Pubdate: Fri, 18 Mar 2005 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2005 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Michael Wagner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) RESTRICTIONS SOUGHT ON KEY METHAMPHETAMINE CHEMICAL RALEIGH - State lawmakers want to restrict the sale of cold medicine to make it tougher to produce methamphetamine. The Meth Lab Prevention Act would move cold tablets containing pseudoephedrine - a nasal decongestant and one of the key ingredients in methamphetamine - from drugstore shelves to behind the pharmacy counter. Pseudoephedrine is a key ingredient in Sudafed. Prescriptions would not be required, but shoppers would have to show identification to buy the drugs. Because meth producers have to use pseudoephedrine powder, gel capsules and liquid medicines containing the drug would continue to be available on store shelves. Supporters of the legislation say the move is an important step in preventing what is already a problem in North Carolina from getting worse. "Methamphetamine use is at a crisis point in the Western and Midwestern states," state Attorney General Roy Cooper said during a press conference Thursday. "We want to prevent it from becoming a crisis in North Carolina." Sen. Walter Dalton, a Rutherford County Democrat, and Sen. John Snow, a Democrat from Murphy, introduced the bill Thursday. It is modeled on legislation passed in several Western states limiting the sale of pseudoephedrine. Cooper said attorneys general nationwide are pushing for federal legislation limiting access to the drug. "Dealers go to the states of least resistance," said Dalton. "We're not going to be that." Methamphetamine has been growing in popularity. Cooked from household ingredients such as cold medicine and lithium batteries using recipes available on the Internet, the drug is tougher to detect than cocaine or marijuana, which are trafficked across international borders. "It unfortunately is the choice of drugs right now," said Sampson County Sheriff Jimmy Thornton. "They can make it and move it quick. The addictive nature of it is so powerful." 'A No-Brainer' Harnett County Sheriff Larry Rollins said the legislation could affect meth production. "It's a no-brainer," he said. "It's an obvious cure. Pseudoephedrine is what they have to have to make methamphetamine. If they can't get it, they can't make it. It's the kind of legislation that would have a real impact." Most of the meth labs found in North Carolina were in the mountains, but they exist throughout the state, Cooper said. In the Cape Fear region, lawmen raided five Harnett County labs in 2004. Lee County had one, and Sampson County had two. Authorities found 322 labs in the state in 2004, up from nine in 1999 and 177 in 2003. Sampson County sheriff's deputies found three meth labs in January. Lawmen rely on tips to find the labs but often don't learn about them until they catch fire, a typical reaction of the chemicals used to produce the drug. "Being in a big rural county, there's no telling how many we got here," Thornton said. Thornton cited a case in the West in which a state hired outside help to crack down on the labs. He said more than 100 labs were discovered in less than a month. "That tells me that really this is a serious problem, far more so than we can ever hope to imagine," he said. Thornton said he would like the legislation to further limit access to - or at least track the sale of - items such as batteries and fertilizers used to make methamphetamine. Criticisms Raised Some say the legislation goes too far, too soon. Mike James, president of the N.C. Independent Community Pharmacists Association, said several over-the-counter drugs that include pseudoephedrine would be pulled from shelves if the bill becomes law. Because pharmacy counters aren't open as long as drug and grocery stores, he said, the bill would limit people's access to basic cold medicines. "The concerns I have as a pharmacist is if I put all of the products off the shelves, we are denying the public access to products they need, products that help them get better and prevent them from having to make a call to a doctor," James said. He supports pulling pure pseudoephedrine, but said cold-tablet mixtures shouldn't be included in the bill. "I think we're moving too far in one step," he said. "If it appears we're not making any headway, then we'll take the next step." Fran Preston, president of the N.C. Retailers Association, said the bill would burden pharmacists with another responsibility and would limit the choices for consumers. "They (pharmacists) should be counseling patients and dispensing drugs," Preston said. "To ask them to do this is a serious problem." The legislation would require a pharmacist to look at an ID and record the buyer's name in a log book. But supporters such as Cooper say the bill amounts to little more than a slight inconvenience for "a great benefit." The legislation would appropriate $836,000 to hire more than a dozen new agents, chemists and drug technicians at the State Bureau of Investigation. Law-enforcement agencies say the extra help is needed, not just for meth cases, but for all narcotics cases. Once a lab is discovered, police have to wait for a chemical analyst from the SBI to check the site, leaving crime scenes open for as long as two or three days, Thornton said. Rollins said SBI drug analyses can take anywhere from nine months to a year, which delays prosecution. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth