Pubdate: Tue, 06 Mar 2007 Source: Salisbury Post (NC) Copyright: 2007 Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.salisburypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/380 LAW CURBS METH LABS Labs producing homemade methamphetamine may be dwindling in number, thanks to restrictions the state put on cold medication about 13 months ago. If you want a cold medicine containing pseudoephedrine in it now, you have to ask for it at the pharmacy counter and show identification, and that has cramped the style of people who used to cook up meth in their kitchens. Authorities have found 40 percent fewer meth labs recently - a drop from 328 in 2005 to 197 last year. That does not mean the problem of methamphetamine addiction has gone away, unfortunately. Instead, as is often the way with illegal drugs, new sources popped up as soon as the state started making life more difficult for mom and pop dealers. Meth has gone big-time, with out-of-state traffickers (and some outside the country) sending large shipments into North Carolina. The dealers of cocaine and marijuana have just diversified their product line, one State Bureau of Investigation official told the News & Observer. As long as there's a demand for a drug, someone will provide it. Thanks to the easy availability of meth a few years ago, the state has an abundance of people who are hooked on the strong stimulant - and looking for a fresh supply. Still, the pseudoephedrine restrictions have made some headway. The small labs that have been squeezed out of the picture were the source of big problems. Often, children lived in those homes and were endangered by the toxic fumes produced in the process, which hurt their lungs and skin. As meth makers moved on, they left contamination behind that could be harmful to the next tenants. And meth lab explosions were all too common during the small labs' heyday. N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper has made some requests of the General Assembly to help take the battle against meth and other illegal drugs to the next level: more SBI drug agents and a new crime lab in the Piedmont Triad to provide quicker analysis of drug evidence. Legislators should do what they can to help him. Cooper also asks for community support in identifying drug traffickers and users. His office is developing a guide that will outline warning signs. The National Institute on Drug Abuse says signs of methamphetamine use include: * Agitation, excited speech, decreased appetite, increased physical activity, dilated pupils, nausea and vomiting. * Occasional episodes of sudden and violent behavior, intense paranoia, visual and auditory hallucinations, and bouts of insomnia. * A tendency to compulsively clean and groom and repetitively disassemble and sort objects. It's not a pretty picture - and not one that's easily changed. North Carolina has taken a step forward and needs to keep pushing on. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath