Pubdate: Tue, 10 Jul 2007 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2007 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH LABS MOVE ON, BUT METH IMPORTING KEEPS ON GROWING The plague of methamphetamine has changed its character in North Carolina from a manufacturing problem to an importing problem but continues to infect the state. So-called superlabs were once rife here, but tough rules dried up the supply of precursor chemicals and raids on labs shut many down. In 2001, almost 300 labs were seized. Between 2002 and 2006, seizures fell by 73 percent. But demand for the drug hasn't abated. National spending on meth now comes close to matching that on cocaine and opiates combined. To supply that lucrative appetite, the business has shifted to less rigorously policed areas ---- especially Mexico. By 2004, Mexican drug labs were importing 224 tons of pseudophedrine in about equal amounts from India, China and Germany. The drugs made in Mexico then enter pipelines feeding the United States. They travel, according to the Drug Enforcement Agency, by private and commercial vehicles or by express parcel services. North Carolina figures in the trade, DEA notes, because an increasing population of Mexican origin "allows Mexican traffickers to effectively conceal their activities within immigrant communities in numerous North Carolina counties." This is not a pretty picture and the scope and scale of the $25 billion illegal business makes enforcement a daunting international challenge. Chemical suppliers must be stopped from exporting. Mexican labs must be stopped from producing. The pipeline has to be disrupted and street sales curtailed. Of course, none of that would be necessary if Americans didn't create a huge market for the drug. But Americans haven't just said no, and efforts to persuade them to do so have been fitful and less than successful. A lot more needs to be done. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake