Pubdate: Sun, 21 Aug 2005 Source: Courier, The (TX) Copyright: 2005 The Courier Contact: http://www.thecourier-online.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3366 Author: Sue Thackeray Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) OFFICIALS HOPE LAW HINDERS DRUG LABS Local drug enforcement officials hope a new law placing restrictions on the sale of pseudoephedrine, a major component in the manufacture of methamphetamine, will help curb the number of clandestine laboratories operating in Montgomery County. "It will hopefully slow down the production and limit the number of clandestine labs we recover," said Lt. Phillip Cash, who heads up the Montgomery County Special Investigation Unit. "There are still illicit ways to get the product, but hopefully this will reduce the number of labs that are operating." The law, which went into effect Aug. 1, requires pharmacies and retail stores selling cold medications containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine to place the items behind the counter. It also limits the amount that can be purchased at any one time to two packages or six grams and requires buyers to be over the age of 16 and show valid photo identification. Pharmacies also are required to keep a log of everyone who purchases the medications. "As with any other records we keep, if they are subpoenaed or the police come in with a warrant, we turn those records over," said Steve Oatman, owner and pharmacist at Medicap Pharmacy on West Davis in Conroe. The law requires pharmacists to keep the log books on file for two years. Oatman said he doesn't think the new law will have much of an impact on smaller pharmacies like his. "It's more of a minor inconvenience for us," Oatman said. "We had to move about 20 products behind the counter, and we have to keep the log book." Oatman said it's unlikely methamphetamine producers frequent the smaller pharmacies for their supplies. "We've never had anyone come in and buy a really large amount or come back repeatedly," Oatman said. "I think the larger retailers are more likely to have that happen." Several common decongestants in the pill form are affected by the law, including Sudafed, Tylenol Sinus and Advil Cold and Sinus, Oatman said. Changes in laws in the past have slowed the methamphetamine production locally for a short period of time. But manufacturers have changed the process to get around the laws. "Several years ago, they made it so you couldn't buy red phosphorus without a permit from DPS and they outlawed P2P; the number of labs in that state of Texas dropped to about one a year," Cash said. "The manufactures eventually changed to the pseudoephedrine method, and we started to see the number of labs rise again." Both red phosphorus and P2P were vital ingredients in the manufacture of methamphetamine before the tough restrictions were placed on their sale. While Cash said he hopes the law will slow the local production of methamphetamine, he doesn't believe it will end the use of meth in Montgomery County. "Meth is already starting to flood the market in this area from Mexico," Cash said. "They're sending both Ice and regular meth up here." Ice is a crystallized form of methamphetamine that is smoked. "Meth is the number one drug problem in the United States right now, according to the (U.S.) Justice Department," Cash said. "It's even more of a problem than marijuana." In 2003, SIU detectives seized 224,555 grams of methamphetamine in Montgomery County with an estimated street value of $5,256,788. In the same year, detectives seized 383 pounds of marijuana with a street value of $172,350. Even before the new legislation went into effect Aug. 1, there were tough laws with strict penalties for the possession of large amounts of pseudoephedrine for use in the manufacture of methamphetamine. Last week, Drew Wayne Odem, a Montgomery County resident, was sentenced to 30 years in prison after being convicted of possession of certain chemicals used in the manufacture of methamphetamine. The chemical Odem was found in his possession, as well as a large amount of pseudoephedrine. "He was also found in possession of a small amount of methamphetamine, which the jury gave him a five-year prison sentence for," Cash said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth