Pubdate: Wed, 23 Mar 2005
Source: Daily Reflector (Greenville, NC)
Copyright: 2005 Daily Reflector
Contact:  http://www.reflector.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1456
Author: Robin Pendergraft
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

LOOK AT OKLAHOMA LAW IN FIGHTING METH LABS

I am writing to respond to the March 19 Darts and Laurels which discussed 
options for fighting methamphetamine labs. Many North Carolinians are 
unfamiliar with the horrors of these labs that are beginning to infest our 
communities. We busted only nine labs in 1999, but that number escalated to 
322 in 2004 and is continuing to rise.

When State Bureau of Investigation agents respond to meth labs, they often 
find young, innocent children (124 of them in 2004) who must be removed 
from these homes because of exposure to toxic fumes which cause both short- 
and long-term illnesses and potential brain damage. These labs cause 
violent crime to increase, property values to go down and threaten 
communities with fires and explosions.

Pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, found in over-the-counter cold tablets, is 
the main ingredient for methamphetamine. For meth manufacturers in North 
Carolina, the main source of pseudoephedrine is the everyday retail store. 
In Oklahoma, when cold tablets containing pseudoephedrine were put in the 
control of pharmacists, the number of meth lab busts fell a dramatic 80 
percent.

Law-abiding North Carolinians would continue to have access to a variety of 
cold remedies under the proposed law. In Oklahoma, many consumers with 
colds switched to pseudoephedrine gel caps or liquid (which would not be 
affected by the new law in North Carolina) or made sure they had pills on 
hand if a midnight cold strikes. These gel and liquid cold remedies could 
remain on grocery and convenience store shelves under the law, while tablet 
forms would be placed behind a pharmacy counter.

Attorney General Roy Cooper, and I hope North Carolina, will have the 
foresight to trade a minor inconvenience for a major benefit and adopt the 
Oklahoma law. It's clear from the results in Oklahoma that we can help 
prevent great financial and human toll from meth labs by taking this simple 
step.

ROBIN PENDERGRAFT

Director, State Bureau of Investigation 
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