residue isn't only left in trash dumps or discharged down sewers. A state study found that methamphetamine residue from labs could be detected on walls and floors, where it could come into contact with children and pets, and that the residue stained wallboard and other materials with its acidic properties. The manager of a north Lodi apartment complex said a lab found in an apartment last year kept her from renting it out for 10 months. Part of the problem was that city officials weren't sure how clean an apartment needed to be, said the manager, Margaret, who wouldn't provide her last name. An Assembly bill working its way through the state Legislature creates standards for meth lab cleanups. Doug Wilson, a supervisor for San Joaquin County's environmental health division, said his department was called by the Sheriff's Office 14 times last year to oversee cleanup at residential meth labs. They've responded eight times this year. Lodi police Detective Dale Eubanks said he hopes the new formula will reduce the number of small labs his department has uncovered, including a recent find where 99 pounds of pseudoephedrine pills were confiscated. But he expects cookers will adapt to their new obstacle. "Where there's a will, there's a way," he said. Professor Fries agreed, saying limiting access to pseudoephedrine and reformulating cold medicines will "slow things a bit for a while." But dope cookers will find another way, he predicted. "There's money in it," Fries said. "There are more sophisticated ways to make methamphetamine from other, not too chemically different, available materials." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth